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Wednesday, 10 June 2020

"The Family Of Apostolic" by THE FAMILY OF APOSTOLIC [aka THE FAMILY] – April 1969 US 2LP Studio Set on Vanguard Apostolic Records (July 1969 in the UK) featuring John Townley [ex The Magicians], Jay Ungar of Cat Mother, Robert Berkowitz and Travis Jenkins of Archie Whitewater, Jerry Burnham of The Fifth Avenue Band, Lyn Hardy [nee Ungar] of Rude Girls with Deirdre and Gilma Townley and David Ames (April 2016 US Light In The Attic/Future Days Recordings – 2LP Set onto 1CD – John Baldwin Remaster) - A Review by Mark Barry...



"...Lone Pilgrims..."

The Sixties - God help us all!

Recorded towards the end of 1968 at Vanguard's Apostolic Studios in New York (often home to Frank Zappa's Mothers Of Invention) and finally released April 1969 in the USA (July 1969 in the UK) - this completely forgotten Americana Folk-experimental double-album by THE FAMILY OF APOSTOLIC is the very definition of the hippy-dream in all its best and worst components.

Featuring a heady mix of Band-like Folk and Folk Rock, Acoustic Blues and World Music influences stretching from the fiddlers of the Appalachian Mountains to the oud-droning Middle East and sitar-swirling rice fields of Pakistan - Vanguard Apostolic VDS 79301/2 did no business anywhere (God knows who bought it in Blighty). So of course top-quality American reissue label 'Light In The Attic' couldn't wait to put it out again using their 'Future Days Recordings' label imprint. And actually in parts I can hear why. Let's get naked in the river me boys...

US released 22 April 2016 - "The Family Of Apostolic" by THE FAMILY OF APOSTOLIC [aka THE FAMILY] on Light In The Attic/Future Days Recordings FDR 613 (Barcode 826853061322) offers the full 22-Track Double-Album from 1969 Remastered onto 1CD in gatefold card-sleeve packaging and plays out as follows (58:37 minutes):

1. Redeemer [Side 1]
2. Zoo Song
3. Spring Song
4. Down The Road
5. Please Be Mine
6. Don't You Like The Party?
7. Fiddler A Dram [Side 2]
8. Bubbling Brook
9. I Won't Be Sad Again
10. Old Grey House
11. Dholak Gheet
12. Doin' A Stretch [Side 3]
13. The Lone Pilgrim
14. Water Music [Instrumental]
15. Grotesque Silly Bird
16. Taking Me Home
17. O Splendour [Side 4]
18. Lilting Lil
19. Mabel's Umbrage
20. Devil's Yard
21. Personality
22. Saigon Girls
Tracks 1 to 22 are the debut double-album "The Family Of Apostolic" (their only release) – released April 1969 in the USA on Vanguard Apostolic VSD 79301/2 and July 1969 in the UK on Vanguard SDVL 1. Produced by JOHN TOWNLEY – it didn't chart in either country

NOTES:
Tracks 1 to 4, 6, 9, 14 and 21 written by John Townley
Tracks 15, 18, 19 and 20 written by Gilma Townley
Tracks 6 and 10 written by Robert Berkowitz
Tracks 7, 8 and 11 co-written by John Townley and Jay Ungar
Tracks 4 and 13 are cover versions of Blues and Folk Traditionals
Track 12 is co-written by Gilma and John Townley
Track 15 written by Gilma Townley
Track 16 written by Deirdre Heather Townley
Track 17 written by David Ames
Track 22 is an instrumental written by Alan Gordon and Gary Bonner of The Magicians
Tracks 8, 14, 19 and 22 are instrumentals

The gatefold card sleeve features an outside Obi strip with details of the album and adverts for other FDR releases. The chunky 28-page booklet with new liner notes from ALEX STIMMEL of New York features recent interviews with Townley that explain how Apostolic Studios imploded under financial messes thereby dooming any real effort to promote the sprawling double. It's a fascinating read but the real deal is a stunning Remaster from 12-track original tapes by JOHN BALDWIN – a top notch done – up to a point where the listen feels like this could have been recorded in 2008 as US Indie Folk – instead of 1968.

