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Friday 29 March 2019

"Five Albums On Three Discs" by MIKE COOPER (22 March 2019 UK Beat Goes On Compilation - 5LPs Remastered onto 3CDs Plus Bonuses) - A Review by Mark Barry...








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"...Looking Back..."

How here's a treat, and a lot of it too. Hailing out of Reading in Berkshire, our Guitar-playing Harmonica-ingesting British hero MIKE COOPER sees his first five platters between 1969 and 1973 be given the BGO treatment - New Remasters, Digipak presentation and even three bonus tracks – rare stand alone single sides from 1970 and 1972 on Dawn Records.

His musical styles and influences progressed from Roots Blues, Folk and Americana in 1969 (on Pye) through to 1971’s Folk and Country Rock aided and abetted by guest players taken a hiatus from their day jobs as Jazzers in groups like Mike Westbrook’s Quintet, Nucleus and The John Dummer Band. The very Neil Young "Places I Know" set from 1971 is a collaboration album with Michael Gibbs and his next ensemble group 'The Machine Gun Co.' Playing superb 12-string guitar on one of Cooper's 'you never see them' British singles "Your Lovely Ways (Part 1 & 2)" is none other than Chris Spedding (it's the first of three bonus tracks tail-ending on Disc 3). There's a wad of open tunings to wade through, so let’s get at it...

UK released Friday, 22 March 2019 (29 March 2019 in the USA) - "Oh Really?!/Do I Know You?/Trout Steel/Places I Know/The Machine Gun Co. with Mike Cooper/Bonus Tracks" by MIKE COOPER on Beat Goes On BGOCD 1371 (Barcode 5017261213716) offers 'Five Albums On Three Discs' plus Three Bonus Single Sides and plays out as follows:

Disc 1 (73:30 minutes):
1. Death Letter [Side 1]
2. Bad Luck Blues
3. Maggie Campbell
4. Leadhearted Blues
5. Four Ways
6. Poor Little Annie
7. Tadpole Blues [Side 2]
8. Divinity Blues
9. You're Gonna Be Sorry
10. Electric Chair
11. Crow Jane
12. Pepper Rag
13. Saturday Blues
Tracks 1 to 13 are his debut album "Oh Really?!" - released February 1969 in the UK on Pye Records NSPL 18281 in Stereo and in the USA on Janus JLS-3004. Mike Cooper on Vocals and Guitar with Derek Hall on Second Guitar.

14. The Link [Side 1]
15. Journey To The East
16. First Song
17. Theme In C
18. Thinking Back
19. Thinks She Knows Me Now [Side 2]
20. Too Late Now
21. Wish She Was With Me
22. Do I Know You?
23. Start Of A Journey
24. Looking Back
Tracks 14 to 24 are his second studio album "Do I Know You?" - released March 1970 in the UK on Dawn Records DNLS 3005 and 1970 in the USA on Janus JLS-3021. Mike Cooper on Guitar, Vocals and Slide with Harry Miller of The Mike Westbrook Quartet on Double Bass

Disc 2 (70:40 minutes):
1. That's How [Side 1]
2. Sitting Here Watching
3. Goodtimes
4. I've Got Mine
5. A Half Sunday Homage To A Whole Leonardo Da Vinci (Without Words By Richard Brautigan)
6. Don't Talk Too Fast [Side 2]
7. Trout Steel
8. In The Mourning
9. Hope You See
10. Pharaoh's March
11. Weeping Rose
Tracks 1 to 11 are his third album "Trout Steel" - released November 1970 in the UK on Dawn Records DNLS 3011 (no USA issue)

12. Country Water [Side 1]
13. Three-Forty Eight
14. Night Journey
15. Time To Time
Tracks 12 to 15 are Side 1 of his fourth album "Places I Know" credited to Mike Cooper with The Machine Gun Co. and Michael Gibbs - released November 1971 in the UK on Dawn Records DNLS 3026 (no USA issue)

Disc 3 (75:35 minutes):
1. Paper And Smoke [Side 2]
2. Broken Bridges
3. Now I Know
4. Goodbye Blues, Goodbye
5. Places I Know
Tracks 1 to 5 are Side 2 of his fourth album "Places I Know" credited to Mike Cooper with The Machine Gun Co. and Michael Gibbs - released November 1971 in the UK on Dawn Records DNLS 3026 (no USA issue). "Night Journey" and "Paper And Smoke" feature The Machine Gun Company [Co.] - Alan Cook on Piano, Bill Boazman, Geoff Hawkins on Saxophone and Pipes, Jeff Clyne of Nucleus, John Van Derrick, Laurie Alan, Les Calvert on Bass and Tim Richardson on Percussion with Chorus Vocals by Gerald Moore of Reggae Guitars, Jean Oddie and Jazz Vocalist Norma Winstone

