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Thursday, 21 July 2016

"Fun House" by THE STOOGES [featuring IGGY POP] (2005 Elektra/Rhino 'Deluxe Edition' 2CD Remasters) - A Review by Mark Barry...





"...Instant Mayhem..."

Rock has produced its fair share of talented loony bins - wild men born to upset and excite - Jerry Lee Lewis, Little Richard, Screamin' Jay Hawkins, Jim Morrison and Michigan's most famous front man - James Jewel Osterberg - IGGY POP to us mere mortals.

Even now in July 2016 as I write this - I look at the release date of 'December 1970' for "Fun House" by THE STOOGES and my jaw drops to the floor. I mean The Velvets were out there for sure as far back as 1967 - but not like this. Listening to the sheer sonic assault of "L.A. Blues" where the guitars threaten to bleed all over the Laura Ashley bed linen (its only five minutes of feedback but hard to take even now) or the fantastic hammer-down riffage of "Down On The Street" – The Stooges were so friggin’ PUNK before anyone even knew the meaning of the word – a band more likely to wear barbed wire in their hair than a flower.

In fact - if this early Punk jewel had arrived December 1977 in the UK – I’d argue it would have made Top 10 if not Top 5 - hailed as a genre masterpiece - and not suffered the ignominious fate of not even making the Top 200 in the USA on original release. I worked for Reckless Records in London for near 20 years as a Rarities Buyer and Mail Order head honcho – and I can count on one hand the number of times I've seen an actual British-pressed 'EKS' red label Elektra original. It sold nothing and never got promoted. An odd thing considering that you can literally feel the template for four decades of Punk, Grunge, Hardcore and Alternative screaming out of these 1970 grooves – a staggering legacy for such an overlooked album. Let's get to the in-house details and allow some Detroit mayhem into our nice orderly Feng Shui living rooms...

UK and USA released August 2005 - "Fun House" by THE STOOGES on Elektra/Rhino 8122-73175-2 (Barcode 081227317522) is a 2CD 'Deluxe Edition' with a new remaster on CD1 of the album and outakes/singles first issued on the 1999 Rhino Box Set "The Complete Fun House Sessions". It plays out as follows...

Disc 1 (36:40 minutes):
1. Down On The Street
2. Loose
3. T.V. Eye
4. Dirt
5. 1970 [Side 2]
6. Fun House
7. L.A. Blues
Tracks 1 to 7 are their 2nd studio album "Fun House" - released December 1970 in the USA and UK on Elektra Records EKS 74071. Produced by DON GALLUCCI - it didn't chart in either country.

Disc 2 (73:28 minutes):
1. T.V. Eye (Takes 7 & 8)
2. Loose (Demo)
3. Loose (Take 2)
4. Loose (Take 22)
5. Lost In The Future (Take 1)
6. Down On The Street (Take 1)
7. Down On The Street (Take 8)
8. Dirt (Take 4)
9. Slide (Slidin' The Blues) (Take 1)
10. 1970 (Take 3)
11. Fun House (Take 2)
12. Fun House (Take 3)

Bonus Single Mixes:
13. Down On The Street
14. 1970
Tracks 13 and 14 were released December 1970 as the A&B-sides of a USA 7" single on Elektra EKM 45695

THE STOOGES was:
IGGY POP - Lead Vocals
RON ASHETON - Guitar
STEPHAN MACKAY - Tenor Saxophone
DAVE ALEXANDER - Bass
SCOTT ASHETON - Drums

The 20-page booklet is a pleasing affair - an introductory note by Jack White of The White Strips where he famously describes "Fun House" as 'the definitive rock album of America' - a quote they use on the jewel case sticker. PAUL TRYNKA supplies a truncated version of his "Fun House" liner notes from the 1999 six-disc blockbuster that included every take. It's accompanied by trade adverts, a facsimile of the Lester Bangs review in Creem Magazine and fantastic colour photos of Iggy and the band from the period (as well as the usual reissue credits).

DAN HERSCH and BILL INGLOT - long-time Audio Engineers whose history with Rhino and the vast WEA catalogue stretches back decades – have newly remastered the album onto Disc 1 (different to the 1999 issue) – and what a job they’ve done. The passion and sheer attitude captured by original Producer Don Gallucci (he let Iggy sing live into the mike to capture the energy) is amplified into something akin to The Ramones in your living room. This sucker ROCKS and the 1999 Remasters of the outtakes on Disc 2 perfectly distil the huge Box Set into one usable alternative chunk – giving the listener a cool yin-yang listen. Both CDs have the Elektra Butterfly label logo and beneath the see-through CD tray there’s even a garish colour picture of the band sitting obediently on a carpet as they look like altar boys out at the camera. Apparently Producer Gallucci removed the carpets and mufflers from the Elektra Studios for the song-a-day sessions to properly capture the sheer shock 'n' awe of the band...

"Fun House" storms into your man cave with "Down On The Street" - Iggy grunting, growling and yelping behind a riff that intends to hurt your granny. Things continue on their 'destroy all in our path' mission with the fantastic "Loose" - a properly huge guitar sound blasting away in the slightly echoed distance - a garage band telling you how they 'stick it deep inside' (oh dear tell me we're not talking about those naughty drugs boys). Iggy screams "LORD!" at the beginning of "T.V. Eyes" - another fab riff that The Sex Pistols would have nobbled a close family member to attain. Side 1 of this organised mayhem ends with "Dirt" - seven minutes of slow Doors-like Blues meets a menacing Stooges Rock groove – Ron Asheton's guitar playing a total revelation.

