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Showing posts with label IAN A ANDERSON - "Please Re-Adjust Your Time - The Early Blues & Psych-Folk Years 1967-1972" (Nov 2021 UK Cherry Tree 4CD 65-Track Clamshell Remasters Box Set). Show all posts
Showing posts with label IAN A ANDERSON - "Please Re-Adjust Your Time - The Early Blues & Psych-Folk Years 1967-1972" (Nov 2021 UK Cherry Tree 4CD 65-Track Clamshell Remasters Box Set). Show all posts

Wednesday, 22 April 2026

"Please Re-Adjust Your Time: The Early Blues & Psych-Folk Years 1967-72" by IAN A. ANDERSON (November 2021 UK Cherry Tree 4CD 65-Track Anthology in a Clamshell Box Set with Four Mini LP Repro Card Sleeves, a 24-page booklet, Almost Six LPs Worth of Material Plus Three Previously Unreleased - Simon Murphy Masters) - A Review by Mark Barry...




https://amzn.to/4sObYNu

Overall: ****
Material: *** to *****
Audio: *** to *****
Presentation: *****

"...Singer Sleeps On As Blaze Rages..."

Taking its title from a song on his second studio album "(Royal York Crescent)" on his own The Village Thing Records – this 4CD 65-Track Anthology gives us a hefty overview of Somerset Folkie and Acoustic Guitar Virtuoso IAN A. ANDERSON (not to be confused with Tull mainman Ian Anderson). 

When I worked at Reckless Records in Islington and Soho as the Rarities guy (twenty years of RPM servitude) – Ian A. Anderson albums were thin on the ground throughout those two decades to say the least, and now as the decades have passed into five and half hence – they have started clocking up ghoulish price tags in places. There is a lot to unpack here, so once more my pirates of audio hazard waste unto the crazy fool mumbles of Stereo yore. Here are the Somerset details…

UK released Friday, 21 November 2021 - "Please Re-Adjust Your Time: The Early Blues & Psych-Folk Years 1967-72" by IAN A. ANDERSON on Cherry Tree CDTREEBOX025 (Barcode 5013929692503) is a 4CD 65-Track Anthology Clamshell Box Set. It contains four full UK Studio Albums on Liberty and Village Thing Records (June 1968 to December 1972), eight songs of a twelve-track fifth album on Fontana Records from April 1970, Exclusive 45-Single EP Tracks, a Sampler LP duo, Songs from a Collaboration LP with Mike Cooper (all on Saydisc/Matchbox Records), a Live September 1969 Folk Festival Rarity and three Previously Unreleased outtakes from 1973 (Anderson with his band Hot Vultures).
Housed in a Mini-LP Sized Clamshell Box Set, Each Card Sleeve is a Replica of the Four Original British Albums and each CD has Bonus Tracks. The 24-Page Booklet sports new liner notes by ELIZABETH KINDER (July 2021) and features input from Anderson about his formation of Village Thing Records and beyond. Project managed by JOHN REED of Cherry Red and approved by Anderson with Remasters are by SIMON MURPHY at Another Planet. It plays out as follows...




CD1 (76:14 minutes):
1. Get In That Swing [Side 1]
2. Litte Boy Blue
3. (My Baby Ain't Nothing But A Doggone) Crazy Fool Mumble
4. New Lonesome Day
5. Short Haired Woman Blues
6. Hot Times
7. Stereo Death Breakdown [ Side 2]
8. When I Get To Thinking
9. Way Up Your Tree
10. Bring 'Em Down
11. That's Alright
12. Baby Bye You Bye
Tracks 1 to 12 are the June 1968 UK Debut Solo LP "Stereo Death Breakdown" on Liberty Records LBS 83242E, Stereo only release credited to Ian Anderson’s Country Blues Band


CD1 BONUS TRACKS:
13. Put It In A Frame
14. Stop And Orange
Tracks 13 and 14 from the April 1970 UK Second Solo LP "Book Of Changes" by Ian Anderson on Fontana STL 5542 in Stereo (Musician Credits in Booklet) – see also CD2 for two more (Tracks 13 and 14) and CD3 (Tracks 11 to 14) for four further cuts from this LP (eight out of a total of twelve)

15. Louise
Track 15 is from the 1969 UK 5-Track LP-Speed EP "Anderson Jones Jackson" on Saydisc 33SD 25 in Stereo. Credited to Ian Anderson, Alun Jones and Elliot Jackson – it is a cover version of a Johnny Temple Blues song on Decca Records from 1946 originally called "Louise, Louise Blues" – Alun Jones would go on to be large part of the Cats Stevens band on Island Records

