Amazon Music Bestsellers and Deals

Showing posts with label Mick Taylor. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mick Taylor. Show all posts

Monday, 18 November 2019

"So Many Roads: An Anthology 1964-1974" by JOHN MAYALL including tracks from the albums "John Mayall & The Bluesbreakers" (1965), "Blues Breakers" (1966), "Raw Blues", "A Hard Road" and "Crusade" (1967), "Bare Wires" and "Blues From Laurel Canyon" (1968), "The Turning Point" (1969), "Empty Rooms" and "USA Union" (1970), "Back To The Roots" (1971 2LP set) and more - featuring Mick Taylor, Jack Bruce, Eric Clapton, Peter Green, Mick Fleetwood, Steve Winwood, Keef Hartley, Dick Heckstall-Smith, Freddie Robinson, Charles Owens, Blue Mitchell and more (July 2010 Universal/Decca 4CD Book Set – Paschal Byrne Remasters) - A Review by Mark Barry...

 



This Review and Over 384 More Like It
Are Available In My E-Book 
 
GIMME SHELTER!
CLASSIC 1960s ROCK ON CD 
And Other Genres Thereabouts 
 
Your All-Genres Guide To 
Exceptional Reissues and Remasters 
All Reviews From The Discs 
No Need To be Nervous!
(No Cut and Paste Crap)

<iframe style="width:120px;height:240px;" marginwidth="0" marginheight="0" scrolling="no" frameborder="0" src="//ws-eu.amazon-adsystem.com/widgets/q?ServiceVersion=20070822&OneJS=1&Operation=GetAdHtml&MarketPlace=GB&source=ss&ref=as_ss_li_til&ad_type=product_link&tracking_id=mabasreofcdbl-21&language=en_GB&marketplace=amazon&region=GB&placement=B013TDUC2K&asins=B013TDUC2K&linkId=573f2e449223d6ca3608be4714bc08db&show_border=

"…Walking On Sunset…Never Reach The End…"

"So Many Roads: An Anthology 1964-1974" is a long overdue 4CD 75-Track Book Set for England's Blues Rock maverick JOHN MAYALL. There's a huge trawl of great stuff on here so let's get to the blues breakers and shakers right away...

UK released July 2010 - "So Many Roads: An Anthology 1964-1974" by JOHN MAYALL on Universal/Decca 532 764-2 (Barcode 600753276426) plays out as follows...

Disc 1 (78:11 minutes):
1. Crawling Up A Hill
2. Mr. James (1 and 2 are A & B-sides of a May 1964 UK 7" single on Decca F 11900)
3. When I'm Gone
4. R&B Time
5. Runaway
6. What's The Matter With You (3 to 6 from the March 1965 UK LP "John Mayall & The Bluesbreakers" on Decca LK 4680)
7. Crocodile Walk
8. Blues City Shake Down (7 and 8 are A&B-sides of an April 1965 UK 7" single on Decca F 12120)
9. I'm Your Witchdoctor
10. Telephone Blues (9 and 10 are the A&B-sides of an October 1965 UK 7" single on Immediate IM012)
11. On Top Of The World (first appeared on the December 1967 UK LP compilation "Blues Anytime Vol.2" on Immediate IMCP 105)
12. They Call It Stormy Monday (part of the 1969 UK compilation LP "Looking Back" on Decca SKL 5010)
13. Have You Ever Loved A Woman (part of the 1977 "Primal Solos" UK compilation LP on London LC 50003)
14. All Your Love
15. Double Crossing Time
16. Steppin' Out
17. What'd I Say
18. Key To Love
19. Parchman Farm (14 to 19 are from the July 1966 UK LP "Blues Breakers" - John Mayall with Eric Clapton on Decca LK 4804)
20. Looking back
21. So Many Roads (20 and 21 are the A&B-sides of an October 1966 UK 7" single on Decca F 12506)
22. Long Night (from the January 1967 UK LP "Raw Blues" on Ace Of Clubs SCL 1220)
23. Dust My Blues
24. The Stumble (23 and 24 are from the February 1967 UK LP "A Hard Road" on Decca SKL 4853)
[Notes: 1 to 11, 14 to 21 are in MONO - all others are STEREO; CD1 also has an uncredited Track 25 which is simply called "Title 25"]