Side 2 offers the genius of the 'I feel alright' riffage of "1970" where Steven Mackay’s wild Saxophone playing finally makes itself known – followed by everyone's crave – the title track "Fun House". The near eight-minutes of "Fun House" was chosen as the LP's representative track on the gorgeous 5CD Elektra Records "Forever Changing" retrospective in 2006 (see my full in-depth review of that amazing set) and it's easy to hear why. More angry guitars and screaming Saxophone take no prisoners as the band wig out like their lives depend on it. But in truth I find the final screaming feedback and general slaughtering of your eardrums of "L.A. Blues" just too much to take (forgive me punk overlords) - but it doesn't stop me from being blown away by the album overall...

As someone who couldn't afford the lavish 1999 Rhino Set "The Complete Fun House Sessions" - Disc 2 offers up a mouth-watering prospect - an edited variant I can actually use - a sort of alternate "Fun House". I immediately went to "Slide" which is essentially a run-through for "Dirt" but with Saxophone thrown into the mix. I'm totally loving the slow groove of "Lost In The Future" even if Iggy's vocals show that he's still grappling with the words. And my God but the 'demo' of "Loose" could easily have been a single there and then - release it - leave it alone mother (love that feeding back guitar). Take 2 of "Fun House" runs to 9:31 minutes while Take 3 goes even longer to 11:30 - both are amazingly good and the Audio Remaster full of punch for all the right reasons.

As the album "Fun House" was released in late 1970 and few wanted to know let alone buy it - Heroin reared its ugly head and everything went to pieces for The Stooges (Bowie would rescue Iggy and some say vice versa). But remember them this way - snotty, raw and doing it for the little guy. Genius and then some...

Wednesday, 20 July 2016

"Grave New World" by STRAWBS (1998 A&M Remaster Pieces 'Expanded Edition' CD) - A Review by Mark Barry...




This Review Along With 500 Others Is Available In My
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"...Heavy Disguises..."

After clocking up four albums between May 1969's debut "Strawbs" and July 1971's "Witchwood" (two with Yes Keyboardist Rick Wakeman on board) - the STRAWBS (shortened from Strawberry Hill Boys) finally rewarded the patience of A&M Records A&R men with a big fat hit album - the fondly remembered "Grave New World" from February 1972.

Even without a single to plug it - but armed with a tri-gatefold sleeve and natty booklet within original copies - "Grave New World" climbed up to No. 11 in the UK LP charts and lay the ground for their 'Rock' record breakthrough - "Bursting At The Seams" in February 1973 which went all the way to No. 2.

"Grave New World" is seen as their last overtly 'Folk Rock' LP and features what many feel was the classic Strawbs line-up. Here are the grim (slightly new) details...

UK released July 1998 - "Grave New World" by STRAWBS on A&M Records 540 934-2 (Barcode 731454093422) is an 'Expanded Edition' CD Remaster with Two Bonus Tracks and plays out as follows (42:39 minutes):

1. Benedictus
2. Hey, Little Man...Thursday's Child
3. Queen Of Dreams
4. Heavy Disguise
5. New World
6. Hey Little Man...Wednesday's Child
7. The Flower And The Young Man [Side 2]
8. Tomorrow
9. On Growing Older
10. Ah Me, Ah My
11. Is It Today, Lord?
12. The Journey's End
Tracks 1 to 12 are their 5th album "Grave New World" - released February 1972 in the UK on A&M Records AMLH 68078 and in the USA on A&M Records SP-4344. Produced by The Strawbs - all songs written by Dave Cousins except "Heavy Disguise" by John Ford. "Ah Me, Ah my" by Tony Hopper and "Is It Today Lord" by Richard Hudson.

BONUS TRACKS:
13. Here It Comes - non-album track released as a UK-only 7" single April 1972 on A&M Records AMS 7002 with the album cut "Tomorrow" as its B-side
14. I'm Going Home - a Strawbs track issued in the UK as a DAVE COUSINS solo 7" single in September 1972 on A&M Records AMS 7032 with "Ways And Means" on the B-side. Both songs turned up on the September 1972 first solo LP by Cousins called "Two Weeks Last Summer" on A&M Records AMLS 68118. Neither the single nor the album received US release.

STRAWBS was:
DAVE COUSINS – Lead Vocals, Acoustic and 12-String Guitar, Electric Guitar, Electric-Acoustic Dulcimer, Recorders
TONY HOPPER – Lead Vocals, Acoustic Guitar and Auto Harp
BLUE WEAVER – Organ, Piano, Harmonium, Mellotron and Clavioline
JOHN FORD – Vocals and Bass
RICHARD HUDSON – Vocals, Drums, Percussion, Tablas and Sitar on "Is It Today, Lord?"

GUESTS:
Trevor Lucas and Anne Collins sing backing vocals on "Benedictus"
Robert Kirby Silver Band on "Heavy Disguise"
Tony Visconti Arranged and Provided 'Chorus' Vocals for "Ah Me, Ah My"

The 12-page booklet has typically in-depth liner notes from a great chronicler of music - JOHN TOBLER (with thanks to Dave Cousins) and the centre pages are the 'Paper Tiger' painting that graced the inner tri-gatefold (William Blake's painting is on the front cover and his verse on the last page). Recorded at Morgan Studios in November 1971 with some further work at Island Studios - the tapes are clearly in great shape because the PETER WAKE Remaster (done at Bourbery-Wake Studios) is gorgeous to listen too - all that great original production shining through. But notable and sloppy omissions include "Queen Of Dreams" (track 3) and "On Growing Older" (track 9) - both are missing entirely from the track-by-track session notes on Page 10 (who played what on what) and it appears the booklet has never been corrected.