6. Song For Abigail [Side 1]
7. The Singing Tree
8. Midnight Words
9. So Glad (That I Found You) [Side 2]
10. Lady Anne
Tracks 6 to 10 are his fifth studio album "The Machine Gun Co. with Mike Cooper" - released November 1972 in the UK on Dawn DNLS 3031 (no USA issue).

BONUS TRACKS:
11. Your Lovely Ways (Part 1 & 2) - UK 1970 7" Maxi EP single on Dawn Records DNX 2501, A-side, Non-Album
12. Time In Hand - UK 1972 7" single on Dawn Records DNS 1022, A-side, Non-Album
13. Schaabisch Hall - UK 1972 7" single on Dawn Records DNS 1022, B-side, Non-Album Instrumental
Tracks 11, 12 and 13 featuring Chris Spedding on 12-String Guitar

As far as I know this is only the second time BGO has used fold-out digipaks (Sonny & Cher was the other in 2018) and I must say I miss the classiness of the outer card slipcase because the four-panel digipak is a bit weedy and although every see-through tray has original artwork beneath it – this is one of those cases where you wish they’d done a Grapefruit Records reissue and stuck three card sleeves in a clamshell box with a bigger booklet. At 24-pages you get all the original artwork and new liner notes from noted writer JOHN O’REAGAN – but I think it ‘feels’ like one of those crappy Universal Deluxe Editions without the plastic titled slipcase.

And in 2006 when Japan reissued his most popular album "Trout Steel" on a SHM-CD with original repro artwork – they included both seven-minute sides of his 1970 Dawn Records single as two Bonus Tracks - "Your Lovely Ways (Part 1 & 2)" with its B-side "Watching you Fall (Part 1 & 2)". I mention this because "Watching you Fall (Part 1 & 2)" is not here – a damn shame because as you can from the total playing time for Disc 2, there was room for one more important inclusion. But these are minor complaints because the real spoils lie in new 2019 ANDREW THOMPSON Remasters that lift up the primarily acoustic-based music beautifully. This threesome sounds gorgeous and the music deserves it too.

The first album is pure Folk Blues – Acoustic one-man renditions by way of Scunthorpe – all songs originals except for the two openers – a cover of the Son House doomy classic "Death Letter" and a Blind Boy Fuller song called (not surprisingly) "Hard Luck Blues". The debut is a beginning and you can hear it – the whole album quietly good, but more functional than inspiring. But when Cooper hit the second platter "Do I Know You?" – it’s like he suddenly found his voice – the songs more distinctively him than copyist styling of some Americana dream. The most immediate comparison is Michael Chapman over on Harvest Records (the playing and voice) – the opening instrumental "The Link" getting a huge acoustic sound (like a 12-string). That promising entrée is followed by an impressive Roy Harper-ish duo of tunes "Journey To The East" and "First Song". Birdies and Froggies chirp and croak for the intro of "Them In C", a Bluesy Slide Acoustic with treated vocals that sound like Ray Dorset discovering the Delta as it segues into "Thinking Back". Other winners include the pretty but painful "Too Late Now", the panned Gallagher & Lyle acoustic guitars of "Wish She Was With Me" and the tidal wash of "Start Of A Journey".

Everything has changed Cooper sings on "That’s How" – another familiar acoustic strummer that opens album number three "Trout Steel". Stefan Grossman and Bill Boazman guest on guitars as do Mike Osbourne, Alan Skidmore and Geoff Hawkins on varying Horns. Very cool acoustic soloing on "Sitting Here Watching" while the run-together title "Goodtimes" feels like jolly Gallagher & Lyle or Ronnie Lane’s Slim Chance rehearsing some slide acoustic melodies. The eleven-minutes-plus of "I’ve Got Mine" feels like experimental John Martyn, a bedroom of acoustic picking jabbed by Jazz musicians who know how to feel out something special – probably the album’s best moment – and something even Prog Folk lovers will crave.