Disc 2 (76:44 minutes):
1. You Don't Love Me
2. It's Over
3. The Super-Natural (1 to 3 are from the February 1967 UK LP "A Hard Road" on Decca SKL 4853)
4. Sittin' In The Rain (A-side to a January 1967 UK 7" single on Decca F 12545)
5. Ridin' On The L&N
6. All My Life (5 and 6 are from a January 1967 UK EP "John Mayall Bluesbreakers with Paul Butterfield" on Decca DFE 8673)
7. Double Trouble (A-side of a June 1967 UK 7" single on Decca F 12621)
8. Suspicions (Part One) (A-side of an October 1967 UK 7" single on Decca F 12684)
9. Oh Pretty Woman
10. Snowy Wood
11. Checkin' Up On My Baby (9 to 11 are from the September 1967 UK LP "Crusade" by John Mayall's Bluesbreakers)
12. No More Tears
13. Brand New Start (12 and 13 are from the November 1967 UK LP "The Blues Alone" on Ace Of Clubs SCL 1243)
14. Picture On The Wall (A-side of a February 1968 UK 7" single on Decca F 12732)
15. Look In The Mirror
16. No Reply
17. Hartley Quits (15 to 17 are from the June 1968 UK LP "Bare Wires" on Decca SKL 4945)
18. 2401 (A-side of a November 1968 UK 7" single on Decca F 12846)
19. Walking On Sunset
20. Medicine Man
21. Miss James
22. Fly Tomorrow (19 to 22 are from the November 1968 UK LP "Blues From Laurel canyon" on Decca SKL 4972)
[Notes: 4 to 8, 12 to 14 and 18 are MONO - all others are STEREO]

Disc 3 (75:38 minutes):
1. The Laws Must Change
2. California
3. Room To Move (1 to 3 are from the November 1969 UK LP "The Turning Point" on Polydor 583 571)
4. Sleeping By Her Side (recorded at the Fillmore East 12 July 1969 - Previously Unreleased)
5. Don't Waste My Time
6. Something New
7. Waiting For The Right Time
8. Counting The Days (5 to 8 are from the April 1970 UK LP "Empty Rooms" on Polydor 583 580)
9. Off The Road
10. Crying
11. Nature's Disappearing (9 to 11 are from the November 1970 UK LP "USA Union" on Polydor 2425 020)
12. Accidental Suicide
13. Prisons On The Road
14. Unanswered Questions (12 to 14 are from the June 1971 UK 2LP Set "Back To The Roots" on Polydor 2657 005)

Disc 4 (77:04 minutes):
1. Television Eye (from the June 1971 UK 2LP Set "Back To The Roots" on Polydor 2657 005)
2. Memories
3. Nobody Cares (2 and 3 are from the 1971 UK album "Memories" on Polydor 2425 085)
4. Good Time Boogie
5. Got To Be This Way
6. Mess Around
7. Country Road (4 to 7 are `live' from the 1972 UK LP "Jazz Blues Fusion" on Polydor 2425 103)
8. Moving On
9. Things Go Wrong
10. High Pressure Living (8 to 10 are from the 1973 UK LP "Moving On" on Polydor 2391 047)
11. Driving `Til The Break Of Day
12. Burning Sun (11 and 12 are from the 1973 UK LP "Ten Years Are Gone" on Polydor 2683 036)
13. Little Kitten
14. Gasoline Blues (13 and 14 are from the 1974 UK LP "The Latest Edition" on Polydor 2391 141)

The attached 38-page colour booklet is a treasure of great photos (many unpublished until now), album sleeves, concert posters, trade adverts for singles on Decca and brilliant liner-notes by MARK POWELL (has contributed to major Universal box set projects and Esoteric CD reissues). All the big musician names that travelled through the Mayall catalyst camp are in here too - Eric Clapton, Peter Green, John McVie, Mick Taylor, Paul Butterfield, Jack Bruce, Aynsley Dunbar, Hughie Flint, Keef Hartley, Don "Sugarcane" Harris, Johnny Almond, Roger Dean and a whole plethora of other luminaries too numerous to mention.