16. Cottonfield Blues
17. Big Road Blues
18. Tom Rushen Blues
Tracks 16, 17 and 18 are from the 1968 UK 4-Track 45-Single EP "Almost The Country Blues!" on Saydisc SD134 in Stereo. Credited to Ian Anderson with Elliot Jackson. The missing fourth track is "Shake Em On Down" which is Track 10 on the debut solo LP "Stereo Death Breakdown" credited as "Break Em Down" (see Track 10 above)

19. Friday Evening Blues
20. West Country Blues
Tracks 19 and 20 are from the 1968 UK Label Sampler LP "Blues Like Showers Of Rain" on Saydisc/Matchbox SDL 142 in Stereo – Anderson had two tracks featured on this famous Various Artists album

21. West Country Blues
22. Don't You Want To Go
23. The Inverted World
Tracks 21, 22 and 23 are from the 1968 UK LP "The Inverted World (The Country Blues Of Mike Cooper and Ian Anderson)" on Saydisc/Matchbox SDL 159in Stereo. A shared LP credited to Mike Cooper and Ian Anderson with seven songs to each artist on each side of the LP. The song "The Inverted World" is the last song by Mike Cooper on his Side 1, but it also features Ian A. Anderson in a song-writing credit and on Guitar. Three other songs (credited to Anderson) on Side 2 of that shared album were "Cottonfield Blues", "Big Road Blues" and "Tom Rushen Blues" – but these were also on the "Almost The Country Blues!" EP (Tracks 16, 17 and 18) so are not duplicated here. The final two songs on the shared "The Inverted World" LP by Ian Anderson are two Traditional Song cover versions called "Little Queen Of Spades" and "Beedle Um Bum" – both feature Anderson on Guitar and Vocals – but are not included in this set


CD2 (50:38 minutes):
1. That's No Way To Get Along [Side 1]
2. Please Re-Adjust Your Time
3. Goblets And Elms
4. Shining Grey
5. The Worm
6. Hero
7. Silent Night No. 2 [ Side 2]
8. Mr. Cornelius
9. The Maker/The Man In The High Castle/The Last Conjuring
10. Ginger Man
11. Working Man
Tracks 1 to 11 are the November 1970 UK Third Solo LP "(Royal York Crescent)" on The Village Thing VTS 3, Stereo only release credited to Ian A. Anderson. The Village Thing Records was formed by Anderson and part of the Saydisc group of labels from Gloucestershire specialising in Folk and Acoustic Blues

CD2 BONUS TRACKS:
12. Get Back Into Town (Live)
13. Sleepy Lynne
14. Internal Combustion Rag
Track 12 was recorded live at Farnham Folk & Blues Festival in September 1969 and first appeared on the May 2016 UK Expanded Edition Reissue CD "Almost The Country Blues: EPs And Extras 1966-1969" by Ian Anderson on Ghosts From The Basement GFTB 7050
Tracks 13 and 14 "Sleepy Lynne" and "Internal Combustion Rag" were recorded Autumn 1969 at Chapel Studios in London and appeared on the April 1970 UK Second Solo LP "Book Of Changes" by Ian Anderson on Fontana STL 5542 in Stereo (see also two tracks from that LP on CD1 and four more on CD3 - eight songs out of twelve in total)


CD3 (50:37 minutes): 14 tracks
1. One More Chance [Side 1]
2. Black Uncle Remus
3. Policeman's Ball
4. Edges
5. The Survivor
6. Well…All Right [Side 2]
7. Time Is Ripe
8. Wishing The World Away
9. One Too Many Mornings
10. Number 61
Tracks 1 to 10 are the December 1971 UK Fourth Solo LP "A Vulture Is Not A Bird You Can Trust" on The Village Thing VTS 9, a Stereo only release credited to Ian A. Anderson. The Village Thing Records was formed by Anderson and part of the Saydisc group of labels from Gloucestershire specialising in Folk and Acoustic Blues. All songs are Anderson originals except "Black Uncle Remus" which is a Loudon Wainwright III cover version, "Well…All Right", a Buddy Holly cover and "One Too Many Mornings", a Bob Dylan cover.

