"...The More You Get, The More You Want..."
Rinse-haired geezers like me
(62 and still no criminal record) will remember with a fuzzyheaded glow and a
shape-shifting shuffle in the trouser area SAMPLER ALBUMS of the late 60s and
early 70ts.
They were a great way of
getting to know tons of new music/genres for next-to-zip amounts of cash. One
of these is the now-forgotten "El Pea" double-album from June 1971 on
Island IDLP 1 – an Island/Chrysalis Records twofer pitched at £1.99 with a
great big green pea on the cover. The double-album and its distinctive artwork
were supposed to plug 1971 Rock Music and Folk Rock on both conjoined labels.
But instead of introducing fans to the likes of Nick Drake, Traffic, Jethro Tull, King Crimson, Sandy Denny, Quintessence, Amazing Blondel, Mick Abrahams, Free, Mott The Hoople etc – it became infamous for its rubbish plastic inner holder sleeves with foam lips which were supposed to clean the LPs as you took them out - but just ended up scratching the palm-tree label vinyls to buggery (a great compilation of new music ruined by gimmicky).
But instead of introducing fans to the likes of Nick Drake, Traffic, Jethro Tull, King Crimson, Sandy Denny, Quintessence, Amazing Blondel, Mick Abrahams, Free, Mott The Hoople etc – it became infamous for its rubbish plastic inner holder sleeves with foam lips which were supposed to clean the LPs as you took them out - but just ended up scratching the palm-tree label vinyls to buggery (a great compilation of new music ruined by gimmicky).
Amidst its many other
presentational sins was also Side 1's entry for "Song For Suzie" by
Heads Hands & Feet. It advertised beneath, that you could find this
wickedly good song on their Island Records debut album ILPS 9149. But when
punters went looking for the seven-minute opus, the 11-track UK self-titled LP
hadn't got the song - nowhere to be seen. This is because their debut
"Heads Hands & Feet" had been a 17-track double-album in the USA
issued in April 1971 on Capitol Records (containing that song) - but when their
debut was eventually issued June 1971 in the UK, Island didn't want to chance a
double, so edited it down to an 11-Track single LP minus of course the
"Song For Suzie" track (cut probably due to time restrictions). In
fact when Universal issued the "Strangely Strange But Oddly Normal: An
Island Anthology 1967-1972" 3CD Box Set of Remasters in 2005 – the booklet
compounded the mistake again by saying you could get the song on the UK LP.
Well, you can't. But here is a place where you can...
Which brings us via a very
circuitous route to this rather splendid fully loaded 2014 Prog Temple CD
reissue - finally offering fans the Original 17 Track U.S. Version of Heads
Hands & Feet as a CD Remaster for the first time. There is a lot to wade
through, so on to the head-bangers...
UK released 1 September 2014
– "Heads Hands & Feet" by HEADS HANDS & FEET on Prog Temple
PTCD8029 (Barcode 4753314802919) offers the Original 17 Track U.S. Version on
CD for the first time. This 15-Track CD (two of the songs have two parts, hence
the 17) plays out as follows (77:55 minutes):
1. I'm In Need Of Your Help
[Side 1]
2. Send Me A Wire
3. Look At The World It's
Changing / 3a. You Because You Know Me
4. Green Liquor
5. Country Boy [Side 2]
6. Tryin' To Put Me On
7. I Wish You Knew Me
8. Devil's Elbow
9. Pete Might Spook The
Horses [Side 3]
10. Everybody's Hustlin' /
10a. Hang Me, Dang Me
11. Delaware
12. The More You Get, The
More You Want [Side 4]
13. Song For Suzie
14. Tirabad
15. Little Bit Lonely
Tracks 1 to 15 are the April
1971 US Debut Double-Album "Heads Hands & Feet" on Capitol
Records SVBB-680. It was issued June 1971 in the UK with the same name on
Island Records ILPS 9149 as a Single LP with 11 Tracks. That British album can be sequenced from this
2014 CD Remaster as follows:
Side 1: Tracks 1, 2, 7, 10,
10a and 8 (six tracks)
Side 2: Tracks 5, 6, 11, 9
and 15 (five tracks)
HEADS HANDS & FEET were:
TONY COLTON – Lead Vocals
ALBERT LEE – Lead and Rhythm
Guitars, Keyboards, Vibes and Vocals
RAY SMITH – Lead Guitar and
Vocals
MIKE O'NEILL – Guitars,
Vibes, Keyboards and Vocals
CHAS HODGES – Bass, Banjo,
Fiddle and Vocals
PETE GAVIN – Drums,
Percussion, Vibes and Vocals
Along with Jerry Donahue and
Pat Donaldson (later of Fotheringay and Fairport Convention fame) – Tony
Colton, Albert Lee, Ray Smith and Drummer Pete Gavin had been with the group
Poet And The One Man Band for their lone self-titled album on Verve Forecast
SVLP 6012 – released April 1969. Mike O’Neill had been part of The John Barry
Seven and Chas Hodges had been with Cliff Bennett and The Rebel Rousers
(amongst others) and would of course go on to be one half of Chas & Dave.