But for me the big news is the fabulous PASCHAL BYRNE remasters carried out at The Audio Archiving Company in London from original master tapes. I've got most of the important Sixties albums on great Decca remasters ("Blues Breakers", "Bare Wires" and the mighty "Blues From Laurel Canyon") - but what a blast to hear Disc 3 and 4 where it stretches into uncharted remasters - the Seventies. I love the weary piano misery of "Nobody Cares" (from 1971's "Memories") and the live slinky Blues of "Country Road" with a band that's cooking in front of an appreciative crowd (dig Clifford Soloman on Sax). And Laurel Canyon's 9-minute "Fly Tomorrow" is trippy genius - featuring superb Mick Taylor guitar work (later with The Stones) while Colin Allen gives it some California Tabla and cool vibes. It also sounds glorious. You get a little Jazz Blues on "High Pressure Living" and it ends on the funky "Gasoline Blues" bemoaning the foreign oil crisis ("I'm stuck out here in the Hollywood hills...waiting in line `til your engine croaks...").

"I'll be way up in the sky...", John Mayall sings on "Fly Tomorrow". If you want to start your journey - then I'd advise you begin your trip with him to the many varieties of The Blues right here...

Friday, 1 April 2016

"North Country Maid/Loveinamist" by MARIANNE FAITHFULL (April 2016 UK Beat Goes On Records (BGO) Compilation - 2LPs Remastered Onto 2CDs with Bonus Tracks) - A Review by Mark Barry...



"...First Time Ever I Saw Your Face..." 

Dogged by decades (not years) of horrible drug dependency and personal trauma – the once high-profile chanteuse of swinging 60ts London (complete with boyfriend Mick Jagger on her arms) has seen life's up and downs more than most and miraculously survived. Homelessness at least twice, the loss of a daughter, physical injury under the influence, croaking on US National TV in front of millions, the glorious comebacks in the 80ts to fantastic collaborative work in the 90ts and 00ts - and all of it while battling a lifelong addiction that threatened to literally overwhelm at any minute. Marianne Faithfull has been there and done that. Aged 70 in December 2016 - by the grace of God and good friends - it's clearly a minor miracle that the Hampstead Lass is alive at all.

Which brings us to these two forgotten but period-cool slices of Folk-Rock (two of three albums she made for England's Decca Records in the 60ts) – "North Country Maid" (April 1966) and "Loveinamist" (March 1967) - bolstered up here with six interesting and relevant bonus tracks. Beautiful and tender traditionals mix with smartly chosen contemporary cover versions of the day (Donovan, Jackie DeShannon, Bob Lind, Tim Hardin et al) – each nestling nicely alongside tinges of hippy Acid Folk akin to The Incredible String Band. It's all up for our digital delectation on this superb and timely BGO 2CD reissue/remaster. Here are the battered and bruised details...

UK released Friday 1 April 2016 (8 April 2016 in the USA) – "North Country Maid/Loveinamist" by MARIANNE FAITHFULL on Beat Goes On BGOCD 1227 (Barcode 5017261212276) features Remasters of 2LPs onto 2CDs with six Bonus Tracks and plays out as follows:

Disc 1 (42:51 minutes):
1. Green Are Your Eyes [Bert Jansch song]
2. Scarborough Fair [Traditional arranged by Jon Mark]
3. Cockleshells [Mick Taylor song, Rolling Stones guitarist]
4. The Last Thing On My Mind [Tom Paxton song]
5. The First Time I Ever Saw Your Face [Ewan MacColl song]
6. Sally Free And Easy [Cyril Tawney song]
7. Sunny Goodge Street [Donovan song] – Side 2
8. How Should I Your True Love Know [Traditional arranged by Jon Mark]
9. She Moved Thru' The Fair [Traditional Irish Ballad adapted by Herbert Hughes with lyrics by Padraic Colum, arranged by Jon Mark]
10. North Country Maid [Traditional arranged by Jon Mark]
11. Lullaby [Jon Mark song]
12. Wild Mountain Thyme [McPeake Family song arranged by Jon Mark]
Tracks 1 to 12 are her 4th album "North Country Maid" – released April 1966 in the UK on Decca LK 4778 (Mono only)

BONUS TRACKS:
13. The Most Of What Is Least [Donovan song]
14. Come My Way [Jon Mark song]
15. Mary Ann [Traditional song]
Tracks 13 to 15 first appeared as Previously Unreleased outtakes from the sessions on the August 1990 UK CD Reissue/Remaster of "North Country Maid" on Deram 820-631-2. "Come My Way" and "Mary Ann" appeared on the 1965 American compilation LP from "Go Away From My World" on London Records (see PS below).