With a full cast of 19 musicians – principals included John Townley [ex The Magicians], Jay Ungar of Cat Mother, Robert Berkowitz and Travis Jenkins of Archie Whitewater (Cadet Concept Records), Jerry Burnham of The Fifth Avenue Band, Lyn Hardy [nee Ungar] of Rude Girls with David Ames, Deirdre and Gilma Townley and many more.

Those expecting wild Psych passages or even Avant Garde free form trip outs can very decidedly look elsewhere. There is nothing Zappa or Mothers or even Quicksilver Messenger Service about this. Imagine the Americana side of "Music From Big Pink" by The Band got drunk with Scotland's The Incredible String Band and England's The Amazing Blondel and then had a baby with Judy Henske and Jerry Yester of "Farewell Aldebaran" fame – and you 'kind of' get there. The double–album is mostly short two-minute Folk and Americana orientated songs with the occasional drivel like "Taking Me Home" where a child sings. In-between you stumble on surprising moments of prettiness like the Scottish instrumental "Mabel's Umbrage" which feels like it should be on a Boys Of The Lough LP.

With its doubled-vocals, droning oud-sitar-sounding organ and plinking guitar - the opening "Redeemer" could be an outtake from anything on the Straight label including "Farewell Aldebaran". That is unfortunately followed by animal noises in "Zoo Song" – an insufferable off-key vocal too. Things go into where the album's real heart lies – rolling Folk – the acoustic guitars and mandolins of "Spring Song" making Townley sound like Iain Matthews of Matthews Southern Comfort at times. The knocked-out-loaded junco-partner acoustic Blues of the Traditional "Down The Road" sounds so damn good – beautiful remaster virtually minus any hiss and yet full of air around the duet vocals and guitar string rattles. 

Townley had been with The Byrds-sounding sixties band on Columbia called The Magicians and it seems some of that songwriting hitsville had remained. Sporting a weirdly comforting sax solo, pretty female vocals and very CSYN organ - "Old Grey House" could have grabbed radio play as a commercial single. Even more impressive though is the reinterpretation of a Pakistani structure in the superb "Dholak Gheet" – all Tabla beats with Karen Dalton-like vocals. We then go all Leon Redbone drunk-piano up-the-river-daddy in "Doin' A Stretch" - itself followed by another album highlight in the lovely old-world way-out-West Folk feel to "The Lone Pilgrim" (gorgeous audio too).

In a bizarre move, Vanguard dragged two 45s from the album before its release in the spring of 1969. Both apparently issued 24 December 1968 (and in picture sleeves) – they coupled the trippy Side 1 opener "Redeemer" with "I Won't Be Sad Again" from Side 2 and issued it on Vanguard Apostolic VRS-35084 credited to a made-up band name called THE GOSPEL. Weirder again was the album ending instrumental "Saigon Girls" (a thrown-over song by Alan Gordon and Gary Bonner from Townley's time at The Magicians) put out as an A-side with the drossy "Water Music" as the flip-side. But this time the sleeve credits the fictitious group as THE SPIRIT OF KHE SAHN while the label tells us their real name – THE FAMILY. Whatever someone was thinking, if I was a DJ of the time, I would have viewed both not just as terrible, but the A-side "Saigon Girls" as downright confrontational - and in all the wrong ways.  

Banjos and tambourine shakes introduce the short but menacing "Devil's Yard" – the doubled lady vocals feeling like The Incredible String Band. Far better is the (again short) but still gorgeous guitar-and-oud combo of "Personality" – a 'won't somebody please tell me who I am' song. And it ends on the decidedly unfinished instrumental "Saigon Girls" where angular guitars play over giggling Vietnam ladies and a radio broadcast about occasional gunfire and bombings (its both disturbing and horrible).