After the acoustic-based Blues and Folk variations of the first three albums, the overtly Country-Rock of "Places I Know" feels like you’ve stumbled on Plainsong making their debut album - only a year earlier. At times "Three-Forty Three" even feels like Neil Young circa 1970 or Lindisfarne contemplating the Fog On The Tyne. While the Bluesy groove of "Night Journey" is uncomfortably close to Dylan and his Blonde On Blonde gem "Pledging My Time" – even the way the sliding guitar strings build. But Roy Harper type greatness comes in the epic 8:30 minutes of the Side 1 finisher "Time To Time" – all strummed acoustics and Alan Cook giving us aching piano echoing in the background only to be joined by gorgeous Norma Winstone and Chorus ooh and aahs as the strum builds – you don’t know, the way she can be from...

The strangely deflated mellow of "Song For Abigail" opens "The Machine Gun Co. with Mike Cooper" album – the whole LP apparently supposed to have been the second half of the double-album "Places I Know". The fourteen-minute John Martyn Guitar and Rock Fusion noodle that is "So Glad (That I Found You)" is either going to test you or thrill you. But as much as I try to like the tunes, few move me and I can’t help thinking this half of the double was canned for a reason. Way prettier and a reminder of his fresh-faced genius is the ultra-rare 1970 single Mike Cooper "Your Lovely Ways (Part 1 & 2)" with Chris Spedding elevating its seven minutes to gorgeousness by way of his 12-string guitar playing – Michael Gibbs directing the cello. Given a picture sleeve (repro’d on Page 16) – it was a Maxi single that played at LP speed and along with "Time In Hand" and its piano-ballad B-side "Schaabisch Hall" end Disc 3 on a high.

For sure not everything here is undiluted Mike Cooper genius (Michael Chapman or Roy Harper would thrash him song-wise any day of the week). But there is also a great deal to love and it’s been decades since I heard it all sound so well. Maybe next time though BGO – go for that clamshell box and some tasty card sleeves...

Tuesday 26 March 2019

"In A Wild Sanctuary/Gandharva/All Good Men" by BEAVER & KRAUSE - 1970, 1971 and 1972 Albums Remastered onto 2CDs (March 2019 UK Righteous Records Compilation - 3LPs onto 2CDs - Alan Wilson Remasters) - A Review by Mark Barry...





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"...Spaced..."

There aren't many bands or artists who 'don't' make the Record Collector Rare Records Price Guide when they issued albums as far back as 1970, 1971 and 1972 - but the eccentric and frankly noodlesome output of PAUL BEAVER and BERNARD KRAUSE are among that select few.

When I worked as a Rock and Rarities Vinyl Buyer at Reckless Records (a stretch of 20 years penal servitude) - Beaver & Krause albums were like Bach on a Moog or Sitar for your Grannies Bunions - curios that sold for a few quid, usually bought by hipster DJs looking for samples, quirky bits of noise they could use in between spins on the Technics 1200s. And in some respect, not a lot has changed for this dynamic duo of alternate soundscapes.

What you're getting here is three full albums the keyboard bending boys did for Warner Brothers in the early Seventies (they did their first in 1968 "The Nonesuch Guide To Electronic Music" and a second on Limelight Records in 1969 called "Ragnorök (Electronic Funk)") – the third having slowly moved away from Ambient Electronics to embrace proper songs (even if they are a bit weepy and let the side down somewhat). Short on playing time but impactful nonetheless, the first and third of these forgotten albums were only released in the USA ("In A Wild Sanctuary" in 1970 and "All Good Men" in 1972) - whilst the more commercially accessible "Gandharva" LP saw both America and Blighty outings and remains the one album most British Rock heads have ever seen by them.

Insider support was impressive too. The first two albums drew in some world class players prepared to bolster up experimental outings - Bud Shank on Flute and Saxophone, Dave Grusin on Keyboards, Gerry Mulligan on Saxophone with Milt Holland on all manner of Percussion. The Electronic Rock of the "Gandharva" album even has the guitar work of Mike Bloomfield and Ronnie Montrose on it with genuine Soulful bonuses being supplied by that trio of classy backing vocalists - Vanetta Fields, Clydie King and Patrice Holloway – Clydie lending "Walkin'" an almost ethereal Rotary Connection feel before the three launch into a full-on see-me-in-church Gospel romp on the very next song (and that's a Nirvana for me I can tell you). Ace Conductor Jimmie Haskell arranged the third platter where the duo did most of the playing – tackling Scott Joplin amongst other things - all forgotten now in a sea of existential bum fluff.

