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Thursday 20 April 2017

"Machine Head: Anniversary 2CD Edition" by DEEP PURPLE - April 1972 Studio LP (September 1997 EMI 2CD Reissue - Remixes and Remasters) - A Review by Mark Barry...




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TUMBLING DICE - 1972

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"...All right...hold tight...I'm a highway star..." - Ian Gillan sings on the explosive opener. OK boys - I'm holding tight and I'm liking what I'm hearing – even if it is digitally sozzled and recomboozalated.

The Purp's classic "Machine Head" hit the streets of both Blighty and Big City USA in April 1972 and we've been in love with its non-nonsense Rawk ever since (a No. 1 in the UK and No. 7 over there). Followed later in the year with the stunning double-live set "Made In Japan" - and with "Fireball" from 1971 and "Deep Purple In Rock" from 1970 already under their hard-rocking belt - it seemed like a slam-dunk.

And like Jethro Tull's catalogue with its endless but hugely pleasing book sets - EMI seem to have a CD thing for this most British of hairy-men bands - always giving their reissues more than a half-decent outing and not just what they can get away with. So it is with head-banging pleasure that I come to the September 1997 'Anniversary 2CD Edition' of the wunderbar "Machine Head" and announce with glee that it’s no different. Bit of a barnstormer in fact. Let's get to the space truckin' and the smoke on the water...

UK released 8 September 1997 - "Machine Head: Anniversary 2CD Edition' by DEEP PURPLE on EMI CDDEEPP 3 (Barcode 724385950629) is an 'Expanded Edition' 2CD Reissue with 1997 Remixes on Disc 1 while Disc 2 comprises of the album Remastered and Three Bonus Tracks. It plays out as follows...

Disc 1 - 1997 Remixes - 43:42 minutes:
1. Highway Star
2. Maybe I'm A Leo
3. Pictures Of Home
4. Never Before
5. Smoke On The Water
6. Lazy
7. Space Truckin'
8. When A Blind Man Cries

Disc 2 - Remastered - 53:12 minutes:
1. Highway Star [Side 1]
2. Maybe I'm A Leo
3. Pictures Of Home
4. Never Before  
5. Smoke On The Water [Side 2]
6. Lazy
7. Space Truckin'
Tracks 1 to 7 are their sixth studio album "Machine Head" - released April 1972 in the UK on Purple Records TPSA 7504 and in the USA on Warner Brothers BS 2607. Produced by DEEP PURPLE (Engineered by Martin Birch) - it peaked at No. 1 in the UK and No. 7 in the USA.

BONUS TRACKS:
8. When A Blind Man Cries - non-album B-side to "Never Before" - written by the whole band it was released March 1972 in the UK on Purple Records PUR 102 and the same month in the USA on Warner Brothers WB 7572 (charted at No. 35 in the UK but didn’t chart USA).

9. Maybe I'm A Leo (Quadrophonic Mix)
10. Lazy (Quadrophonic Mix)
Tracks 9 and 10 first issued May 1972 in the UK on the 'Quadrophonic' LP issue of "Machine Head" on Purple Records Q4TPSA 7504. Note: many guides list this as issued in 1974 but I've EMI catalogues dated from June 1972 onwards through to late 1974 that list it as 06/72.

DEEP PURPLE was:
IAN GILLAN – Lead Vocals
RITCHIE BLACKMORE – Guitars
JON LORD – Keyboards
ROGER GLOVER – Bass
IAN PAICE – Drums

A card slipcase contains a slim-line double-CD jewel case – The 1997 Remixes CD has a picture of the blurred faces artwork while the Remastered album and bonuses on Disc 2 sports the Purple label. Nice as all that is – the 28-page booklet is a proper feast both with band involvement and superb visuals. Page 2 has an intro from ROGER GLOVER, a row of four rare foreign picture sleeves for the “Never Before” single from around the world and on Page 3 – a black and white photo of a cloud of smoke billowing from the Casino Studio building in Montreaux – the scene that of course inspired the classic “Smoke On The Water” song. There's even a snap of The Rolling Stones mobile parked outside the hotel and further shots of the boys inside during sessions. A major essay on the making of the album by SIMON ROBINSON fills pages 4 to 17 only to be taken over by Roger Glover's own notes called "Machine Head remembered..." from Pages 17 to 25. There's alternate artwork, trade adverts for singles and the LP and one page even has the handwritten lyrics for their most famous riff – "Smoke On The Water". It's impressive stuff...

But all that is nobbled by the fabulous new audio supplied. The vastly experienced Audio Engineer PETER MEW has remastered the Album at Abbey Road from real tapes and its way better than what I had before. But I must admit I’m drooling over the new remix versions – handled by a team of four - PETER DENENBERG, ROGER GLOVER, and JOE DiGIORGI with mastering by the supreme GREG CALBI (Paul McCartney's “Band On The Run”, Supertramp's “Crime Of The Century” and Paul Simon's “Graceland” to name but a few). Even Glover in his liner notes seemed amazed by the 1997 Remixes which he clearly felt gave the album the extra oomph it seemed to lack on original vinyl – especially given the truly explosive live versions of the songs that would come later that year on the monster double-album "Made In Japan". At last that live power is evident everywhere on these studio recordings - "Highway Star" and the hooky "Maybe I’m A Leo" alone enough to make even the most ardent unbeliever double take.