Mad, crap, brilliant, touching – this blast – this double-album urge-splurge of creativity – won't be for everyone for sure. But those Folk-beauty moments and all those instrumental merges make me know why FDR wanted it back out there after 50 years in obscurity. The Sixties man...oh yeah...

"The Best Of The Grateful Dead" by THE GRATEFUL DEAD – Including Tracks from "The Grateful Dead" (March 1967 Debut), "Anthem Of The Sun" (July 1968), "Aoxomoxoa" (June 1969), "Workingman's Dead" (June 1970), "American Beauty" (November 1970), "Wake Of The Flood" (October 1973), "From The Mars Hotel" (June 1974) and more – Featuring Jerry Garcia, Bob Weir, Phil Lesh, Ron McKernan, Mickey Hart and Bill Kreuetmann (March 2015 Rhino 2 x HDCD – David Glasser and Jamie Howarth Remasters) - A Review by Mark Barry...



This Review Along With Over 310 Others Is Available In My
SOUNDS GOOD E-Book on all Amazon sites
CADENCE /CASCADE 
PROG ROCK, PSYCH, AVANT GARDE...
And Others Genres Thereabouts
Exceptional CD Remasters
Covering 1967 to 1977 - It Also Focuses On
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"...A Long Strange Trip..."

It seems strange that there hasn't been a proper "Best Of" to cover the Dead’s astonishing career (1993 was the last and that was a single disc I believe).

Unremarkable title aside – and forgiving the complete absence of live material (a domain every fan acknowledges they excel in) – what you do get here is 31 tracks from their thirteen studio albums between 1968 and 1989 on Warner Brothers, Grateful Dead and Arista Records as well as a rare 7" single version of 1968's "Dark Star" – all of it remastered into HDCD in 2015. Here are the not-so-skeletal details...

UK released March 2015 – "The Best Of The Grateful Dead" by THE GRATEFUL DEAD on Rhino 081227955984 (Barcode 081227955984) is a 32-track 2 x HDCD set of new Remasters and breaks down as follows (the letters [A] to [N] after each LP represent personnel codes for the Band - see list):

Disc 1 (79:54 minutes):
1. The Golden Road (To Unlimited Devotion)
2. Cream Puff War
Tracks 1 and 2 from the debut LP "The Grateful Dead" – released March 1967 in the USA on Warner Brothers W 1689 (Mono) and WS 1689 (Stereo). Stereo mix used. [A]
3. Born Cross-Eyed
Track 3 is from their 2nd studio LP "Anthem Of The Sun" – released July 1968 in the USA on Warner Brothers WS 1749 (Stereo only). [B]
4. Dark Star (Single Version)
Track 4 was released October 1968 in the USA as a 7" single on Warner Brothers 7186 ("Born Cross-Eyed" was the B-side). Note: the UK variant on Warner Brothers WB 7186 reversed the sides and had "Born Cross-Eyed" as the A [C]
5. St. Stephen
6. China Cat Sunflower
Tracks 5 and 6 are from their 3rd studio album "Aoxomoxoa" – released June 1969 in the USA on Warner Brothers WS 1790 [D]
7. Uncle John’s Band
8. Easy Wind
9. Casey Jones
Tracks 7 to 9 are from their 4th studio album "Workingman's Dead" – released June 1970 in the USA on Warner Brothers WS 1869 [E]
10. Truckin'
11 Box Of Rain
12. Sugar Magnolia
13. Friend Of The Devil
14. Ripple
Tracks 10 to 14 are from their 5th studio album "American Beauty" – released November 1970 in the USA on Warner Brothers WS 1893 [F]
15. Eyes Of The World
Tracks 15 is from their 6th studio album "Wake Of The Flood" – released October 1973 in the USA on Grateful Dead Records GD-01 [G]
16. Unbroken Chain
17. Scarlet Begonias
Tracks 16 and 17 are from their 7th studio album "From The Mars Hotel" – released June 1974 in the USA on Grateful Dead Records GD-102 [H]
18. The Music Never Stopped
Track 18 is from their 8th studio album "Blues For Allah" – released September 1975 in the USA on Grateful Dead/United Artists GD-LA494-G [I]
19. Estimated Prophet
Track 19 is from their 9th studio album "Terrapin Station" – released August 1977 in the USA on Arista AL 7001 [J]