Supposedly the story of one man's life from cradle to the grave - the album opens with Cousins getting all hymn-like on "Benedictus" - three of the band's vocals joined by Fairport's Trevor Lucas and British Contralto singer Anne Collin. With a heavy-on-the-organ intro and strummed dulcimer strings rattling around the speakers – the songs feels very English Folk-Rock (in a good way). In direct contrast we then get Cousins on his own with his Acoustic Guitar for the one-minute of "Hey Little Man...Thursday's Child" - the kind of pretty ditty that enthrals even after all these years (beautifully produced too).

Things take a decidedly trippy turn with the backwards guitars, dulcimers and Mellotron of "Queen Of Dreams" - while John Ford gets his first look in on the excellent "Heavy Disguise" - a track many fans would have easily issued as a winning 45 (he would of course form Hudson-Ford after they both left the Strawbs in the mid 70ts). But the Mellotron melodrama of "New World" feels leaden and tired – like bad Procol Harum. Thankfully Side 1 ends on the second short but very pretty Cousins melody - "Hey Little Man...Wednesday's Child" – as sweet as first part.

Side 2 opens with echoed Acapella vocals before "The Flower And The Young Man" settles into a sort of Incredible String Band power ballad - Ford's Bass incredibly clear in the mix. "Tomorrow" is another Prog plodder I'm afraid that irritates instead of lifts - far better is the superb "On Growing Older" - a beautifully melodic piece and one of the album's highlights. The 'cor blimey mate' days gone by of "Ah Me, Ah My" (sung by Tony Hopper and originally produced by Gus Dudgeon) is the kind of song they obviously thought was funny and it isn't. But things return to Strawbs form with the finisher "Is It Today, Lord?" - Richard Hudson doing a blinder on the Sitar and tables acting like he's just discovered ISB's "Wee Tam And The Big Huge"...

The two UK 7" single Bonus Tracks turn out to just that - actual bonuses - in fact I'd argue that "Here It Comes" is better than some of the lesser tunes on the GNW LP.

So not all genius - but so much worthy of your hard earned post-Brexit pound. And "Bursting At The Seams" from 1973 was even better in my book...

PS: see also my review for the hugely underrated "Dragonfly" from 1970 by STRAWBS

"The Band" by THE BAND (2000 Capitol 'Expanded Edition' CD Remaster of their 2nd album from 1969) - A Review by Mark Barry...




"...Ain't No Reason To Hang My Head..."

Sounding like it was recorded in Uncle Bob's Basement and Garage (they used a house in the Hollywood Hills owned by Sammy Davis, Jr and padded it out with blankets and wood) - The Band's self-titled second album delivered on the promise of their 1968 debut "Music From Big Pink" in a huge way. Today it's revered as an Americana classic and this cool little CD Remaster from 2000 hammers that home big time. Here are the rag mama rags...

Released September 2000 - "The Band" by THE BAND on Capitol 525 3892 (Barcode 724352538928) is an 'Expanded Edition' CD Remaster and breaks down as follows (71:57 minutes):

1. Across The Great Divide
2. Rag Mama Rag
3. The Night They Drove Old Dixie Down
4. When You Awake
5. Up On Cripple Creek
6. Whispering Pines
7. Jemima Surrender [Side 2]
8. Rockin' Chair
9. Look Out Cleveland
10. Jawbone
11. The Unfaithful Servant
12. King Harvest (Has Surely Come)
Tracks 1 to 12 are their 2nd album "The Band" - released September 1969 in the USA on Capitol Records STAO-132 and January 1970 in the UK on capitol Records E-ST 132.

BONUS TRACKS:
13. Get Up Jake (Outtake - Stereo Mix)
14. Raga Mama Rag (Alternate Vocal Take - Rough Mix)
15. The Night They Drove Old Dixie Down (Alternate Mix)
16. Up On Cripple Creek (Alternate Take)
17. Whispering Pines (Alternate Take)
18. Jemima Surrender (Alternate Take)
19. King Harvest (Has Surely Come) (Alternate Performance)

THE BAND was:
GARTH HUDSON - Organ, Clavinette, Piano, Accordion, Soprano Tenor & Baritone Sax and Slide Trumpet
RICHARD MANUEL - Vocals, Piano, Drums, Baritone Sax & Mouth Harp
LEVON HELM - Vocals, Drums, Mandolin & Guitar
RICK DANKO - Vocals, Bass, Violin & Trombone
ROBBIE ROBERTSON - Guitar

Compiled by Cheryl Pawelski and Andrew Sandoval - the 16-page booklet has fantastically comprehensive liner notes by ROB BOWMAN that feature interviews stretching back twelve years (from 2000), photos of tracking sheets, mix instructions, American 45s and Picture Sleeves, trade adverts, colour snaps from the session in the house - and even a Time Magazine cover from January 1970. It's very well done as befits an album of this stature. But the big news is a great remaster by DAN HERSCH and ANDREW SANDOVAL. Recorded outside of a conventional studio in a loose manner and with `feel' being all-important - the tracks vary in sound quality. And you have to say that this remaster allows the whole lot to `breathe'. On tracks like "King Harvest (Has Surely Come)" and the beautiful "Whispering Pines" where hiss is more than evident - the transfers haven't tried to supress it - but given it space to shine - it's properly lovely.

Almost a mission statement as to `this is how we sound - love it or lump it' - the openers "Across The Great Divide" and the single "Raga Mama Rag" establishes that `Band' sound and feel. The joviality abates for the epic "Virgil Cane" Civil War ballad "The Night They Drove Old Dixie Down" with Levon Helm sounding literally like a beaten soldier from the South. It's one of Robbie Robertson's finest songwriting moments. Richard Manuel and Garth Hudson do a great vocal trade off on "When You Awake" but Manuel's lead on "Whispering Pines" is probably most people's crave - a gorgeous melody with all those croaking voices harmonizing and that organ giving it a church on Sunday backdrop. It ends Side One perfectly.