It’s hard now to play the studio version of the opener "Highway Star" without thinking of its live nemesis on "Made In Japan" - quite possibly the single most exciting opening to a live double 'ever'. But man had I forgotten how good this little sucker is. Following hot on the heels is the hugely hooky "Maybe I'm A Leo" has always been a poison for me while the drum opening of "Pictures Of Home" is now huge. The obvious 7" single "Never Again" arrived in UK shops 21 March 1972 on Purple Records PUR 502 with the non-album "When A Blind Man Cries" on the B-side - a ballad that was good enough in my books to be on the album although "Machine Head" the album was never about mellow or 'my world is pale' sorrow. I love the audio on both. Both "Lazy" and "Space Truckin'" sound big and ballsy - especially the keyboards and drums on "Space Truckin'" – and when Gillian lets rip on those chorus screams towards the end - dancing with Alice and the stars indeed.

It's now nearly twenty years since this 1997 2CD Reissue of Deep Purple’s "Machine Head" and a 45th Anniversary of the original vinyl LP looms this month (April 2017) - so no doubt another variant will wing its way into our living rooms right soon. In the meantime - come on - let's go space truckin' – burn down your speaker stacks with rockin' beast...

"Mott" by MOTT THE HOOPLE [feat Ian Hunter and Mick Ralphs] (April 2006 Columbia/Legacy 'Expanded Edition' CD – Vic Anesini Remaster) - A Review by Mark Barry...


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"…Hit The Sky…"

After three albums on Island between 1970 and 1971 that saw constant touring, critical acclaim but little chart action ("Mad Shadows", "Wildlife" and "Brain Capers") – Mott The Hoople were about to throw in the towel when they finally hit paydirt with the David Bowie assisted "All The Young Dudes" single and LP in the heady days of 1972 (the height of Glam Rock in the UK). With the mercurial Bowie a fan and his star exploding everywhere – the timing and the song was perfect. All they needed to do was to consolidate that fresh beginning – and 1973’s "Mott" followed through in real style. In fact it’s when most fans agree that the band was at its most coherent – with their identity and heir own sound – a vital high water that was achieved without needing the help of any Glam Superstar. Here are the Honaloochie Boogies...

UK released April 2006 – "Mott" by MOTT THE HOOPLE on Columbia/Legacy 82796938102 (Barcode 827969381021) is an 'Expanded Edition' CD Remaster and plays out as follows (58:42 minutes):

1. All The Way From Memphis
2. Whizz Kid
3. Hymn For The Dudes
4. Honaloochie Boogie
5. Violence
6. Drivin’ Sister
7. Ballad Of Mott The Hoople (march 26, 1972 – Zurich)
8. I’m A Cadillac / El Camino Dolo Roso
9. I Wish I Was Your Mother
Tracks 1 to 9 are 5th studio album “Mott” – released July 1973 in the UK on CBS Records S 69038 and August 1973 in the USA on Columbia KC 32425

BONUS TRACKS:
10. Rose
11. Honaloochie Boogie (Demo version)
12. Nightmare (Demo)
13. Drivin’ Star (Live, Hammersmith Odeon)

The album was originally produced by the band (with Andy McKay of Roxy Music guesting on Sax) and this CD reappraisal offers fans 4 additions – "Rose" the non-album flip of "Honaloochie Boogie", 2 previously unreleased demos of "Honaloochie Boogie" and "Nightmare" and one incendiary live version of "Drivin' Sister" recorded at the Hammersmith Odeon in 1973. Oddly the single edit of "All The Way From Memphis" is AWOL when there was plenty of room to include it.

It won’t take British fans very long to notice that the gorgeous gatefold die-cut artwork of the original 1973 UK LP with it’s centred plastic face and inner lyric bag is completely absent - sloppily replaced with reissue artwork. At least the 12-page booklet is better than the scrappy 8-page affair that afflicts the 2006 Legacy CD of 1972’s "All The Young Dudes". 

We get more liner notes by KEITH SMITH (Editor of the MTH Fanzine “Two Miles From Heaven”), detailed recording info, lyrics and even the D.H. Lawrence piece "A Sane Revolution" that appeared on the rear cover artwork. But the colour-photo montage that’s on inner gatefold is missing and the booklet’s impact is negligible when the original LP was a thing of beauty.