Disc 2 (79:08 minutes):
1.Terrapin Station
Tracks 1 is from their 9th studio album "Terrapin Station" (at 16:10 minutes this is the whole of Side 2) – released August 1977 in the USA on Arista AL 7001 [J]
2. Shakedown Street
3. I Need A Miracle
4. Fire On The Mountain
Tracks 2 to 4 are from their 10th studio album "Shakedown Street" (album Produced by Lowell George of Little Feat) – released November 1978 in the USA on Arista AB 4198 [K]
5. Feel Like A Stranger
6. Far From Me
Tracks 5 and 6 are from their 11th studio album "Go To Heaven" – released May 1980 in the USA on Arista Al 9508 [L]
7. Touch Of Grey
8. Hell In A Bucket
9. Throwing Stones
10. Black Muddy River
Tracks 7 to 10 are from their 12th studio album "In The Dark" – released July 1987 in the USA on Arista AL 8452 [M]
11. Blow Away
12. Foolish Heart
13. Standing On The Moon
Tracks 11 to 13 are from their 13th studio album "Built To Last" – released November 1989 in the USA on Arista AL-8575

THE GRATEFUL DEAD Band Members:
GERRY GARCIA [A to N] – Lead Guitar, Vocals, Pedal Steel and Piano
BOB WEIR [A to N] – Guitar and Vocals
RON "PIGPEN" McKERNAN [A to F] – Organ, Harmonica, Vocals, Keyboards, Acoustic Guitar, Congas and Percussion
PHIL LESH [A to N] – Bass, Vocals, Guitar and Piano
BILL KREUETZMANN [A to N] – Drums and Percussion
TOM CONSTANTEN [B and D] – Keyboards and Piano
MICKEY HART [B to F and I to N] – Drums and Percussion
KEITH GODCHAUX [G to K] – Keyboards, Piano and Vocals
DONNA GODCHAUX [G to K] – Vocals
BRENT MYLAND [L to N] – Keyboards and Vocals

GUESTS:
DAVE GRISMAN - Mandolin on "Friend Of The Devil" and "Ripple"
HOWARD WALES – Organ on "Truckin'"
STEVE SCHUSTER – Saxophone on "The Music Never Stopped"
TOM SCOTT – Lyricon and Saxophone on "Estimated Prophet"

DAVID LEMIEUX produced the compilation with the Tapes and Remasters handled by both DAVID GLASSER and JAMIE HOWARTH. It’s housed in a fetching three-way foldout card digipak with two see-through trays holding Grateful Dead skeleton logo CDs (discography info beneath each). The 16-page booklet features new song-by-song liner notes by BLAIR JACKSON (it’s almost entirely text) with pictures of the band on the last and rear pages only. Blair’s insights into each song are suitably detailed and fun – pointing out who played on what and how the track happened. Provided by Jim Marshall - the booklet is also fronted by a gorgeous black and white photo of the boys hanging out by the Haight/Ashbury Road Sign in the late Sixties. And the embossed Skull Logo on the front is gorgeous - the whole thing feels classy and shows that Rhino are back on reissuing form...

But the best news is the new 2015 remasters. Comparing a few tracks to the 2003 Rhino HDCD remasters for the individual albums – I must confess that the earlier cuts from say "Grateful Dead" to "American Beauty" on Warner Brothers sound roughly the same if not a small bit improved. But the Grateful Dead Records and Arista Records stuff is 'so' much better than CDs I had in the Nineties. For that alone – and the extra breath of material Disc 2 brings (over 2 and half hours of music) – this is a bit of a stunner Audio-wise and its available beneath a ten-spot in many places too.