Disc 2 (48:24 minutes):
1. Yesterday [Beatles song]
2. You Can't Go Where The Roses Go [Jackie DeShannon song]
3. Our Love Has Gone [Chris Andrews song]
4. Don't Make Promises You Can't Keep [Tim Hardin song]
5. In The Night Time [Donovan song]
6. This Little Bird [John D. Loudermilk song]
7. Ne Me Quitte Pas [Jacque Brel song]
8. Counting [Bob Lind song] – Side 2
9. Reason To Believe [Tim Hardin song]
10. Coquillage [French sung version of the Mick Taylor song "Cockleshells" on "North Country Maid"]
11. With You In Mind [Jackie DeShannon song]
12. Young Girl Blues [Donovan song]
13. Good Guy [Donovan song]
14. I Have A Love [Leonard Bernstein/Stephen Sondheim song from "West Side Story"]
Tracks 1 to 14 are her 5th album "Loveinamist" – released March 1967 in the UK on Decca LK 4854 (Mono) and SKL 4854 (Stereo) - Stereo mix used

BONUS TRACKS:
15. Hang On To A Dream [Tim Hardin song]
16. Rosie, Rosie [Kinks song]
17. Monday, Monday [Mamas and Papas song]
Tracks 15 and 16 appeared as Bonus Tracks on the October 1988 UK CD Remaster of "Loveinamist" on Decca 820 632-2. Track 17 appeared on the American compilation LP "Forever Faithfull…" in November 1966 (see below)

As always with BGO - the outer card-slipcase gives the release a classy feel – the 16-page booklet with new JOHN O'REGAN liner notes features basic album credits, some photos and an in-depth musical history of Marianne Faithfull up to 2016 (the details are many and Internet referenced). But the big news is new 2016 ANDREW THOMPSON Remasters that sound great – warm and clear without over-trebling it.

Produced by Mike Leander, Engineered by Gus Dudgeon and with song arrangements and playing by Jon Mark - the largely acoustic and overtly Folky "North Country Maid" album benefits greatly from a CD Remaster. Those Jon Mark arranged high strung Spanish guitars on "Scarborough Fair" and "North Country Maid", the gorgeous quivering vocals and lonesome cello note on Ewan MacColl's "The First Time Ever I Saw Your Face" and the ISB Dulcimer and Sitar flourishes on "Wild Mountain Thyme" and "She Moved Thru' The Fair" - all sound clear and full. Originally appearing as session outtakes on the 1990 Deram CD in the UK - even the three bonus cuts are good. A thumping double-bass along with guitars and clavinet fill "The Most of What Is Least" (a Donovan cover) – while the audio on Jon Mark's outtake "Come My Way" is stupendous – beautifully rendered. "Mary Ann" (not the Ray Charles Atlantic Records hit from 1956) is a Traditional about a ship waiting while he wishes his love 'fare thee well my own true love' – lovely acoustic guitars and double bass. Rolling Stones fans will love Mick Taylor's "Cockleshells" which he arranged and played on too (it appears in French language form on "Loveinamist" – see Track 10) – a very pretty Acoustic song that feels like a long lost classic. There is a small amount of instrument distortion on occasion and evident hiss on the quiet "Lullaby" and the Harmonica wails in "Sunny Goodge Street" but it's never too much to distract on any. Overall the album holds up well with her unique Nico-esque quivering vocals mightily impressive throughout (and those genuinely excellent bonuses are welcome inclusions).

On the evidence of "In The Night Time", "Young Girl Blues" and "Good Guy" – Marianne probably would have made a masterpiece just recording DONOVAN covers. There seemed to be something in his rhythms, words and ideas that made her the perfect conduit. Another sympathetic writer who gets two nods is the lovely Jackie DeShannon – "With You In Mind" being a gorgeous mid-tempo highlight on here – double-vocals, wind instruments and even a harp make it 'so' Sixties cool. "You Can't Go Where The Roses Go" is another sweetie – even if its strings are a tad syrupy. Her second stab at Mick Taylor's "Cockleshells" is a skittish French language version called "Coquilages" which has a very baroque feel and lightness of touch (wicked string arrangements) is arguably better than the English variant. "Counting" was a Bob Lind cover that originally appeared on his "Don't Be Concerned" LP in 1966 on World Pacific Records – the building melodrama features all manner of instruments – especially a crashing drums and string section – the Remaster handling the lot really rather well. Almost from another world compared to the mellow baroque 60ts feel of what's on the rest of the album (like she discovered electrified Bob Dylan) – Tim Hardin's "Don't Make Promises" gets funked up and feels like Fred Neil having a bit of a wig out. It all ends on a string and oboe version of the "West Side Story" classic – "I Have A Love" where despite the heavy-on-the-tears arrangement - her vocal sincerity can be felt in an impressive vocal performance. Far better are the two beautifully recorded bonus cuts – Tim Hardin's "Hang On To A Dream" and The Kinks "Rosie Won't You Please Come Home" (from 1966's "Face To Face"). She retitles the Ray Davies pining melody "Rosie, Rosie" and again gives it a fast pace.