Offsetting the disappointing presentation however is the real deal - a fantastic new remaster by tape wizard VIC ANESINI whose credits include Simon & Garfunkel, Stevie Ray Vaughan, The Jayhawks, Elvis Presley, Carole King, Hall & Oates and Santana to name but a few. His work is fantastic and I actively seek out his Remasters. And “Mott” had the tunes. Ian Hunter’s songwriting talents came to the fore on “Mott” - most are his songs except “Violence” and “Drivin’ Sister” which are co-writes with Guitarist Mick Ralphs (who was already in Bad Company). The other co-write is “Hymn For The Dudes” which is with Verden Allen.

The LP opens with the full album version of the rollicking "All The Way From Memphis" which to this day makes me smile (lyrics above). The grungy boogie of "Whizz Kid" could so easily have been a rocker on Bowie's "Ziggy Stardust" and the melodrama ballad "Hymn For The Dudes" is properly great Mott The Hoople - the "Thunderthighs" girly backing vocalists adding real power to a great song. The trio that follow "Honaloochie Boogie", "Violence" and "Drivin' Sister" show the differing song approaches of two huge talents – Ian Hunter and Mick Ralphs – both giving Mott The Hoople Rock, fun and that fabulous British Rock 'n' Roll swagger. But again it's the ballads that get you – the 1972 Live In Zurich "Ballad Of..." and the lovely acoustic strum of "I Wish I Was Your Mother" see the album finish on a real high.

The four bonus tracks are a typically mixed bag of the good and the average. Favourite is the beautiful ballad "Rose" – the non-album flip of "Honaloochie Boogie" (a long-prized Mott item). Musically as good is Verden Allen's "Nightmare" – that is until he opens his mouth and starts singing – he’s a terrible voice. The reissue finishes with the huge guitar punch of a live show opener "Drivin’ Sister” – but it’s already appeared on the 30th Anniversary issue of "Mott The Hoople Live".

So there you have it – a great album and a properly fab trip down Rock’s Memory Lane. It's a real shame that the booklet doesn’t celebrate "Mott" a bit more (an Indie label would have splashed out 20-pages or more) and a few more bonus tracks would have sweetened the deal - but at least what’s on offer is sonically brilliant (a fantastic remaster by Anesini).

Verden Allen would leave as would Mick Ralphs - but with principal song-writer and singer Ian Hunter still at the helm – the band would go on to even better things with their underrated 6th LP "The Hoople" in 1974 with the gorgeous "Trudi's Song" on it (see reviews for that and "Dudes" from 1972).

Now in 2017 - this remastered "Mott" CD is cheaper than a bag of chips after the pub. 
Get your greasy fingers on this 70ts Classic Rock right away...

"Nantucket Sleighride" by MOUNTAIN (2003 Columbia/Legacy 'Expanded Edition' CD Remaster) - A Review by Mark Barry...






"...A Whale Of A Time..."

Mountain's March 1970 LP "Climbing!" had busted the doors down – a gold album and a No. 17 placing on the US charts – not bad for a second platter. The New Yorkers (with Mississippi in their veins) liked it loud, proud and ear-splitten-louden-boomer. Riding a wave surfed by Grand Funk Railroad, The James Gang and bands like Zephyr – Mountain's heads-down no-nonsense hard boogie had captured a zeitgeist – let's ROCK and to hell with the Man and his Government plans. And in the larger than life Leslie 'The Great Fatsby' West – they had an axeman worth getting soppy about.

Taking its name from a Massachusetts whaler's experience (you harpooned the mighty creature – he'd dive – resurface full throttle and take the men and their boat on a Nantucket Sleighride) – the LP's title track also had a dedication to the suitably surnamed Owen Coffin in its subtitle. When a full-grown sperm whale surfaced mid Pacific in November 1820 and wrecked their ship the 'Essex' – the starved, drifting and diminishing crew of a surviving long boat ran out of food and then ran out of dead bodies to eat. So in further desperation they decided to shoot a mariner amongst their remaining ranks and eat him to survive. The unfortunate but brave 19-year old Owen Coffin literally drew the short straw – and refusing his Captain's offer to swap places – gave himself whole up to save the others. Naturally Mountain the band - who had holidayed in Nantucket between tours - thought this was a great idea for a song! Which brings us to this blubbery CD reissue - here are the cannibalistic details...

UK released April 2003 – "Nantucket Sleighride" by MOUNTAIN on Columbia/Legacy 510718 2 (Barcode 5099751071822) is an 'Expanded Edition' CD Remaster with One Bonus Track and plays out as follows (42:24 minutes):

1. Don't Look Around [Side 1]
2. Taunta (Sammy's Tune)
3. Nantucket Sleighride (To Owen Coffin)
4. You Can't Get Away
5. Tired Angels (To J.M.H.)
6. The Animal Trainer And The Toad [Side 2]
7. My Lady
8. Travellin' In The Dark (To E.M.P.)
9. The Great Train Robbery
Tracks 1 to 9 are their third studio album "Nantucket Sleighride" – released January 1971 in the USA on Windfall 5500 and May 1971 in the UK on Island Records ILPS 9148. Produced by Bassist and Studio Wizard FELIX PAPPALARDI – the album rose to No. 16 in the US LP charts and No. 43 in the UK (their first charting in Britain).