Disc 1 sticks to favourites – the "hey hey" jaunt of "The Golden Road (To The Unlimited Devotion)" from the debut segues into Jerry Garcia's lone credit on "Cream Puff War" – a sort of Garage Pop chugger. The 7" single 2:42 minute edit of "Dark Star" and "Born Cross-Eyed" (a Bob Weir song) was issued in the USA and UK as a seven-inch single on Warner Brothers in the spring of 1968 (funny now to see "Dark Star" as a 'single' when it is always been associated with 25 to 30-minute jams). "Dark Star" is the most un-commercial of singles and has a bit of spoken poetry/banjo in the fade out! Both of the cuts from "Aoxomoxoa" introduced Funk into the Dead’s Psychedelic swagger with Organ and Guitar fighting it out. Both the LPs "Workingman's Dead" and "American Beauty" are surely everyone’s faves – both introducing a musicality and warmth to their sound that can't be denied. I would have loved to have had "New Speedway Boogie" from "Workingman's Dead" included – but you can’t have everything (check out Marc Cohn's great cover of it on his "Listening Booth: 1970" CD album from 2010).

David Grisman adds wonderful Mandolin strums to the witty "Friend Of The Devil" and the lovely "American Beauty" Side 2 opener "Ripple" – as pretty a song as they've ever written (gorgeous audio on it). I always thought "Eyes Of The World" terribly weedy fare – far better is the acoustic "Unbroken Chain" with Donna Godchaux providing really sweet duet Vocals. Things go a bit Funky for the "...mosquitos on the river..." song "The Music Never Stopped" where Donna gives it some vox yet again (nice Sax too from Steve Schuster). Speaking of that great instrument - Tom Scott adds Saxophone to the LA reggae-ish sway of "Estimated Prophet" (from their first album for Arista "Terrapin Station"). Its (dare we say it) 'commercial' for the Dead – but I actually love that rhythm (remaster is superb too). The full 16:02 minute/seven-part "Terrapin Station" that took up the whole of Side 2 of the LP may test your patience – but I love the Eastern mysticism vibes and the Prog parts with those mad string flurries in the final section of the suite.

Lowell George of Little Feat fame stepped up to the Producer Chair for "Shakedown Street" and the band returned from Prog to straight-up Rock 'n' Roll with "I Need A Miracle". The disco-funk of the title track probably brings out a rash in hardcore fans and the soft-shoe commercial cod-reggae shuffle of "Fire On The Mountain" probably elicits the same reaction – but they both sound incredible in these new remasters. Far more accomplished is "Feel Like A Stranger" where new Keyboard player Brent Myland really makes his presence known in those tasty fills (fabulous remaster too). His vocal lead on “Far From Me” sounds almost “Rumours” in its sophisticated Rock way and you can hear that Bob Weir hip influence – Funky one moment – pretty the next – and those Queen layered vocals (a bit cool actually). "I will survive!" they sing on their unlikely hit single "Touch Of Grey" – Garcia having fun. We get a bit more downhome boogie on the excellent "Hell In A Bucket" where that motorbike growl travelling across your speakers still takes me by surprise (enjoying the ride). And that's what's so cool about Disc 2 – it surprises you – and in many ways is actually better than the later Seventies stuff in some ways.

So there you have it – a "Best Of" that finally does the band justice (in the studio anyway). What’s needed now is a "Best Of LIVE DEAD" but we’re probably looking at a 3-disc minimum or more. In the meantime – dig in here and remember what those Robert Crumb cartoon teeshirts used to say...Keep On Truckin'...

Tuesday, 9 June 2020

"Chicago III" by CHICAGO – January 1971 Third Double-Album on Columbia Records (USA) and March 1971 (UK) on CBS Records - featuring Robert Lamm, Terry Kath, Peter Cetera, Daniel Seraphine, Lee Loughnane, James Pankow and Walter Parazaider (July 2002 UK Warner Strategic Marketing/Rhino Reissue - 2LP Set Onto 1CD – David Donnelly Remaster) - A Review by Mark Barry...







"...Motorboat To Mars..."