We go into boogie mode for "Jemima Surrender" - a top-notch chugger with the group sounding like they're enjoying themselves while discovering a special chemistry ("I'll bring over my Fender and play all night for you..."). But the biggies are the two finishers - Rick Danko sings "The Unfaithful Servant" where "that train is comin'..." and the malevolent "King Harvest (Has Surely Come)" is handled by Richard Manuel. There's even traces of Little Feat's funky sound in its 1969 grooves. The extra tracks provide a fabulous insight into the recording process - beginning with a real find - an outtake called "Get Up Jake" considered at the time as one too many for the album - its great. Listening to a string of Alternate Takes of songs you've known for decades is a strange and exhilarating experience - the acoustic "Dixie" is unbelievably intimate with its false starts and great sound. A keyboard-funky "Up On Cripple Creek" follows - but the real prize has to be another version of "Whispering Pines" which is just as achingly beautiful as the finished cut (even when it breaks down mid-take because of a `squeaky chair'). The loose guitar jam of "King Harvest" feels like eavesdropping on "union man" Americana. Wicked...

Dirt cheap from most online retailers - this is one of those occasions where you don't have to pay through the CD nose to get that great combo of top music and quality sound. And if ever a group deserved such a sweet outcome - then The Band are it...

"The Garden Of Jane Delawney" by TREES (2008 Sony/BMG 'Expanded Edition' CD Remaster) - A Review by Mark Barry...





"...The Great Silkie..."

Music historians have postulated that CBS had seen the huge commercial and critical success that Island Records was having with Sandy Denny at the vocal helm of FAIRPORT CONVENTION (turning English Folk on its head and making Folk-Rock) and wanted the same on their label.

Although her high voice was more in line with Apple's Mary Hopkins than Sandy Denny - Celia Humphris looked damn good (in a sexy Sonja Christina kind of way) and the four hirsute men of TREES played complicated Folk in a new Rock fashion - slightly Psych – bit Acid – but all very British and eccentric. CBS's Prog-Folk needs sorted! 

Original Acoustic Guitar player with the band DAVID COSTA has written the affectionate, illuminating and brutally honest liner notes to this elegant Sony/BMG CD reissue - enlightening us on the mysteries of their two highly revered Psych-Folk albums - April 1970's "The Garden Of Jane Delawney" and "On The Shore" which followed only 10-months later in February 1971. Both CBS LPs have been darlings of the Prog-Folk collecting scene for years (sold little at the time, deleted quickly) and listed at £300 and £350 respectively - but can sell for twice that and more in genuine Mint condition (they had flimsy sleeves and are notoriously difficult to find in good condition). Here is the garden of delights...

UK released September 2008 - "The Garden Of Jane Delawney" by TREES on Sony/BMG 88697356712 (Barcode 886973567128) is an 'Expanded Edition' CD Remaster with Four Bonus Tracks and plays out as follows (62:39 minutes):

1. Nothing Special
2. The Great Silkie
3. The Garden Of Jane Delawney
4. Lady Margaret
5. Glasgerion [Side 2]
6. She Moved Thro' The Fair
7. Road
8. Epitaph
9. Snail's Lament
Tracks 1 to 9 are their debut album "The Garden Of Jane Delawney" - released 24 April 1970 in the UK on CBS Records S 63837 (no USA release). Produced by DAVID HOWELLS and TONY COX - Track 1 by Trees - Tracks 3, 7, 8 and 9 written by Bias Boshell - all others are covers of Traditional English, Irish and Scottish airs. 

BONUS TRACKS:
10. She Moved Thro' The Fair (Demo Version) - recorded August/September 1969 with additional pipe organ - PREVIOUSLY UNRELEASED
11. Pretty Polly (Demo Version) - recorded August/September 1969 with banjo - PREVIOUSLY UNRELEASED
12. Black Widow (Recorded July 2008) - song from the album period newly recorded for the reissue with drummer Mark Roberts
13. Little Black Cloud Suite - a BBC version can be found on the CD reissue of "On The Shore" - this old Bias Boshell song is newly recorded June 2008 as a short Instrumental for this reissue

TREES was:
CELIA HUMPHRIS – Lead Vocals
BARRY CLARKE – Lead and Acoustic Guitars
DAVID COSTA – Acoustic and 12-String Guitar
TOBIAS 'BIAS' BOSHELL - Bass, Acoustic Guitar and Vocals
(STEPHEN) UNWIN BROWN – Drums

The 16-page booklet is beautifully put together (real effort) and is filled with great period photos of the band larking about in a park – live at Plimpton Festival in May 1970 – most photos featuring the clearly gorgeous Celia Humphris making the Prog boys look good. A team of three have handled the Remaster – NICK ROBBINS at Sound Mastering created the 24-Bit/96 Hz digital copy from original master tapes and that was further mastered by BIAS BOSHELL (original band member) and ADRIAN HARDY at Unit 2 in London (July 2008). Amidst the bonus tracks is "Black Widow" - a song written at the time of 'Delawney' but never properly recorded. The band reconvened in July 2008 and using drummer Mark Roberts to take the place of the sadly passed Unwin Brown (to whom the reissue is dedicated) - they recreated a new version of it. The audio is excellent especially on the longer more Prog pieces like the brilliant "Lady Margaret" and the very Fairports cover of the beautiful traditional "She Moved Through The Fair" - but the guitars on the diddly-idle dance-round-the-maypole "Glasgerion" are a bit grungy sounding in places. 