BONUS TRACK
10. Travellin' In The Dark (To E.M.P.) (Live) – no recording date provided

MOUNTAIN was:
LESLIE WEST – Guitars and Vocals
FELIX PAPPALARDI – Bass and Vocals
STEVE KNIGHT – Keyboards
CORKY LAING – Drums and Percussion

The 12-page booklet has new liner notes from LESLIE WEST and CORKY LAING (dated November 2002) - and as well as band photos supplied by the group. Their thoughts are witty and informative - the making of their 'loud' 3rd album and how the whole Nantucket area/mythology fitted in with the album’s creation. Laing laughs affectionately at Pappalardi the Producer when his wild drum solo in the title song went against the written page (instead of firing the drummer – Pappalardi thought it rocked). The Roy Bailey pencil drawing of the whale and the Nantucket Sleighride that adorned the inner gatefold is reproduced on Pages 2 and 3 in full while the insert cartoon drawing of the four-piece looking like they’re playing some Tuba adorns Page 9. It’s strange though that Sony didn’t use the Windfall label logo here as they did with the "Climbing!" reissue. But outside of that it looks cool...

But the big news is the new BOB IRWIN/VIC ANESINI Remaster from original tapes done at Sony Music Studios in New York. As the script-written line on the inner cover ‘credits box’ famously announced 'Play This Record At High Volume For Maximum Sonority...Loud!' - you quickly find out that none of the band's players are joking. This mother rocks – vibrato, fuzzy, grunge guitar noises emanate from Leslie West's speaker stacks and threaten to cause a public disturbance with your docile Laura Ashley stereo. The album was never an Audiophile event – but the space of sound on their tribute to the recently fallen Jimi Hendrix "Tired Angels (To J.M.H.)" is suddenly way better than what I've heard before. Having said that – this is a good remaster – rather than a great one and perhaps one day a better format will bring out what seems to be buried deep in the mixes...

Heavy Metal guitars and distant wailing Mellotron-sounding keyboards bring in the Side 1 opener "Don’t Look Around"  – a huge lumbering Rock song that admittedly does sound a tad old fart now after 46 years – West wailing ominously about tanning hides and being me. But you’re then hit with a brill one-two - the short but beautiful Pappalardi instrumental "Taunta (Sammy's Tune)" that then leads into the album's epic six-minute title track "Nantucket Sleighride". Pappalardi co-wrote the song with lyricist and artist Gail Collins and I've always loved West's guitar playing at the opening of "Nantucket Sleighride" and throughout - pulling out those turns on the fretboard that literally engender guitar-hero worship. It's also the most Prog Rock song on the album with its internal sea-shanty moments. I can remember hearing it on the credits of "Weekend World" on British tele - apparently a source of Royalty revenue for the band. Always compromised by being the last song on Side 1 of my battered and used Island ILPS 9148 vinyl LP – its way cool to hear their tribute to Hendrix "Tired Angels (To J.M.H.)" sound so mellow and yet full.

Windfall obviously thought the very Allman Brothers good ole Rock 'n' Roll Boogie of "The Animal And The Toad" might rattle the American airwaves - and they were right. In March 1971 they issued the Side 2 opener with the equally good "Tired Angels (To J.M.H.)" as its B-side and were rewarded with a modest placing at No. 76 for Windfall 533. They followed through with single number two in July 1971 - "Travellin' In The Past (To E.M.P.)" b/w "Silver Paper" (from the "Climbing!" album) - but Windfall 535 failed to chart. I always thought though that the far better "My Lady" would have been a better single choice - maybe gone Top 20 - it's hooky melody catchier that the rather clumsy 'can't see a thing' over-melodrama of "Travellin' In The Dark". Album number three ends on a piece of fabulous slide-guitar - West asking us do we remember "The Great Train Robbery" back in '63. The slightly muffled sound to his guitar is still there (he sounds like Ron Wood of the Faces 1971 masterpiece "A Nod's As Good As A Wink...") - but the song is definitely more powerful now. The live bonus cut of "Travellin' In The Past" is five minutes long (no recording details) and very well recorded considering the amount of riffage going on (fans will love it)...

I don't think "Nantucket Sleighride" is the Hard Rock masterpiece many make it out to be - but its many moments have been a pal to me for more than four and half decades and this CD remaster rocks that whale.

I'm off now to re-listen to "High Roller" from Leslie West's first solo album "The Great Fatsby" in 1975 – the kind of good old Boogie Rock that Mountain epitomised back in those days of magical albums and their expansive gatefold sleeves...
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Tuesday 18 April 2017

"Don't Look Back" by BOSTON (July 2006 Epic/Legacy CD Reissue - Tom Scholz, Bill Ryan and Toby Mountain Remaster) - A Review by Mark Barry...