And even though he'd left to join Sandy Denny in Fotheringay, Pat Donaldson had
been songwriting with them so long that he is listed as the third writer of
"I'm In Need Of Your Help" alongside Tony Colton and Ray Smith
(principal songwriters on almost every song).
As a sort of newly formed
supergroup, there was a lot of major label interest, and as the eight-page
FRASER MASSEY liner-notes explain (with the aid of Tony Colton) – the British
boys were wined and dined at the legendary Troubadour club in Hollywood, then
signed for very big money at the time to the established Capitol Records in the
USA - to be handled by the hipper independent label Island Records in the UK.
On this 2014 Prog Temple CD it clearly states DIGITALLY REMASTERED but there is
no name associated. No problems because the audio throughout is really great -
fantastically alive and without being over-trebled too. Nice job done. Let's
get to the music...
Recorded between November
1970 and February 1971 and Engineered by EDDIE OFFORD of Yes fame - the
double-album splurge begins with "I'm In Need Of Your Help" - a
rapido Funk-Rock chaser that even feels a tad Prog as it begins. Better is
"Send Me A Wire" where I always felt their strengths lay - a sort of
Rock-Funk groover that chugs along very nicely - put out the smoke - put out
the fire - can't get any higher. I've included it on some compilations of mine
where I dig Rock on a Funky tip. We're then hit with a seven and a half minute
two-parter - (3) "Look At The World It's Changing - and (3a) "You
Because You Know Me". The first part is a dreadfully syrupy love song that
overdoes the melodrama whilst part two goes all acoustic Simon & Garfunkel
which is only a little better. Side 1 ends with the boozy swagger of the
tasting-fine "Green Liquor" - a sort of precursor in song style to
their fabulous single "Warming Up The Band".
Side 2 of the American
double also opens Side 2 of the single British LP - a cotton-picker horse and
cart romp non-surprisingly called "Country Boy" - and again amazing
clarity in the Remaster. That's followed by the Dobro and Fiddle Country Blues
of the excellent "Tryin' To Put Me On" - a fave amongst fans - put
this one in the steel house. "I Wish You Knew Me" opens on an
acoustic guitar flourish only to be followed by a wall of harmonising vocals -
a sort of Beach Boys meets Bronco moment (gorgeous remaster too). A Methodist
Minister calls on our vocalist and asks his domination - trying to convert the
Rock 'n' Roll man away from the "Devil's Elbow" - though even despite
the mellow feel of the track - I think the preacher has his work cut out for
him.
Side 3 opens with "Pete
Might Spook The Horses" - a drum-driven rocker co-written by Colton and
Smith with sticks-man Pete Gavin. Again the Remaster leaps out of the speakers
as PG whacks his kit to the accompaniment of funky chugging guitars from the
boys (shine on sunshine). Another countrified two-parter follows – Uncle Joe
hustling the bar and everything for that matter (including his kids) in (10)
"Everybody's Hustlin'" - while things get funky-rock again with the
rolling across my mind (10a) "Hang Me, Dang Me". And again another
great audio spread. Side 3 ends with five minutes of piano-peace in
"Delaware" – probably the prettiest song on the album – lines down in
Utah – raining in Delaware – still things are good.
Side 4 gives us
seven-minutes of the J.J. Cale Tony Joe White Vocal stylee Bass-Funky "The
More You Get, The More You Want". Unfortunately UK fans lost on this one
(wasn't on the single LP) and what a loss. Our boy is looking for some Hookfoot
– servicing another turnstile to keep that hooch flowing and the girls by the
bar rolling their eyes. This wickedly groovy funky-as-a-tweeter
Swamp-Country-Rock tune was Heads Hands & Feet stock in trade – sexy-cool
flicking guitar work from Albert Lee and fantastic wild Alto Sax soloing from
guest musician Elton Dean. What a tour de force, and for me, a definite
highlight on the album. That is then followed by the epic Moody Blues-sounding
"Song For Suzie" - a prayer ballad for a lost lady's peace of mind.
The Little Feat guitar boogie of "Tirabad" and the Spanish acoustic
of "Little Bit Lonely" bring a big album to a quietly majestic end.
It's not all magic - but damn - when they hit that groove - they were so damn
good.
Heads Hands & Feet would
issue their second studio album "Tracks" in late April 1972 on Island
ILPS 9185 (June 1972 in the USA on Capitol Records ST-11051) and a final UK
studio set called "Old Soldiers Never Die" in March 1973 – newly
signed to Atlantic Records for K 40465 – but all to no avail. Not even the
wickedly good "Warming Up The Band" stand-alone single broke the
charts for them - when it should have (both it and its non-album B-side are
featured as Bonus Tracks on the "Tracks...Plus" CD reissue - see my
review).
England's Heads, Hands &
Feet are a footnote now in the history of Seventies Rock Music - but they're
remembered with affection for a reason and the better tracks on this
wicked-sounding 2LPs-onto-1CD Remaster prove why. A very cool little reissue
really and I'd love to see someone tackle all three of their Seventies albums
in a mini box set with Extras - and right soon...