Costa’s liner notes come from the trenches and aren’t the least bit bossy or overreaching but funny and touching – Celia sat in a truck with throat lozenges because they’d been pushing her too much vocally (“Glasgerion”) while they contemplate buying a bigger PA to go even louder – CBS’s printed sticker campaign called “Trees March” that couldn’t be used because the album arrived on the market in late April and didn’t get reviewed in most cases until May or even June. Not even putting the impossibly pretty title track “The Garden Of Jane Delawney” on Side 3 of the popular CBS Records label-sampler “Fill Your Head With Rock” 2LP set seemed to shift more copies. As Costa admits – the album received ‘...mild reviews and even milder sales’. Which is a damn shame because there’s so much to love here.

It opens on the lovely guitar jangle of "Nothing Special" and the following electric leads immediately remind of the musicality Genesis got on "Nursery Cryme" tracks like "The Music Box" and "Harlequin". Mythical creatures abound in the Traditional cover of "The Great Silkie" that starts out all strummed English Folk but then goes seriously Prog half way through - guitarist Barry Clarke reaching for his inner Robert Fripp. The lovely harpsichord title track is probably the best-known song from the LP because of its exposure on compilations of the time and subsequently (it turned up on the superb "Dust On The Nettles" 3CD Box Set put out by Grapefruit in 2015 - see my review). It's a bit hissy for sure but that's on the tapes and it doesn't take away from the delicacy of Celia's vocals and the gorgeous playing. I suspect "Lady Margaret" is precisely the kind of track that gives this LP such value - a superb mixture of Acoustic Lead Guitar backed by Electric Lead that's pushed into the background like a tamed Richard Thompson. It's 7:11 minutes are brilliant - Celia giving the 'fair maid' story a wonderful wistful feel.  

Side 2 opens with the dodgy cod English "Glasgerion" which is followed by "She Moves Thro' The Fair" - a track some have derided as an obvious reach for Fairport Convention's fusion of Folk and Rock. But I've always loved its slow eight-minutes and seven seconds of melody – building Acoustic Guitar flourishes and that melody at it's drum-rumbling heart always slays me. We then get three-in-a-row from Guitarist Bias Boshell - the first called "Road" he handles as a duet vocal with Celia - and it works. Musically it's so interesting and still sounds fresh to me - even echoing the largely acoustic feel to Led Zeppelin III in places. "Epitaph" is only 3:23 minutes long and features a warm Celia vocal (little hissy in places) while one of the best is left to last - "Snail's Lament" - a sort of Byrds jangle that crosses swords with Fairport Convention (Bias and Celia sharing doubled vocals). Superb stuff...

I had thought the Bonus Tracks would be throwaway (as they can be on these reissues) – but they’re not. The two Previously Unreleased demos are hissy for sure – but musically they’re very good – especially the new “Pretty Polly” with a stunning vocal from Celia and Banjo playing adding a strange cowboy feel to a Folk song. The two new songs are excellent and show Celia's voice is still in fine fettle on "Black Widow" while the short but gorgeous instrumental "Little Black Cloud" is beautifully orchestrated with strings (more please Mister Boshell, much more).

Sure TREES were of their time and all that hippy-dippy ambling can grate – but I think it’s a beautiful 'overlooked' album and worth the dosh.

"...It will not be long now until my wedding day..." - Celia sings on the melodious "She Moved Thro' The Fair". 

You don't have to marry to get this 1970's British magic in your life or even commune with a great Silkie - "The Garden Of Jane Delawney" is online for less than a fiver in most places and worth every Folk Roots penny of it. Dig in and enjoy...

Tuesday, 19 July 2016

"Avocet" by BERT JANSCH and MARTIN JENKINS (2016 Earth Records CD Remaster) - A Review by Mark Barry...








"...Bittern...Stellarus..."

Quite who was listening to Bert Jansch and his two pals Martin Jenkins and Danny Thompson in February 1979 on the 'budget' label Class (part of the Charisma Records group in the UK) is anybody's guess. I doubt anyone was - and that would most definitely have been 'their' loss.

The entirely instrumental "Avocet" album has an 18-minute title track on Side 1 and the other 5 bird-themed flick-and-strums on Side 2 give it a bit of a New Age meets early Americana vibe (high guitars vs. high production values). Budget label or not - in the huge 51-year arsenal (1965 to 2016) of the mighty ex Pentangle Guitar player Bert Jansch - time and a tasteful remaster have been kind to the forgotten but strangely hypnotic "Avocet" album. 

This is a gorgeous record - ambling guitar themes that float over you like a more-mellow Gordon Giltrap or Sufjan Stevens or even the soundscapes of Boards Of Canada. It isn’t all pointless noodling either – there is warmth to this Acoustic music - and at times the whole album’s swirl and sway feel like it was ahead of its Progressive time - pre-dating Nineties sounds by at least twelve years. Time for a tasty reissue - here are the flighty details...

UK released February 2016 - "Avocet" by BERT JANSCH on Earth Records EARTHCD010L (Barcode 809236171092) is a straightforward CD Reissue and Remaster of the 1979 LP and plays out as follows (37:09 minutes):

1. Avocet (17:59 minutes)
2. Lapwing (1:31 minutes) [Side 2]
3. Bittern (7:49 minutes)
4. Kingfisher (3:44 minutes)
5. Osprey (3:16 minutes)
6. Kittiwake (2:48 minutes)
Tracks 1 to 6 are the album "Avocet" - first released 1978 in Denmark on Exlibris Records EXL 30.005 (credited to Bert Jansch and Martin Jenkins). It was then released February 1979 in the UK (credited to only Bert Jansch) on Charisma CLASS 6 and November 1980 in the USA on Kicking Mule KM 310. Recorded in February 1978 at Sweet Silence Studios in Copenhagen, Denmark - Engineered and Produced by Freddy Hansson and Fleming Rasmussen - all songs are by Bert Jansch except "Osprey" which is by Martin Jenkins.