Apart from maybe Zappa and The Mothers - I can't think of any other American band that could have managed THREE double-albums of original studio material in a row during an twenty-month period - but CHICAGO did.

Their Columbia Records debut as "Chicago Transit Authority" hit the shops in late April 1969, the second simply called "Chicago" though more commonly known as "Chicago II" came in January 1970 whilst the ingeniously named "Chicago III" came out in January 1971 - all 2LP studio sets. And then, they whacked out a further four-LP live box recorded at Carnegie Hall later than same year (November 1971 as "Chicago IV") resplendent with posters and other cool inserts. Pour it on boys why don't you...

And their 2LP platters weren't jacked-up with 16-minutes songs – 12-minutes of which consisted of a filler guitar solo. No. Columbia went with the band's artistic bint and let them stretch. If the songs were long, they were long and needed to be released into the wild as such. These were full-on musical compositions that certainly contained Prog Rock and often had Classical leanings too. "Chicago III" was no different to the two before. With three large pieces (Travel Suite, An Hour in The Shower and Elegy) and a total of 23-tracks – it was not for the faint-hearted or those pressed for time. And it looked the part of a 'big release' too. The front sleeve sported the now familiar CHICAGO logo (which they've used ever since) while both the inner gatefold and two inner sleeves came with custom script lettering for the recording details and lyrics. "III" also sported a giant foldout poster of our heroes amidst a sea of soldier's gravestones (alluding to the mentions of Vietnam in some of the songs). Pour it on why don't you...indeed.

I've always liked early Chicago before the big soppy ballads showed them where the real money lay. But I'd have to admit that much of those endless brass improvs will test the patience of today's 2020 audience, But I say let's take a few minutes for the boys who used to once dream of bus terminals only to end up in early 1971 on a motorboat to Mars (yeah baby)...

UK released 27 July 2002 - "Chicago III" by CHICAGO on Warner Strategic Marketing/Rhino 8122-76173-2 (Barcode 081227617325) offers the 1971 Double-Album Remastered onto 1CD in total and plays out as follows (71:29 minutes):

1. Sing A Mean Tune Kid [Side 1]
2. Loneliness Is Just A Word
3. What Else Can I Say
4. I Don't Want Your Money
TRAVEL SUITE (Tracks 5 to 10)
5. Flight [Side 2]
6. Motorboat To Mars
7. Free
8. Free Country
9. At The Sunrise
10. Happy 'Cause I'm Going Home
11. Mother [Side 3]
12. Lowdown
AN HOUR IN THE SHOWER (Tracks 13 to 17)
13. A Hard Risin' Morning Without Breakfast
14. Off To Work
15. Fallin' Out
16. Dreamin' Home
17. Morning Blues Again
ELEGY (Tracks 18 to 23)
18. When All The Laughter Dies in Sorrow [Side 4]
19. Canon
20. Once Upon A Time...
21. Progress?
22. The Approaching Storm
23. Man vs. Man: The End
Tracks 1 to 23 are the double-album "Chicago III" – released January 1971 in the USA on Columbia Records C2 30110 and March 1971 in the UK on CBS Records 66260 (both in Stereo). Produced by JAMES WILLIAM GUERICO – it peaked at No. 2 in the USA and No. 31 in the UK

CHICAGO was:
ROBERT LAMM - Vocals and Keyboards
TERRY KATH - Vocals and Guitar
PETER CETERA - Vocals and Bass
JAMES PANKOW - Trombone
LEE LOUGHNANE - Trumpet and Vocals
WALTER PARAZAIDER - Vocals and Woodwinds
DANIEL SERAPHINE - Drums

Rhino's CD reissues for the first three twofers all initially came with outer card wraps and gatefold card digipak inners - aping the original vinyl artwork to a degree (they've been subsequently reissued as jewel case versions) and that's what you get here. While the inner digipak mimics the inner gatefold of the original double-album right down to the script text (a see-through plastic CD tray allows you to see what’s beneath), for some reason the 12-page booklet leaves out the two inners with the lyrics and the foldout poster - a bit of a boob really (perhaps they weren't able to secure them).