This Review Along With Hundreds of Others Is Available In My
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CLASSIC 1970s ROCK and POP - Exceptional CD Remasters  
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"...Take A Chance On Rock 'n' Roll..."

17 million Americans and gazillions more worldwide devoured the August 1976 debut of the "More Than A Feeling" LP. "Boston" by BOSTON on Epic JE 34188 was a monster that had Rock legs stretching over a year and more (it was released December 1976 in the UK on Epic S EPC 81611 and proved just as popular there). The pressure to deliver spaceship-guitar juggernaut No. 2 was immense and Boston took two years before they popped out "Don't Look Back" in August 1978. Despite mixed reviews and some very vocal fan disappointment - initially it garnished humungous sales eventually amassing over seven million units sold – the kind of chart statistics most other groups would nobble dear old Granny Mae for.

But its transition to CD has been strange and piecemeal. With a staggering four million-plus album sales in the first month alone – Boston’s second platter was always going to be a contender for ‘first release’ on the new fangled format. But the early 80s issues were released haphazard, withdrawn, never properly annotated etc and an overly expensive Mastersound Gold CD has been deleted years - leaving a decades-long big fat remastering audio hole in a very big catalogue title.

Well here comes the inevitable definitive CD Remaster - done in 2006 by Band founder member and Lead guitarist Tom Scholz. And like its illustrious self-titled predecessor (also released 2006) – "Don’t Look Back" lacks any musical extras but is not surprisingly a sonic doozy of amazing density. Here are the feelin’ satisfied details...

UK released 10 July 2006 – "Don’t Look Back" by BOSTON on Epic/Legacy 82876822412 (Barcode 828768224120) comes in card digipak packaging with a newly updated 12-page booklet. It's peddled as a 'Collector's Limited Edition' but it's widely available for sale and at a pittance of a price too (37:44 minutes). 

It was then reissued March 2008 on Epic/Legacy 88697184012 (Barcode 886971840124) in a standard jewel case with the same 2006 Remaster, new booklet and photo of the spaceship beneath the see-through CD tray.

The updated liner notes by uber-fan DAVID WILD feature new interviews with band leader and producer TOM SCHOLZ that elaborate on the anxious wait by the public and record label for the album – the hours in his homemade studio basement – the pile-em-high guitar layers – the press’ muted response – perfectionist Scholz’s own ambivalence to the record (he felt it was rushed and too short) and so on. There are various colour period photos of the boys on stage – in the studio – Scholz at a huge church organ and the usual reissue credits. Scholz has returned to the tapes with BILL RYAN and TOBY MOUNTAIN and done an exhaustive and painstaking remaster - the results are HUGE with a capitol 'H'. It's a fantastic listen...

1. Don’t Look Back [Side 1]
2. The Journey
3. It’s Easy
4. A Man I’ll Never Be
5. Feelin’ Satisfied [Side 2]
6. Party
7. Used To Bad News
8. Don’t Be Afraid
Tracks 1 to 8 are their second studio album "Don’t Look Back" – released August 1978 in the USA on Epic FE 35050 and August 1978 in the UK on Epic S EPC 86057. Produced by TOM SCHOLZ – it peaked at No. 1 in the USA and No. 9 in the UK.

BOSTON was:
BRAD DELPH – Lead and Harmony Vocals on all songs
TOM SCHOLZ – Lead and Rhythm Guitars and Organ (on all songs)
BARRY GOUDREAU – Lead and Rhythm Guitars
FRAN SHEEHAN - Bass
SIB HASHIAN - Drums on all (except "The Journey" where all instruments are Tom Scholz)

Rumour has it that "Arrival" was to be the album's name but on hearing ABBA had an album of the same name - the opening track "Don't Look Back" was chosen as the moniker. That signature guitar sound of theirs kicks in with a wallop. To give you an idea of the complexity we're dealing with here - Brad Goudreau handled the 'virtuoso intro, ending leads and slide' while Tom Scholz did the Chorus and Middle Leads. The interlude instrumental "The Journey" features TS on all instruments and was an obvious ape of the very popular "Foreplay" instrumental that leads into the rocking "Long Time" on the debut LP. Here it segues into another chipper rocker "it's Easy" - again with the huge guitars. I'm never a man for big hairy-rocker ballads - but this time around the near seven-minutes of "A Man I'll Never Be" is far more impressive than I remember it.

But its Side 2 that offers more of what I want. The opening one-two sucker punch of "Feelin' Satisfied" and especially the fantastic little boogie number "Party" are up there with the best of the first album - let's get together honey - it's alright indeed. Brad Delph contributed the musically upbeat "Used To Bad News" that Scholz turns into a Boston song with clever organ melody lines. It ends on the huge rocker "Don't Be Afraid" where layers of guitars and vocals assault your ears in a song that's actually just a little too busy.