Players:
BERT JANSCH - Guitar and Piano
MARTIN JENKINS - Mandocello, Violin and Flute
DANNY THOMPSON - Double Bass

The artwork for the LP has had three incarnations - the Denmark original 1978 LP with only the Avocet bird in pencil - the British reissue with five birds drawn in colour aside an inset picture of Bert with Guitar - and now this Earth Records 2016 reissue which opts for a simple but very elegant cover. The textured gatefold card sleeve is gorgeous to look at and feel with an 8-page booklet in the left flap and an 'Earth Records' inner sleeve in the right. The booklet has the six birds drawn in beautiful colour by artist HANNAH ALICE - one to each page with their correct anatomical name beneath each - Avocet (Recurvirostra Avosetta), Lapwing (Vanellus Vanellus) and so on. The downside is no liner notes of any kind. You're getting more info from me on the album than you are from the reissue that is a ridiculous situation and something 'Earth Records' needs to rectify in the future. The Remaster has been done by BRIAN PYLE (doesn't say where) and is truly beautiful - as was the original recording anyway.

Side 1 is taken up with the extraordinary "Avocet" - eighteen instrumental minutes of Acoustic Guitar pickings, Violin strokes and heavy Double-Bass meanderings. There's a central musical theme that keeps recurring - but then in goes off in tangents - Jansch on guitar alone - then Jenkins comes in on either Violin or Flute - while Danny Thompson gives it some Nick Drake/John Martyn plucks on his Double Bass. "Lapwing" is only Jenkins on Piano and feels like a Mozart ditty someone plays in a BBC production of "Pride And Prejudice".

You get a real John Martyn feel to "Bittern" circa "Solid Air" where Danny's DB dominates the track. Initially Jansch solos away on Electric and Acoustic Guitars but it slows into an unexpected Thompson solo - huge sliding notes and plucks rattling your speakers (probably my favourite track). "Kingfisher" has a beauty too - Martin Jenkins' Violin playing set against DT's Bass plucking giving the whole thing a 'where have I heard that ancient melody before' feeling - gorgeous stuff. "Osprey" is dominated by Jenkins on Violin as Jansch accompanies on Acoustic Guitar and Danny plucks that Double Bass as only he can. The playing on this song is fabulous as is the Remaster. It ends on the pretty Acoustic assault of "Kittiwake".

"Avocet" is the very definition of 'overlooked gem that shouldn't be' - an album that cries out for rediscovery. Call it Folk - call it England's 1978 answer to 1990s Americana - call it Progressive even - "Avocet" is kind of magical and well done to Earth Records for making it available again...

"Feel No Fret" by AVERAGE WHITE BAND (Inside Edsel’s 2014 ‘All The Pieces: Complete Studio Recordings 1971-2003’ 19CD Box Set) - A Review by Mark Barry...






"...When Will You Be Mine..." 

You can find AWB’s brill “Feel No Fret” LP from 1979 in a few places – most of which are reasonably priced and good to go Audio wise. But I’d argue that Scotland’s AVERAGE WHITE BAND are worth more than a cheap-as-chips flutter and you should consider flogging the silver for this...

A huge 172-tracks across 19 CDs covering 43 years (1971 to 2003) – every one of the official AVERAGE WHITE BAND studio albums represented in cool-looking 5" card repro artwork. And as if that's not enough - you get four exclusive sets - a rejiggered 1st album with a different track, a mock 2nd album with new artwork, a 1980 US-only Atlantic Records compilation LP called "Volume III" where Side 1 was 4 new songs and Side 2 had 5 oldies and finally a 2CD round-up named "All The Pieces" that gathers together Alternate Versions, 12" Single Mixes and other Rarities.

"All The Pieces" is housed in a squat flip-top box with beautiful AWB artwork and has an illustrated 52-Page Booklet that features involvement from the Scottish Rock-Soul boys themselves (Hamish Stuart and Alan Gorrie). There's a lot of cool music on here that isn't in the least bit average (the “Feel No Fret” album is amongst them) - so let's start cruising down Atlantic Avenue...

UK released 14 July 2014 (22 July 2014 in the USA) - "All The Pieces: The Complete Studio Albums 1971-2003" by AVERAGE WHITE BAND on Edsel AWBOX01 (Barcode 5014797890954) is a 19CD Flip-Lid Box Set with a 52-Page Booklet. The 1979 album "Feel No Fret" is Disc 10 and plays out as follows:

Disc 10 (37:38 minutes):
1. When Will You Be Mine
2. Please Don’t Fall In Love
3. Walk On By
4. Feel No Fret
5. Stop The Rain [Side 2]
6. Atlantic Avenue
7. Ace Of Hearts
8. Too Late to Cry
9. Fire Burning
Tracks 1 to 9 are the album “Feel No Fret” – released February 1979 in the UK on RCA Records XL 13063 and in the USA on Atlantic SD 19207. Produced by AVERAGE WHITE BAND and GENE PAUL – it peaked at No. 15 on the UK LP charts and No. 33 in the USA.

Dedicated to their drummer and band founder-member Robbie McIntosh who died in 1974 from a spiked drink just as the 'AWB' album was taking off - the 52-page booklet features JUSTIN M. KANTOR liner notes on every LP - but oddly leaves out the "All The Pieces" double set entirely. Each album is in a 5” card repro sleeve with original artwork front and rear (gatefolds for “Feel No Fret” and the 2CD sets “Person To Person” and “All The Pieces”) - but no inners or inserts (each disc is numbered).