CD3 BONUS TRACKS:
11. Boof Changes
12. Anthem (You Can Go On Forever)
13. Mouse Hunt
14. Galactic Wings (And Other Tales)
Tracks 11 to 14 "Book Of Changes", "Anthem (You Can Go On Forever)", "Mouse Hunt" and "Galactic Wings (And Other Tales)" appeared on the April 1970 UK Second Solo LP "Book Of Changes" by Ian Anderson on Fontana STL 5542 in Stereo (see also two further tracks from that LP on CD1 and two more on CD2)


CD4 (50:30 minutes): 14 tracks
1. Hey Space Pilot [Side 1]
2. Marie Celeste On Down
3. Spider John
4. A Sign Of The Times
5. Paper And Smoke
6. Paint It, Black [Side 2]
7. Pretty Peggyo
8. The Western Wind
9. Out On The Side
10. Shirley Temple Meets Hawkwind
Tracks 1 to 10 are the December 1972 UK Fourth Solo LP "Singer Sleeps On As Blaze Rages" on The Village Thing VTS 18, Stereo only release credited to Ian A. Anderson. The Village Thing Records was formed by Anderson and part of the Saydisc group of labels from Gloucestershire specialising in Folk and Acoustic Blues. Les Calvert of Machine Gun and Graphite plays Bass and Organ. All tracks by Anderson except Track 6 which is a Rolling Stones cover version

CD4 BONUS TRACKS:
11. Baby Let Me Dance With You
12. Dan Scaggs
13. London Blues
14. You Can't Judge A Book By The Cover
Tracks 11 to 14 are Demos recorded by his band HOT VULTURES in 1973 – Tracks 12, 13 and 14 are Previously Unreleased – Ian A. Anderson on Guitar and Vocals with Maggie Holland on Bass – Track 12 is an Al Jones song, Track 13 is a Chris Thompson song while Track 13 is Willie Dixon cover version – the song most closely associated with Muddy Waters

The Clamshell Box Set features four Mini LP Card Repro sleeves – the albums "Stereo Death Breakdown" (June 1968 – CD1), "(Royal York Crescent)" (November 1970 – CD2), "A Vulture Is Not A Bird You Can Trust" (December 1971 – CD3) and "Singer Sleeps On As Blaze Rages" (December 1972 – CD4) – with all four discs containing copious extras (as listed above). The rear of the card sleeves also mimic original rear cover art when they can. Unmentioned on the outside tracks lists, the fifth LP "Book Of Changes" has eight of its twelve tracks spread across three CDs (not pictured in the booklet) and as you can see from the lists above – the other extras practically represent a sixth LP in terms of sheer content. The 24-Page Booklet provides a seriously indepth overview of the five or six years dealt with – ELIZABETH KINDER providing photos, memorabilia (concert posters, trade reviews, fliers) and Album/EP artwork where possible as well as interviewing Anderson for this deep dive. Page 18 for instance has Anderson with friends gathering for the Royal York Crescent cover shoot in 1970 – another photo has him with Maggie Holland in 1974 when they were called Hot Vultures – playing acoustic in 1968 on the Serpentine river watching a circle of duffle-coated admirers and so on. The final pages give album credits, tracks, production, players etc for all 4 CDs – the whole project managed by longtime associate to Cherry Red and all-round-good-guy – JOHN REED (always a name associated with thorough releases). 

And as most of the recordings are Acoustic Guitars in varying 6-and-12 string guises (lots of slide), the SIMON MURPHY Masters do a stellar job at bringing out pings and things as you travel across the huge amount of material on the four discs. My only complaint (if you could call it that) is that the Psych-Folk label in the title is what Cherry Red know will appeal to punters - but there are very few tracks I could point to displaying anything that’s Psych-Folk!

Box Sets like this allow you to dip, dive and discover - "The Worm" for instance on his third album "(Royal York Crescent)" is the kind of three-minute-plus Bongo and Acoustic Guitar funky ditty that would have not looked out of place on a Led Zeppelin or Roy Harper LP as an inbetween instrumental. "Sleepy Lynne" (another instrumental) from the 1970 "Book Of Changes" LP features Slide Acoustic that will appeal to Bryn Haworth fans. His Funky Harmonica and Fast-Strummed Acoustic cover version of the Loudon Wainwright III briar patches classic "Black Uncle Remus" is very Area Code 615 circa "Stone Fox Chase". 