But (and as they say in a Donald Trump shower situation, here comes the big but) - there's much to be getting on with here - goodies due reappraisal - music that is actually moving and even beautiful at times - tunes that have passed many discerning ears by. Beaver & Krause even championed environmental and ecological issues in 1970 on their big label debut "In A Wild Sanctuary" with the full permission of Warner Bros executives - back in the days when hopeful men ran the music business and not disinterested suits. I mean how can you not love a band that has song titles like "Aurora Hominis" and "Walking Green Algae Blues". For sure the third platter lets the side down somewhat...

Anyways, some reissue crowd called 'Righteous' seem determined that we pay attention with this 2019 digital twofer and start yanking on those bare wires again. So as the plugged-in boys said in their original liner notes - let's get to our 'environmental expressions recorded with Moog synthesiser' (I will if you will baby)...

UK released Friday, 29 March 2019 (5 April 2019 in the USA) - "In A Wild Sanctuary/Gandharva/All Good Men" by BEAVER and KRAUSE on Righteous PSALM23:93D (Barcode 5013929989320) offers 3 albums from 1970, 1971 and 1972 (originally on Warner Brother Records) Remastered onto 2CDs and plays out as follows:

Disc 1 (46:30 minutes):
1. Another Part Of Time [Side 1]
2. And There Was Morning
3. Spaced
4. So Long As The Waters Flow
5. Aurora Hominis [Side 2]
6. Salute To The Vanishing Bald Eagle
7. People's Park
8. Walking Green Algae Blues
9. Sanctuary
Tracks 1 to 9 are their third studio album "In A Wild Sanctuary" - released June 1970 in the USA on Warner Brothers WS 1850 (no UK release).

10. Soft White [Side 1]
11. Saga Of The Blue Beaver
12. Nine Moons In Alaska
13. Walkin'
14. Walkin' By The River
Tracks 10 to 14 are Side 1 of their fourth studio album "Gandharva" - released May 1971 in the USA on Warner Brothers WS 1909 and in the UK on Warner Brothers K 46130.

Disc 2 (55:49 minutes):
1. Gandharva [Side 2]
2. By Your Grace
3. Good Places
4. Short Film For David
5. Bright Shadows
Tracks 1 to 5 are Side 2 of their fourth studio album "Gandharva" - released May 1971 in the USA on Warner Brothers WS 1909 and in the UK on Warner Brothers K 46130.

6. A Real Slow Drag [Side 1]
7. Legend Days Are Over
8. Love Of Col. Evol
9. Sweet William
10. Bluebird Canyon Stomp
11. Looking Back Now
12. Prelude
13. Child Of The Morning Sun
14. Between The Sun And The Rain
15. All Good Men
16. Waltz Me Around Again Willie/Real Slow Drag
Tracks 6 to 16 are their fifth and final studio album "All Good Men" - released September 1972 in the USA on Warner Brothers BS 2624 (no UK release).

The liner notes by DAVE HENDERSON are witty and suitably eclectic (given the two involved) – but there is precious little by way of actual album credits (the guest musicians I've mentioned above) and he barely touches the actual music. For instance the third LP has songwriter Adrienne Anderson giving it some love you soulful vocals on Side 1's "Sweet William" and US Folky Cris Williamson getting all Jimmy Webb on "Looking Back Now" – ballads that are more Dionne Warwick than Karlheinz Stockhausen. There’s an Native Indian voice attributed to Elizabeth Watson in the LP credits on the repeated spoken lyrics in "Legend Days Are Over" – but again no background as to who or why – when it would have been cool to know after all these decades.

ALAN WILSON has done the mastering - the 8-page booklet peppered with snaps of those WB master tapes. "Gandharva" was done digitally in 1994 with Lee Herschberg on the Warner Archives Series while two ok Collector’s Choice CDs came out in 2006 for "In A Wild Sanctuary" and "All Good Men" and I suspect that all three of these have been used (licensed from WEA). The audio is good – at times great – but at other times just a tad low and wanting. Overall I'd say four out of five stars. To the sounds...

Patters of a Tabla Drum are quickly joined by cool synth notes and a hip organ melody on "Another Part Of Time" – the first LP's opener. It's a tune that acts like its Ramsey Lewis on Cadet Records in 1968 instead of 1970. The instrumental "And There Was Morning" has huge dawn-of-man notes and apes an ELP moment. The quiet "Spaced" has surprisingly little hiss as the synth notes trickle like water dripping on a sidewalk – while "So Long As The Water Flows" forgoes dribbles in space and gives us the full storm – crashes and bangs and static sounding like lashing rain – synth notes rising above- all majestic for five minutes. There is even an "Obscured By Clouds" Pink Floyd feel to "Salute To The Vanishing Bald Eagle" – the whole flowery album plea ending with one and half minutes of the peaceful "Sanctuary".