Making up for that are a period publicity photo of the seven-piece band and a US magazine cover (cheap at 60c), along with new interviews by liner-notes writer DAVID WILD with original band members - Trombonist Pankow and Trumpeter Loughnane. It's a potted history and interesting read where the boys praise Columbia for allowing the band to pursue big songs and not just hit singles - Pankow fondly remembering (35 years later) what made it all so special then and still resonates now - the band and the people around them were all in it for the 'music' and not the suits/cash-men who would later take over. DAVID DONNELLY has done the Remaster at DNA Studios in California and the power is fantastic. I've had the British vinyl originals for years and these Rhino transfers rock. To the music...

Columbia issued the brass-funky vocal-growling radio-friendly 2:14 minutes of "Free" as the album's starter 45 in February 1971 (Columbia 4-45331) - a Robert Lamm song that could easily have been passed off as the next Blood, Sweat & Tears or Sly & The Family Stone single (label mates also on Columbia). Chicago was awarded with a No. 20 chart peak - the quirky instrumental  "Free Country" being its flipside). In fact as you play the opening "Sing A Mean Tune Kid" on Side 1 - you could be mistaking its nine-minutes for Rare Earth or even After The Fire or shades of yes, Blood, Sweat & Tears - another Robert Lamm brass-driven funkster. The sexy half-spoken/half-sung "Loneliness Is Just A Word" would end up as the B-side of the album's second US 45 "Lowdown" in April 1971 on Columbia 4-45370. Managing a peak of No. 35 - I'd argue that the better B-side should have been the Plug Side. Future principal vocalist Peter Cetera gets his first tune on the album with the decidedly Eagles-country-ish "What Else Can I Say". The boys goof off at the beginning of "I Don't Want Your Money" - the album's Helter Skelter guitar moment where Chicago suddenly sound like John Mayall discovering Rock. 

The first of three multiple-song couplings comes in the shape of "Travel Suite" where Chicago wrong-foot the listener once again by sounding like they've been listening to too much America on "Flight 602". Next up is a short drum solo called "Motorboat To Mars" which is followed by the infinitely better "Free" - the boys discovering their inner Sly Stone. The full 5:02 minutes of "Free Country" is piano and flute Prog that is pretty for its first half and then improv discordant for the remainder. Lamm asks how can he be happy if he can't see his girl "At The Sunrise" - soon joined on duet vocals with Cetera - a catchy tune that could easily have been single number three. The Travel Suite continues with seven minutes of la-di-dah in "Happy 'Cause I'm Coming Home" - an upbeat almost Latin beat shuffler - followed by Lamm's "Mother" where Trumpet and Trombone do battle to a backbeat.

An Hour In The Shower encompasses five songs - all by Terry Kath - blues slipping down the drain as the morning water cascade pours. As he takes "Off To Work" he lays into Rock guitar backed up by those brass jabs. The problem is that the next three parts hog the same acoustic strum as they segue into each other without being interesting. "Elegy" opens with a poem "When All The Laughter Dies In Sorrow" printed on the inner gatefold (terribly dated unfortunately) followed by a doomy brass preamble called "Canon". This in turn leads into the flute-meandering "Once Upon A Time..." that later goes funky-workout with the superb toe-thumper "The Approaching Storm" – probably one the better numbers on record no. 2. But by "Man vs. Man: The End" it already feels like they're running out of ideas and improvs have replaced actual tunes.

The packaging is cool, the Audio rocks and even if the music on "Chicago III" is seriously dated in places - those cool moments and funky passages make it worth your while investigating door number three...

Monday, 8 June 2020

"Live/Dead" by THE GRATEFUL DEAD – November 1969 US 2LP Live Set on Warner Brothers Records (February 1970 in the UK) featuring Jerry Garcia, Phil Lesh, Bob Weir, Mickey Hart, Bill Kreutzmann, Tom Constanten and Pigpen (March 2003 UK Warner Strategic Marketing/Rhino Reissue – 2LPs onto 1HDCD Plus Two Hidden Bonus Tracks - Joe Gastwirt Remaster) - A Review by Mark Barry...