CD3 offers the excellent December 1971 album "A Vulture Is Not A Bird You Can Trust" – an accomplished set of songs that opens with the melodious "One More Chance". Keith Warmington provides the Lead Harmonica for the big chiming cover of "Black Uncle Remus" – a fast off the block take on a tune that would come to define Loudon Wainwright III. Straight up Acoustic Boogie Blues comes a sliding across your speakers with the manic instrumental "Policeman’s Ball". Pretty and substantial is what you would call the band-effort of the eco-vested "The Survivor" – ruins of cities – humans like a wayward child – crops failing. A cover of the Buddy Holly classic "Well Alright" is good rather than great. Better is the well-recorded "Time Is Ripe" – almost like an acoustic interlude song on a Jethro Tull album from 1971. I really like "Wishing The World Away" – a trying-to-write-this-song melody that our hero is struggling with (go away world). Dylan gets a cover in a truly lovely and simple acoustic guitar take on "One Too Many Mornings" with John Turner providing Double-Bass notes accompaniment. The equally quiet and slyly majestic "Number 61" talks of a long blond-haired woman he worships from afar. 
Recorded in 1969, the "Book Of Change" Acoustic songs (with very clean remastered audio) featured Al Jones on Guitar, John Turner on Double Bass, Keith Christmas on Bongos with Max on Flute. The Flute and Acoustics do battle in the lovely John Martyn-esque "Anthem (You Can Go On Forever)" while a very Gordon Giltrap set of virtuoso guitar runs opens "Mouse Hunt" – a song that jaunts like its title suggests. Earth man moves out to the unknown spaces in "Galactic Wings (And Other Tales)" once again features flute from Max. Speaking of this album…

For some reason eight of the twelve songs on the Second Solo LP "Book Of Changes" from April 1970 on Fontana Records are spread across three CDs without any real reference as to why or where the other four cuts are? (see Notes on CD1, 2 and 3 above for those eight songs). Shame too that the duo of missing cuts from "The Inverted World" shared LP with Mike Cooper and the four from the "Book Of Changes" LP are not here - because there was room to include the six (one can only presume licensing difficulties). Still, what you are getting from "Please Re-Adjust Your Time: The Early Blues & Psych-Folk Years 1967-72" by Ian A. Anderson is the guts of five very hard-to-find albums in the Acoustic Folk /Acoustic Blues/Folk Psych genres and some straggler EP change into the not-so-moneyed bargain. And all of it in more than tasty sound. 

After the first two CDs of purely Folk-Acoustic and Blues - those looking for the Psych-Folk genre casually thrown into the title will be wondering when that genre shows – truthfully, I think for the most part it doesn’t. The fourth LP "Singer Sleeps On As Blaze Rages" (from December 1972) for instance with story songs like Dave Peabody’s "Spider John" and Anderson’s own "A Sign of The Times" are purely Acoustic – Jug Band at times – little Bluesy in the playing – but it sounds more Ralph McTell or John Martyn than Trees or Mellow Candle. Only on Mike Cooper’s "Paper And Smoke" does something resembling a band show – Bill Boozman on Leslie’d guitar with Mike Cooper on Slide – but again it’s more Folksy Faces than anything like Psych. There’s even a Country ye-ha shuffle to his jaunty cover of The Rolling Stones classic "Paint It, Black" – not too far from Mungo Jerry on Dawn Records. Bryn Haworth slide twelve-string fans will dig the Bluesy Traditional "Pretty Peggyo" – a tale of a Captain who falls in love with a local Louisiana beauty (Anderson is accompanied by Maggie Holland on Guitar). Even better is the echoed speaker-panned 12-string bottleneck of "The Western Wind" – a swirling number Anderson describes as a ghost story – great playing with muscular audio. Acoustics dance across both speakers for the noisy-human-race song "Shirley Temple Meets Hawkwind" – a witty ditty on travelling to Venus with the child actress possibly never flying back home.

The three 1973 Hot Vultures demos featuring a Slide 12-String Blues Traditional in the shape of "Baby Let Me Dance With You" (very professionally recorded) followed by three Previously Unreleased - a slightly rough-edged cover of the Al Jones song "Dan Scaggs" and two excellent Acoustic and Bass Guitar tales in "London Blues" (by Chris Thompson) and the Willie Dixon Chess Records R&B classic "You Can’t Judge A Book By The Cover" turned into a race-past-the-post Acoustic. Lots of great moments…

Somerset’s Ian A. Anderson (more than a few times confused with Tull’s mainman) continued in the late 70s with Folk-Blues groups like Hot Vulture, and into the Eighties with The English Country Blues Band and Tiger Moth. He even teamed up with his old mucker Mike Cooper in 1984 for the "The Continuous Preaching Blues" LP on the obscure Appaloosa Records.

But this dinky 4CD 65-Track little bruiser from Cherry Tree (part of Cherry Red) is where his journey started. "Please Re-Adjust Your Time: The Early Blues & Psych-Folk Years 1967-72" by Ian A. Anderson will not be for everyone, but those in love with Folk, Acoustic Blues and a few genre side-dishes along the way will eat it up. Top marks to all involved…

INDEX - Entries and Artist Posts in Alphabetical Order