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Showing posts with label JAN AKKERMAN [of Focus] with KAZ LUX - "Tabernakel/Eli" (October 2015 Beat Goes On Reissue – 2LPs onto 1CD – Andrew Thompson Remasters). Show all posts
Showing posts with label JAN AKKERMAN [of Focus] with KAZ LUX - "Tabernakel/Eli" (October 2015 Beat Goes On Reissue – 2LPs onto 1CD – Andrew Thompson Remasters). Show all posts

Monday 18 November 2019

"Tabernakel/Eli" by JAN AKKERMAN [of Focus] with KAZ LUX - Albums from 1974 and 1977 featuring Bassist Tim Bogert and Drummer Carmine Appice (October 2015 Beat Goes On Reissue – 2LPs onto 1CD – Andrew Thompson Remasters) - A Review by Mark Barry...





This Review And Many More Are Available In My E-BOOK on Amazon 
PROG ROCK, PSYCH, AVANT GARDE 
And Other Genres Thereabouts
All entries taken from the discs themselves 
(No Cut And Paste Crap)


"...A Galliard..."

Virtuoso guitarist JAN AKKERMAN made his name as the principal axeman for the Dutch Prog Rock group FOCUS – a band that many's a spotty teenager bought on Polydor Records back in the early 70ts (especially 1971's "Moving Waves" and 1972's epic double album "Focus III"). After a few belated LP releases featuring 60ts material on Imperial and Harvest – his 3rd solo album "Tabernakel" from early 1974 on Atlantic Records showed where his heart really lay – ancient songs played on ancient instruments but in a very Classical/Seventies Prog Rock kind of way (Jeff Beck's musical buddies Tim Bogert and Carmine Appice guest on Bass and Drums on two tracks). 

Akkerman even returns to his old Focus haunts with a new version of their instrumental hit – "House Of The King" - the B-side of "Sylvia" in December 1972. Coupled with a later album set called "Eli" that he did with the Dutch Blues vocalist Kazimir Lux in 1977 – this beautifully transferred Beat Goes On CD offers fans both albums in their entirety. Here are the lute-playing Minstrels in the Gallery...

UK released October 2015 – "Tabernakel/Eli" by JAN AKKERMAN and KAZ LUX on Beat Goes On BGOCD 1208 (Barcode 5017261212085) is a 2LPs onto 1CD Reissue and Remaster that plays out as follows (76:22 minutes):

1. Britannia by John Dowland
2. Coranto For Mrs. Murcott by Francis Pilkington
3. The Earl Of Derby, His Galliard by John Dowland
4. House Of The King
5. A Galliard by Anthonie Holborne
6. A Galliard by John Dowland
7. A Pavan by Thomas Morley
8. Javeh
9. A Fantasy by Laurencini Of Rome [Side 2]
10. Lammy
(i) I Am
(ii) Asleep, Half Asleep, Half Awake
(iii) She Is
(iv) Lammy, We Are
(v) The Last Will And Testament
(vi) Amen
Tracks 1 to 10 are the album "Tabernakel" – released January 1974 in the UK on Atlantic K 40522 and February 1974 in the USA on Atlantic SD 7032. Bass and Drums by Tim Bogert and Carmine Appice on Track 4 and 10.

11. Eli
12. Guardian Angel
13. Tranquillizer
14. Can't Fake A Good Thing
15. There He Still Goes [Side 2]
16. Strindberg
17. Wings Of Strings
18. Naked Actress
19. Fairytale
Tracks 11 to 19 are the album "Eli" by JAN AKKERMAN & KAZ LUX – released January 1977 in the UK on Atlantic K 50320 and in the USA on Atlantic SD 18210

There’s the card slipcase on the outside that lends these Beat Goes On CD reissues a little class – and on the inside a 16-page booklet with full album credits, some black and white photos and new liner notes on Akkerman and the albums by noted writer NEIL DANIELS. The gorgeous (if not a teensy bit hissy) Audio is courtesy of new 2015 ANDREW THOMPSON Remasters licensed from WEA. Not surprising therefore given the purity of the instruments and the air around them (lots of acoustic madrigal strumming) that the Geoffrey Haslam original production values get to shine. This is a lovely sounding CD – and the combo of high-strung guitars and orchestral arrangements was always going to impress.

Firstly - the album "Tabernakel" isn't "Hocus Pocus" or even "Sylvia" - those looking for that should revert to the Focus catalogue. "Tabernakel” features instrumentals hankering back to ye Olde Englande – madrigals and galliards – beautifully played and produced. Both "Britannia" and "The Earl Of Derby" show his amazing playing credentials straight away and impressive they are too. Despite probably seeming like a good idea at the time - there's a rather pointless and not very good 'guitars and strings' cover version of the Focus hit "House Of The King" - the first of two tunes on the album to feature Jeff Beck's regular sidemen – Bassist Tim Bogert and Drummer Carmine Appice (the other is the epic "Lammy"). Far prettier is the simple acoustic strumming of two jolly ancient England pieces - "A Galliard by Anthonie Holborne" and "A Galliard by John Dowland".

"A Pavan by Thomas Morley" features the most exquisite acoustic guitar playing anchored and beautifully accompanied by a full string section of maybe 15 musicians (concert master Gene Orloff). The same lush orchestra sophistication applies to the Side 1 finisher "Javeh" – only this time with a more overtly Spanish flamenco feel in between the swooning Oboe and Violins. But Side 2 is dominated by the six-part "Lammy" which runs to just over 14 minutes. Bogert and Appice add rhythm spunk to the centre portions and Akkerman plays a mean Funk and Prog Guitar and even a very cool Lute made to sound somehow like a Sitar. During the Guitar/Drums battle before that huge organ and chorus of ELP doomy voices comes in – "Lammy" is Seventies Prog Rock at its very best.

But all of the goodwill built up by the accomplished "Tabernakel" LP goes out the Proggy window with the mostly mediocre and confusing "Eli" album where Akkerman lets Dutch vocalist Kazimir Lux loose on almost all of the songs to largely awful results. They also try to Funk things up all over the place but in most cases (not all) the record just fails to ignite in any real way. Lux has a good voice rather than a great one - when what was needed was Joe Cocker – so no amount of echo on "Eli" is going to save the song. The almost spoken "Strindberg" is ruined by his sub Nilsson nasally vocals and a weirdly poor production - especially after the spectacular "Tabernakel" LP. The fusion-funk of "Guardian Angel" at least has a good vocal while the slinky "Tranquillizer" trundles along with treated guitars that amble instead of impressing. It's not all bad - that old playing magic gets to shine on the lovely "Wings Of Strings" while Lux's own "Can't Fake A Good Time" is probably the best track on the album – properly funky like late 70ts Robin Trower. But the album ends on another ambling instrumental called "Fairytale" which is pleasant at best.

For me that 1977 LP seems out of place here and kind of lets the audio side down too (iffy Production) – but fans will absolutely love the "Tabernakel" LP on CD with such classy presentation too. Worth the price of admission alone I think...

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