So there you have it – two forgotten and expensive platters to acquire on original vinyl. It’s a damn shame BGO didn't include those tracks that would have made the US compilations possible to sequence – but alas (see below). Having said that - "North Country Maid/Loveinamist" is a superb addition to Beat Goes On's roster of quality CD remasters.

"…I am but a young girl working my way through the phoneys…" Marianne Faithfull sang on "Young Girl Blues" - already beautiful in her world-weary way. Nothing false about the excellence on offer here though…

PS:
Before either "North Country Maid" or "Loveinamist" came out in the UK on Decca - American fans will know that both of these British albums along with her other Decca platter "Marianne Faithful' from May 1965 were amalgamated into two London Records compilations for the US market – "Go Away From My World" in December 1965 and "Faithfull Forever…" in November 1966. Using this 2CD set – US fans can program 'most' of the first album and 'some' of the second LP as follows:

"Go Away From My World" (US Compilation LP), December 1965 on London LL 3452 (Mono) and PS 452 (Stereo)
Stereo mix is used
Side 1:
1. Go Away From My World
2. Yesterday [Disc 2, Track 1]
3. Come My Way [Disc 1, Track 14]
4. Last Thing On My Mind [Disc 1, Track 4]
5. How Should True Love [Disc 1, Track 8]
6. Wild Mountain Thyme [Disc 1, Track 12]
Side 2:
1. Summer Nights
2. Mary Ann [Disc 1, Track 15]
3. Scarborough Fair [Disc 1, Track 2]
4. Lullaby [Disc 1, Track 11]
5. North Country Maid [Disc 1, Track 10]
6. Sally Free And Easy [Disc 1, Track 6]

"Forever Faithfull…" (US Compilation LP), November 1966 on London LL 3482 (Mono) and London PS 482 (Stereo)
Stereo mix used
Side 1:
1. Counting [Disc 2, Track 8]
2. Tomorrow's Calling
3. The First Time [Disc 1, Track 5]
4. With You In Mind [Disc 2, Track 11]
5. In The Night Time [Disc 2, Track 5]
6. Ne Me Quitte Pass (Love Theme From "Umbrellas Of Cherbourg") [Disc 2, Track 7]
Side 2:
1. Monday, Monday [Disc 2, Track 17]
2. Some Other Spring
3. That's Right Baby
4. Lucky Girl
5. I'm The Sky
6. I Have A Love [Disc 2, Track 14]

This Review and a huge 390 More Like It 
Are Available in my Amazon e-Book
(Regularly Updated)

GIMME SHELTER!
Classic 60ts Rock on CD
And Other Genres Thereabouts
Exceptional CD Reissues/Remasters

All Info from the Discs themselves
A Monster 3,194 e-Pages to read/download and all for £4.95

https://www.amazon.co.uk/CLASSIC-1960s-MUSIC-Exceptional-Remasters-ebook/dp/B013TDUC2K?crid=1XBWM6YNVAYU2&dib=eyJ2IjoiMSJ9.PRF7gl_yfoiCtufTL_t-3Q.WKrZUgsOGTm_kF8ds-ZgvvsOfLgU8-aneLZwzHqFWLM&dib_tag=se&keywords=gimme+shelter+CD+mark&qid=1738364281&sprefix=gimme+shelter+cd+mark%2Caps%2C92&sr=8-1&linkCode=ll1&tag=mabasreofcdbl-21&linkId=522bce37e302a5cbd47788a6f8e5704e&language=en_GB&ref_=as_li_ss_tl

INDEX - Entries and Artist Posts in Alphabetical Order