Always seen as a poor man's cousin to the spectacular "Boston" debut of 1976 - re-listening to "Don’t Look Back" in 2017 – it's easy to hear why this kind of Rock caught the attention and hearts of millions even if it was perceived at the time as being a bit of a let down. But I'd argue that "Don't Look Back" is way better than that and this superb remaster finally does that second-time around feeling more than proud. As the singer says - take a chance on Rock 'n' Roll...
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Sunday 16 April 2017

"'74 Jailbreak" by AC/DC (2003 Epic/Albert Productions 'ConnecteD Technology' Digipak CD - George Marino Remaster) - A Review by Mark Barry...




This Review Along With Hundreds of Others Is Available In My
SOUNDS GOOD E-Book on all Amazon sites
CLASSIC 1970s ROCK and POP - Exceptional CD Remasters  
Just Click Below To Purchase for £3.95
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"...A Bullet In His Back..."

In truth the 5-track mini LP "'74 Jailbreak" released October 1984 in the USA on Atlantic Records should more accurately be called "Australian AC/DC 1975 and 1976" because that’s what you’re actually getting.

This Bon Scott era compilation was sandwiched between 1983’s "Flick Of The Switch" and 1984’s "Fly On The Wall" to satiate the hunger by fans for more of the biggest (and loudest) Rock band in the world - AC/DC – fronted of course at that time by Brian Johnson who'd come on board for 1981's groundbreaking "Back In Black" album.

But don't be under any illusion just because it has only five 'old' songs – one of which is a Big Joe Williams R&B cover – don't think that this is isn't primo stuff. With Scott's crushing loss still in living memory - to me at the time "'74 Jailbreak" was kind of a magical little number – a timely reminder as to why I fell in love with the Australian Hard Rock band in the first place. Let's get to the CD details first before we go into the song origins..

UK released May 2003 - "'74 Jailbreak" by AC/DC on Epic/Albert Productions 510758 2 (Barcode 5099751075820) is a 5-Track CD reissue and new remaster of the 1984 US compilation LP and plays out as follows (24:23 minutes):

1. Jailbreak
2. You Ain't Got A Hold On Me
3. Show Business
4. Soul Stripper
5. Baby, Please Don't Go
Tracks 1 to 5 are the album "'74 Jailbreak" – released 19 October 1984 in the USA on Atlantic A1-80178. It was first issued in the UK and Europe on CD in 1990.

Some explanation about the song make-up of this compilation... When the first two AC/DC albums were released on Albert Productions in Australia - "High Voltage" in February 1975 (Albert Productions APLP.009) and "T.N.T." in December 1975 (Albert Productions APLPA.016) – they had radically different track lists to their UK, USA and International issues (and different artwork too). Four of the five tracks from "'74 Jailbreak" come from the Ozzy incarnation of the "High Voltage" album - "You Ain't Got A Hold On Me", "Baby, Please Don't Go", "Soul Stripper" and "Show Business". The fifth track "Jailbreak" and its B-side "Fling Thing" were recorded in Australia in January 1976 and released as a stand-alone 7" single in 1976 in various territories.

If you want to sequence the first two Australian LPs and both sides of the stand-alone "Jailbreak" single - you’ll actually need three of these 2003 CD reissues - "'74 Jailbreak", "High Voltage" and "Dirty Deeds Done Dirt Cheap" and two Box Sets - "Bonfire" from 2003 and "Backtracks" from 2009...

Their 8-track Oz original of "High Voltage" looked like this...
Side 1:
1. Baby Please Don't Go (on "'74 Jailbreak" 2003 CD)
2. She's Got Balls (on "High Voltage" 2003 CD)
3. Little Lover (on "High Voltage" 2003 CD)
4. Stick Around (on "Backtracks" 2009 Box Set)
Side 2:
1. Soul Stripper (on "'74 Jailbreak" 2003 CD)
2. You Ain't Got A Hold On Me (on "'74 Jailbreak" 2003 CD)
3. Love Song (on "Backtracks" 2009 Box Set)
4. Show Business (on "'74 Jailbreak" 2003 CD)

While the 9-track original of "T.N.T." looked like this...
Side 1:
1. It's A Long Way To The Top (If You Wanna Rock 'n' Roll) (on "Backtracks" 2009 Box Set)
2. The Rock 'n' Roll Singer (on "High Voltage" 2003 CD)
3. The Jack (on "High Voltage" 2003 CD)
4. Live Wire (on "High Voltage" 2003 CD)
Side 2:
1. T.N.T. (on "High Voltage" 2003 CD)
2. Rocker (on "Dirty Deeds Done Dirt Cheap" 2003 CD)
3. Can I Sit Next To You Girl (on "High Voltage" 2003 CD)
4. High Voltage (on "High Voltage" 2003 CD)
5. School Days (on "Backtracks" 2009 Box Set)

"Jailbreak" b/w "Fling Thing"
June 1976 Australian 7" Single on Albert Productions AP-11135 in label bag
August 1976 UK 7" single on Atlantic K 10805 in label bag
March 1980 UK reissued 7" single on Atlantic K 10805 in picture sleeve
A-side on "'74 Jailbreak" 2003 CD – B-side on "Backtracks" 2009 Box Set