The mastering is by PHIL KINRADE (as it was on the 2009 "Collection" sets) and the material is licensed form Atlantic and Rhino who reissued the bands catalogue in the 90's. Suffice to say that these discs 'Funk' in all the right places and as you wade through them - you remember with huge affection just how good AWB was. This is music that transcends Soul, Funk or Rock – a musical hybrid of all three that hits the mark more times than it misses. That the sporadic later albums maintain that standard is pleasing - 90's and 00's updated variants of their famous 70ts and 80ts sound.

All the charted single are here - "Pick Up The Pieces" (1974), "Cut The Cake" (1975), "Queen Of My Soul" (1976), ""Walk On By" and "When Will You Be Mine" (1979) and "Let's Go Round Again" and "For You For Love" (1980). But in-between the cracks you get forgotten 7" single gems like their UK debut of Joe Sample's ludicrously infectious "Put It Where You Want It" (the keyboardist with The Crusaders) and the stunning "You Got It" which was the B-side of "Pick Up The Pieces" in July 1974 (what a double-sider that was). Other huge fan faves include "School Boy Crush" (November 1975), "If I Ever Lose This Heaven" (August 1975), "A Love Of Your Own" (December 1976) or the Gorrie/Stuart ballad "Cloudy" originally from the "Cut The Cate" LP but brought out and lifted up into the stratosphere for the brill live double "Person To Person". And any variant of the sublime "Let's Go Round Again" is likely to have me wiggling my aged booty in an undignified manner...no matter who's laughing...

But there's also hidden album nuggets like the stunning Brass-Funk shuffle of "Goin' Home" from the overlooked "Soul Searching" LP (they released a 'live' variant of it in March 1977 in the UK on Atlantic K 10192) or the Arif Mardin produced Philly Soulful "A Star in The Ghetto" with Ben E. King from their collaboration album "Benny And Us" - an LP that featured Luther Vandross on Backing Vocals before he brook through himself. Ned Doheny penned the fabulous groove of "Get It Up For Love" - the opening track on "Benny And Us" and from his own "Hard Candy" album from 1976 (see separate review). His songwriting knack would turn up big time with "Whatcha Gonna Do For Me" - a co-write with AWB's Hamish Stuart. Chaka Khan would name her entire 1981 Warner Brothers LP after the song. It should have been released as a single and David Foster admits he made a big mistake on that one (Christine Day does a great version of it on her 2004 CD album "Cover My Soul"). The entire 'AWB' LP is a stone masterpiece to me ("Work To Do" and "There's Always Someone Waiting") – which brings by circuitous route to 1979’s "Feel No Fret"...

With its cool ice-blue gatefold and detailed inner sleeve – I’ve loved this RCA Records LP for decades – bathing in the warmth of summery winners like the irrepressible 'sunlight in my eyes' of "Atlantic Avenue", the drum shuffling heavy-on-the-bass Side 1 funk of "Feel No Fret" and the very AWB 'get back home to you' joy of "Fire Burning" that ends Side 2. From the opening seconds of Hamish Stuart’s Bass and Alan Gorrie’s guitar on the hit single “When Will You Be Mine” – you know you’re in the presence of Funky magic.

Alan Gorrie co-wrote “Please Don’t Fall In Love” with Roger Ball (ex Fusion band Mogul Thrash who managed one album on RCA Records in 1971) – a catchy-as-a-cold Hall & Oates-sounding bopper. They then have a go at Bacharach and David’s Dionne Warwick vehicle “Walk On By” – pumping up those high vocals – anchoring the radio-friendly proceedings with a great Bass line, salsa shuffles and brass jabs. The genius bass run that underlays the Side 2 opener “Stop The Rain” would make Maceo and The JB’s envious. “Ace Of Hearts” gives it some Philly strings while “Too Late To Cry” is good without being great. But as already said the finisher “Fire Burning” is a fab AWB bopper capable of filling dancefloors from a hundred paces...

A cheaper alternative is Edsel's own four-volume "The Collection" series put out April 2009 in 4 card-slip cases that make up an 'AWB' spine. Those four CD reissues contain the first 13 albums in this box set (1973's "Show Your Hand" through to 1982's "Cupid's In Fashion") and can be purchased for about 25 quid secondhand in total. Volume 4 lumps “Feel No Fret” and May 1980’s “Shine” together – a combo many will find appealing.

But I'd advise go to thirty-five quid and get the box with Discs 14 to 18 added on and that gorgeous presentation. The casual buyer should just opt for either the "AWB – Deluxe Edition" or a simple 2CD 'Best Of' that contains both the classic Atlantic and RCA Records periods - of which there are loads for under a fiver. 

When MCA Records talent scouts at an Eric Clapton concert in 1973 got a load of the Scottish support act AVERAGE WHITE BAND - a bunch of hairy white dudes who came on 'funky' like a band of brothers born to it - they were smitten. And thus the AWB legend was born. Clearly aimed at the completist and uber-fan - "All The Pieces" has pride of place on my Soul shelf and I pet it every now and then with affection. I suggest you get that bat crazy too...and check out their duet with Daryl Hall at Daryl's House online doing "Pick Up The Pieces" - wow!

"Tucky Buzzard" by TUCKY BUZZARD (Inside The 2016 Edsel 5CD Box Set ‘The Complete Tucky Buzzard’) - A Review by Mark Barry...







"...Coming On Again..."

Arising out of the ashes of Decca's late 60ts Psychedelia band THE END - the delightfully-named TUCKY BUZZARD took their feathery moniker from a character in from one of the Uncle Remus books where one of the Br'er Rabbit runners was called 'Br'er Tucky Buzzard'. They managed a whopping five albums across three countries and with three different labels (without too many people noticing either) - Hispavox in Spain for the debut released in late 1971 as well as Capitol in the USA and Deep Purple's 'Purple Records' in the UK for the remaining four released between 1971 and 1973.