While the first LP is undoubtedly interesting, things pick up steam considerably with "Gandharva". The Bluesy Guitar picking of Mike Bloomfield follows a huge synth swish at the beginning of "Saga Of The Blue Beaver" – an instrumental that thereafter chugs along in a Funky fashion to a point where you feel you've stumbled on a Shuggie Otis LP over on Epic Records. That’s followed by a droning synth instrumental called "Nine Moons In Alaska" that sounds not unlike "Electro Lux Imbroglio" on Steve Miller's "Book Of Dreams" album in 1977. But this is only a prelude to my fave – Clydie King scatting echoed vocals on the fabulous "Walkin'" – a trippy Soulful moment that acts as a lead in to the full-on Gospel of "Walkin' By The River". Perhaps even better is Gerry Mulligan playing on his own "By Your Grace" over on Side 2 followed strongly by another pretty floating Sax moment in "Good Places".

Minus the big names and with almost every instrument played by the duo only – unfortunately the third album is a very mixed bag (worst of the three) coming across at times like some bad Paul Williams schlock and not the wired experimentalism of the groovy first and second platters. Beaver unwisely sings with his twee voice of a child running in meadows and the sun shining and la-la-laing his way through saccharine flutes. The intro synth drone of "Between The Sun And The Rain" quickly gives way to bopping Salsa rhythms that is frankly way too close to some bad lounge band taking the Michael. The Scott Joplin covers just feel out of place too. There are other better moments on "All Good Men", but they’re not the Side 2 Flute and Sax instrumentals of "Gandharva'".

So musically it's a bit of mishmash then, the first two offering genuinely surprising moments of grandeur and vibe whilst number three loses its way without those big name helps.

Still, a timely reminder and a cool little reissue into the Moogy bargain...

"Fool For The City/Night Shift" by FOGHAT (November 2012 UK Edsel Compilation – 2LPs from 1975 and 1976 (USA - 1976 1977 UK) Remastered onto 1CD Plus A Bonus Track) - A Review by Mark Barry...



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"…Slow Ride…"

Massive in the States but a virtual underground thing in their native Britain – FOGHAT got down and dirty and boogied their way into the hearts of millions across the stadiums of the USA (they arose out of the ashes of two wicked Britain Blues-Rock bands SAVOY BROWN and BLACK CAT BONES).

With four albums under their belt - "Foghat" (1972), "Rock And Roll" (1973), "Energized" (1974) and "Rock And Roll Outlaws" (also 1974) – all of which charted in escalating numbers – the mustached British Blues Boogie Brats finally busted the American top 30 with a Number 23 placing of their 5th (and some would say finest platter) – "Fool For The City". 

With a couple of killer radio friendly Rock singles lifted off the LP – it was their first to go Platinum. 1976 compounded that success with the follow up album “Night Shift” (another cracker despite its naff artwork) that only added to their fan following. Which brings us by way of a bottleneck to this peachy twofer…

Edsel of the UK have licensed the Nineties Rhino remasters – given them a polish – and massively updated the booklets in an almost full catalogue reissue campaign. Here are the Lonesome Dave details…

UK-released 26 March 2012 (10 April in the USA) – "Fool For The City/Night Shift" by FOGHAT on Edsel EDSS 1068 (Barcode 740155106836) offers two albums from 1975 and 1976 Remastered onto 1CD and breaks down as follows (76:23 minutes):

1. Fool For The City [Side 1]
2. My Babe
3. Slow Ride
4. Terraplane Blues [Side 2]
5. Save Your Loving (For Me)
6. Drive Me Home
7. Take It Or Leave It
Tracks 1 to 7 are their fifth album "Fool For The City" released October 1975 in the USA on Bearsville BR 6959 and February 1976 in the UK on Bearsville K 55507

8. Drivin’ Wheel
9. Don’t Run Me Down
10. Burnin’ The Midnight Oil
11. Night Shift [Side 2]
12. Hot Shot Love
13. Take Me To The River
14. I’ll Be Standing By
Tracks 8 to 14 are their sixth album "Night Shift" released November 1976 in the USA on Bearsville BR 6962 and February 1977 in the UK on Bearsville K 55511

Track 15 is a Bonus Track called "New Place To Call Home" - it's a Dan Hartman composition and is a "Night Shift" outtake