AC/DC was:
BON SCOTT – Vocals
ANGUS YOUNG – Lead Guitar
MALCOLM YOUNG – Rhythm Guitar
MARK EVANS - Bass
PHIL RUDD – Drums

So what do you get here? This Epic CD 5-track reissue has what they call 'ConnecteD Technology' which allows you to access online content via your computer but I'm buggered if I've ever bothered. The card digipak is the same for all of these reissues - very tasty and tactile. There’s a picture CD to the right (the cover art of Angus) and a 12-page booklet housed on the left in a pocket pouch. The booklet It's crammed full of period colour photos - a stunner of the boys up beside a derelict house wall and a gatefold spread of Angus in full schoolboy glory holding a pint of milk! They miss a trick by repeating the US picture sleeve of "Jailbreak" with "Soul Stripper" on its B-side twice when they could have used the UK sleeve -
 or even the rare UK original label. There are other great unpublished live shots too of Bon and Angus. MURRAY ENGLEHEART provides the informative and and enthusiastic liner notes. There is another photo of the band in full denims and teeshirt mode (Angus with his velvet suit and 'A' hat) on the inner gatefold and a solo shot of Bon looking suitable leery beneath the see-through CD tray (great fun the lot of it). The GEORGE MARINO Remaster (done in the USA) is from 'original master tapes' and sounds HUGE - fuller than the 1990 remaster I've had for years. Despite their age - tracks like "Soul Stripper" and "Jailbreak" have lost none of their Rock 'n' Roll power.

I’m always amazed that the truly barnstorming "Jailbreak" (a Young, Young and Scott composition) never did the business as a single in the UK – a country that adores it hooky Rock Classics. Admittedly I can't actually remember seeing the first 1976 pressing of Atlantic K 10805 in its distinctive orange and yellow label – I bought the 1980 picture sleeve reissue with Angus dashing across some stage somewhere semi-naked and sweating like a politician at a tax audit. You could argue that they should have stuck the B-side "Fling Thing” on this compilation – but it’s a Scottish Traditional air instrumental of two minutes that is probably the most throwaway track in their entire cannon – so no real loss there (you take the low road and I'll be in Scotland before you have to hear this). The remaster brings out that fantastic riffage though of "Jailbreak" – the rakish Bon singing the praises of a non-PC mate of his whose doing 16-years in Hell for murder - breaking rocks on the chain gang. He makes it out all right - but with a treacherous bullet in his back (an ideal dinner guest I'm thinking). 

After the sheer pulse-increasing blinder of "Jailbreak" - the ever-so slightly weedy "You Ain't Got A Hold On You" comes as a minor disappointment. But that's immediately wiped away by the Thin Lizzy-sounding rocker "Show Business" - a raucous tirade at robbers in their chosen profession. It's typically leery, fun and Rock 'n' Rolls like a goodun. "Soul Stripper" has a very "High Voltage" vibe in its similar riff - great back beat as Bon regales his tale of a lady tingling his spine who then produces a knife and makes him say things he didn't want to say (oh yeah Bon). They miscredited the Big Joe Williams classic "Baby, Please Don't Go" to Big Bill Broonzy on first pressings of their Australian debut album "High Voltage" - but that doesn't stop this being another rocking fave of mine - the band sounding like Budgie who also covered this slide tune on their 1973 album "Never Turn Your Back On A Friend" (Metallica would return the cover favour years later too). I love that Bon/Angus guitar/voice battle that romps the R&B dancer home.   

"'74 Jailbreak" is short I know and not all undiluted AC/DC riffing genius - but for me it was so sweet to hear Bon again - letting rip with that sense of humour of his and the best rock band on the planet backing him up.

It was a long to the top if you wanted to Rock 'n' Roll - but man their climb was filled with magnificence. Break some rocks with the original chain gang folks and bring this saucy little bust-out into your home...
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Saturday 15 April 2017

"Joan Armatrading" by JOAN ARMATRADING - August 1976 Third Studio Album on A&M Records (September 1997 UK A&M 'ReMasterPieces' CD Reissue with Roger Wake Remaster) - A Review by Mark Barry...



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1976

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"...I'm Open To Persuasion..." 

I can recall vividly the first time I heard "Love And Affection" in the Autumn of 1976 – sophisticated, hurting, layered – it was truly jaw-dropping stuff. And this most famous of her songs has pretty much remained a Radio stalwart ever since. 

Her third album – the self-titled "Joan Armatrading" is coming up on a 50th anniversary in 2026 so deserves to have its considerable praises sung "...once more with feeling..."