As well as that these funky British Rockers received the high profile patronage and hands-on help of Rolling Stone Bassist BILL WYMAN who produced three of their albums (see 2, 3 and 5 below) - one of which also featured the guitar chops of Rolling Stone ace axeman MICK TAYLOR and well as their top session players Bobby Keys and Jim Price on the Horns (Disc 2).

To the matter in hand...

I've been digging Edsel Box Sets for years (some actually let the side down slightly - the T.Rex one jumps to mind) - but like the fabulous Average White Band, Chairmen Of The Board and their recent effort for 60ts cult band The End (see separate reviews) - this one is a goodie if you like your Rock hard and heavy one minute whilst being funky the next. Superbly put together and clearly with Bill Wyman's involvement (a man known to take care of the Stones musical legacy) - this 5CD Box Set offers the very best presentation of Tucky Buzzard's short but productive career and allows Seventies Rock lovers (and the curious) access to much that is impossibly hard to find on original vinyl. There's a wad of info to get through - so if you'll forgive the inflight pun - onwards and upwards...

UK released 15 July 2016 (22 July 2016 in the USA) - "The Complete Tucky Buzzard" by TUCKY BUZZARD on Edsel EDSB 4033 (Barcode 740155403331) is a 5CD Mini Box Set containing their 'complete' recorded output between 1970 and 1973. The American-only album "Tucky Buzzard" from 1971 is Disc 2 and plays out as follows:

Disc 2 "Tucky Buzzard" (39:39 minutes):
1. Time Will Be Your Doctor
2. Stainless Steel Lady
3. Sally Shotgun
4. Gu Gu Gu
5. My Friend
6. Pieces Apple Lady [Side 2]
7. She's Meat
8. Ace The Face
9. Whisky Eyes
10. Rolling Cloud
Tracks 1 to 10 are the second studio album "Tucky Buzzard" - released June 1971 in the USA (only) on Capitol ST-787. Produced by BILL WYMAN at London's Olympia Studios and featuring Rolling Stones players MICK TAYLOR (Guitar on "My Friend") as well as BOBBY KEYS and JIM PRICE (Horns on "Whisky Eyes" and "Rolling Cloud") - it was not released in the UK at the time and saw its first CD release in 2002 on Ripple Records (the master is licensed from them).

The massively in-depth 32-page booklet inside the glossy 5" clamshell mini box set is an impressive affair- new liner notes by noted music writer ALAN ROBINSON featuring new interviews with Guitarist Terry Taylor and Drummer Dave Brown - there's artwork for all five LPs with each CD placed inside a singular 5" card sleeve. The project was overseen by the vastly experienced VAL JENNINGS and PHIL KINRADE did the Remasters at Alchemy Mastering using licensed tapes. I found the sound varied across the albums - good to great. Mostly I'm just impressed with the musicianship and the Funkiness of the Rock - my kind of poison for sure...

Coming at you like England's answer to Steppenwolf meets Three Dog Night - probably because of the Deep Purple Records label tie-in Tucky Buzzard were perceived as 'hard rockers' - but in fact they were far funkier than that. There was a swing and chug to their guitars that made them FUNK like say American Gypsy or After The Fire. At other times they were soulful like Free and Humble Pie could be - while still churning out those riffs and funky grooves.

Never is this more obvious than on the "Tucky Buzzard" album from late 1971 with 9 of the 10 tracks being self-penned originals. Both "There Will Be A Doctor" and "Stainless Steel Lady" give it some ants-in-your-pants Funk-Rock with the best of them. But there's horrible hiss levels on "Sally Shotgun" that put a damper on this rather lovely ballad - sweet Peter Green guitar licks from Terry Taylor with Jimmy Henderson's vocals sounding like Pink Floyd circa "Meddle". Things improve hugely with the fabulous "Gu Gu Gu" - a Funky-As-Coffee-Beans groover that I used to put on 70ts CD-Rs whenever I got the chance. Think Spirit's "Mr. Skin" and you're there - a chunky Nick Graham keyboard groove acts as the backdrop to Taylor's guitar and the 'make a mark in the sky' lyrics about existence and not working. I love this track and it sounds wickedly good here.

Other winners on the "Tucky Buzzard" album include their cover of Leon Russell’s "Pisces Apple Lady" where the boys are encouraged by their American friend to get themselves together in the English countryside (they sound so Three Dog Night on this). "She's Meat" and "Ace The Face" feel like groovy Immediate label Small Faces while the two finishers lay down heavy Paul Francis drum beats before going all Brass Funk Rock with Jim Price and Bobby Keys of The Rolling Stones entourage on "Whisky Eyes" and "Rolling Cloud". I love the gritty guitar sound Taylor gets while Graham's keyboards remind me Snafu on WWA Records in 1973 and 1974. An edit of the 5:18 minutes "Rolling Cloud" could easily have been a great 45...

David Bowie apparently saw them live in 1971 and was duly impressed (took some of their stage act with him) - but neither his nor Wyman’s peripheral superstardom seem to rub off and the band disbanded in mid 1974 after poor record sales and missed opportunities (they should have been on the 6 April 1974 'California Jam' bill in front of 250,000 fans where Deep Purple set the record for the 'loudest' band in the world - 50,000 record sales from that gig alone would have saved them). Guitarist Terry Taylor ending up on RAK Records with photogenic heartthrobs The Arrows (released his first solo album in 2014 called "Taylor Made") and Nick Graham later penned winning hits in the 90ts for the Goss Brothers in Bros.

So much to discover and thankfully some of it you can actually like - and even though its far from being undiluted genius from top to bottom - Edsel are to be praised for getting the five-disc "Complete Tucky Buzzard" Box Set out there in such style. Fans should not hesitate...

INDEX - Entries and Artist Posts in Alphabetical Order