FOGHAT was:
LONESOME DAVE (PEVERETT) on Lead Vocals and Guitar
ROD 'THE BOTTLE' PRICE on Lead Guitar and Vocals
NICK JAMESON on Bass, Keyboards, Guitar and Vocals
ROGER EARL on Drums and Percussion
(Nick Jameson) replaced by CRAIG MacGREGOR on Bass for "Night Shift"

Like all of these Edsel reissues in this series - the 20-page booklet is pleasingly substantial. It features the front and rear artwork for each album, the lyrics, reproductions of British Bearsville LP labels, live photos of the band from Peverett's collection and a foreign picture sleeve for "Slow Ride" b/w "Save Your Loving (For Me)". 

More importantly there's a detailed new essay by PAUL MYERS who has interviewed ROGER EARL of the band especially for this reissue and has included relevant previous comments by band-founder-member and principal songwriter "LONESOME" DAVE PEVERETT and long-time band associate NICK JAMESON. PETER RYNSTON at Tall Order Studios did the mastering and the sound apes the Rhino reissues of the Nineties – clear, punchy and full. It's boogie all the way. Also – this CD is pitched at less than mid-price – so it offers a lot of music for very little wedge.

Produced to perfection by Nick Jameson - "Fool For The City" opens with a title-track killer. It was edited down from its album length of 4:33 minutes to 3:28 minutes and put out as a 45 in March 1976 in the USA (Bearsville BSS 0307) with "Take It Or Leave It" as its flip. What a killer tune – to this day it elicits a grin and is an oldies playlist regular. But it was the Side 1 monster "Slow Ride" that blew everyone away. Its stunning eight-minutes of slide Blues Boogie was also edited down a more manageable 3:59 minutes and in January 1976 it broke into the US singles chart peaking at a respectable 20 on Bearsville BSS 0306 (the UK variant is on K 15522). Their take on The Righteous Brothers hit "My Babe" gets a truly fantastic kick-ass makeover as does the Robert Johnson Side 2 opener "Terraplane Blues". The girls and cars "Drive Me Home" goes all barroom Honky Tonk with its sloppy piano backing supporting rocking guitars. It ends on the rather sappy "Take It Or Leave It" – a stab at MOR keyboard schlock – but by that time the rest of the album has boogied its way into your heart.

The "Night Shift" album saw Nick Jameson step down on the Production front – taken over by ex Edgar Winter Group keyboardist DAN HARTMAN. Right from the off we're back to rocking business with a Price/Peverett crowd pleaser "Drivin' Wheel" – a blaster that feels like it should have done better than its chart placing of 34 in December 1976 (Bearsville BSS 03313). We up the manic rock a notch with "Don't Run Me Down" and then get all sleazy Black Crowes with "Burnin' The Midnight Oil".

Side 2 opens with the catchy fast Rock of "Night Shift" - but far better is their inspired rawk take on Al Green's "Take Me To The River" predating Talking Heads by a few years. It ends on ZZ Top slow blues – "I'll Be Standing There" – a cool six-minute builder that features great guitar licks. Production-wise the bonus Dan Hartman song "New Place To Call Home" is an album-quality outtake – an acoustic attempt at Bluesy AOR that's a lot more pleasant than I was expecting.

So there you have it - enough guitar rockers and slide boogie to worry your dandruff phobic lady for months. Five-star presentation, great sound and a cheap price – I’m a fool for it any day of the week…

PS: titles in the March 2012 FOGHAT reissue series are (LP releases dates are USA):
1. Foghat (July 1972) / Foghat [aka Rock And Roll] (March 1973) – Edsel EDSS 1066
2. Energised (January 1974) / Rock And Roll Outlaws (November 1974) – Edsel EDSS 1067
3. Fool For The City (October 1975) / Night Shift (November 1976) – Edsel EDSS 1068
4. Foghat Live (September 1977) / Stone Blue (May 1978) – Edsel EDSS 1069
5. Boogie Motel (October 1979) / Tight Shoes (June 1980) – Edsel EDSS 1070
6. Girls To Chat & Boys To Bounce (July 1981) / In The Mood For Something Rude (November 1982) / Zig-Zag Walk (June 1983) / Rarities – Edsel EDSD 2130 (2CD set)

PPS: this review is dedicated to Charlie Stewart from Dublin - an old friend of mine who adored "Fool For The City"...

INDEX - Entries and Artist Posts in Alphabetical Order