UK released September 1997 – "Joan Armatrading" by JOAN ARMATRADING on A&M CDMID 104 (Barcode 082839322829) is a straightforward mid-price CD transfer of the album on the label's 'A&M ReMasterPieces' Series and plays out as follows (42:05 minutes):

1. Down To Zero [Side 1]
2. Help Yourself
3. Water With The Wine
4. Love And Affection
5. Save Me
6. Join The Boys [Side 2]
7. People
8. Somebody Who Loves You
9. Like Fire
10. Tall In The Saddle
Tracks 1 to 10 are her third LP "Joan Armatrading" – released August 1976 in the UK on A&M Records AMLH 64588 and September 1976 in the USA on A&M SP-4588. The album peaked at No. 12 on the UK album charts (No. 67 in the USA) in September 1976. The CD Remaster was carried out by ROGER WAKE at Bourberry & Wake and is very clean – beautiful in places. Unfortunately the inlay is a gatefold slip of paper with musician credits and bugger all else which is a damn shame (early days of CD reissues).

THE BAND:
JOAN ARMATRADING – 6 and 12-string Acoustic Guitars & Lead Vocals
JERRY DONAHUE – Lead Electric Guitar (all tracks except "Somebody Who Loves You" and "Like Fire")
BRYN HAWORTH – Mandolin on "Somebody Who Loves You" and Slide Guitar on "Like Fire"
PETER WOOD – Piano and Organ (all tracks except "Somebody Who Loves You" and "Like Fire")
DAVE MARKEE – Bass on All Tracks
DAVE MATTACKS – Drums on All Tracks except "Down To Zero" and "Help Yourself"
KENNEY JONES – Drums on "Down To Zero" and "Help Yourself"
Duel drums with Dave Mattacks on "Water With The Wine", "Join The Boys" and "People"
B.J. COLE – Steel Guitar on "Down To Zero"
GRAHAM LYLE (of Gallagher & Lyle) – 12-String Guitar on "Down To Zero"
JIMMY JEWEL – Saxophone on "Love And Affection"
LEROY CHAMPAIGN and CLARKE PETERS – Backing Vocals on "Love And Affection"

Following on from her debut LP "Whatever's For Us" on Cube Records HIFLY 12 in November 1972 and her 2nd effort "Back To The Night" on A&M Records AMLH 68305 in April 1975 – "Joan Armatrading" didn't so much launch her but explode the West Indies lady (by way of Birmingham in the UK) onto a world stage. The self-titled LP was everywhere by Christmas and being praised as one of 'the albums of the year' by admirers in the music press on both sides of the pond and everywhere else for that matter.

Side 1 opens with the magnificent "Down To Zero" – a regular on "Best Of" and "Anthology" compilations and easy to hear why. A gorgeous production by Glyn Johns sees those acoustic guitars up front until Jerry Donahue from Fairport Convention kicks in with that great lead guitar. Kenney Jones (of Small Faces, Faces and The Who) and Dave Markee (of Centipede) both play blinders on the Drums and Bass too. But its those "...first class scene-stealer...brand new dandy..." lyrics that cut into you – announcing with bravado that this is no sappy love song nor is the writer a teenage sucker. The sweet sounds continue with the deceptive "Help Yourself" – and just as you're getting comfortable with it acoustic sway – the song goes funky and angry - genius.

"...Met him on a Monday and he said he loved me so..." she sings warily on "Water With The Wine" and by the time you get halfway though the song you get the uneasy feeling that things aren't going to work out for this Joe Schmo. It's funny now to think of that deep bass vocal on "Love And Affection" as being Detective Lester Freamon in HBO's 'The Wire' TV Series who used to bawl out Dominic West's character McNulty every week. But the other unsung hero on this classic is surely Jimmy Jewell of Jake & The Family Jewels - whose Saxophone work elevates the song into the majestic. Everything about this ode to love is aching like an open wound – longing for a taste of the real thing - and even after 40 years "Love And Affection" still has the emotional mojo to move a soul.

Side 2 opens with the funky Rock of "Join The Boys" where Joan declares her musical motley crew is "...second to none even on a bad night..." – great piano and organ fills from Peter Wood throughout with both Kenney Jones and Dave Mattacks whacking those skins. I've always had a soft spot for anything Bryn Haworth plays on – a fantastic guitar player who used to be with Freakbeat darlings Fleur Des Lys in the 60ts. Haworth had just put out two solo albums on Island "Let The Days Go By" in 1974 and "Sunny Side Of The Street" in 1975 (see my review for this pairing on Gott Discs). Haworth's mandolin playing is sweetly complimentary to "Somebody Who Loves You" bringing out the warmth of the song - while his menacing chunky Slide on "Like Fire" perfectly underscores Joan's fantastic funky Acoustic Guitar playing. The record ends on the quietly hopeful "Tall In The Saddle" which features a wildly effective guitar solo from Jerry Donohue.

If you want more of her great material – the "Gold" 2CD set from Universal has beautiful 2005 remasters from Erick Labson – but at present this is the only way to get the whole album with 'that' song on it.

I'd love to hear outtakes from these sessions or demos and I can't help thinking that a 2CD 50th Anniversary Deluxe Edition of "Joan Armatrading" is due in 2026? Here's hoping...

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