This Review Along With Over 310 Others Is Available In My
SOUNDS GOOD E-Book on all Amazon sites
CADENCE /CASCADE 
PROG ROCK, PSYCH, AVANT GARDE...
And Others Genres Thereabouts
Exceptional CD Remasters
Covering 1967 to 1977 - It Also Focuses On
Fusion Rock, Acid Folk, Art Rock and Underground 
Just Click Below To Purchase
Thousands of E-Pages - All Details and In-Depth Reviews From Discs
(No Cut and Paste Crap)


"...Dark Star..."

Hidden flavours in a forgotten broth...

Even back in 1988 when I first started collecting CDs proper - I always loved Rhino reissues. They were just that bit above everyone else in terms of giving punters what they wanted – packaging, extras and fab sound (usually care of Dan Hersch and Bill Inglot). It helped of course that Rhino had the massive and ludicrously rich WEA catalogue at their fingertips - something they laid into on all genre fronts - especially Soul and Jazz. I've got almost 40 of the 60 three-inch CD singles they issued in 1988 and 1989 called "Lil' Bit Of Gold" – stunning four-track mini-hits sets in cute picture card sleeves and gold-coloured CD singles (remember those long blister packs they came in, pretty but wasteful - but man did they sound good).

So it's hardly surprising to find that once again come the Dead's 1969 fourth outing and their first official live release (an area everyone agrees they excel in) - Rhino have taken that now forgotten stew of a double-album and pumped it up with a remix and a remaster, even tagging on two cleverly chosen 'hidden tracks' in the close out of this RhinOphonic sounding reissue. And it's another winner. Here are the hairy men and their dark stars...

UK released 10 March 2003 - "Live/Dead" by THE GRATEFUL DEAD on Warner Strategic Marketing/Rhino 8122-74395-2 (Barcode 081227439521) offers the 1969 US 2LP set Remixed and Remastered onto 1 HDCD (High Density Compatible Digital) in a Card Digipak with Two Hidden Bonus Tracks. It plays out as follows (79:30 minutes):

1. Dark Star (23:19 minutes) [Side 1]
2. Saint Stephen (6:32 minutes) [Side 2]
3. The Eleven (9:19 minutes)
4. Turn On Your Love Light (15:05 minutes) [Side 3]
5. Death Don't Have No Mercy (10:28 minutes) [Side 4]
6. Feedback (7:49 minutes)
7. And We Bid You Goodnight (0:37 minutes)
Tracks 1 to 7 are their fourth album "Live/Dead" - US released 10 November 1969 as a 2LP set on Warner Brothers 2WS-1830 and February 1970 in the UK as a 2LP set on Warner Brothers WS 1830 (UK issues were pressed with Record featuring Sides 1 and Side 4, whilst Record 2 featured Sides 2 and 3).

NOTE:
Like the original vinyl double, this CD reissue lists Track 7 in the booklet as having a playing time of 37 seconds, but you quickly realise that it runs to a combined three track playing time of 3:13 minutes. This is because there are two hidden tracks - 8 is "Dark Star (Studio version)" at 2:45 minutes and 9 is a "Radio Advertisement" for the album at 1:01 minutes.

The gatefold card digipak allows the attached 15-page booklet to reproduce the gatefold artwork (outside and in) of the original American double-album on Warner Brothers - while the new LENNY KAYE liner notes waxes lyrical about the material's sources and the scene around their shows ("Aoxomoxoa" for "Saint Stephen" and "The Eleven" from "Anthem Of The Sun" while the cover of Bobby 'Blue' Bland's incendiary R&B screamer "Turn On Your Love Light" allowed to band to jump off into improv - stints into even Bluegrass amidst the trippy Rock).

Long-time associate and Audio Engineer for Rhino and WEA's Rock Catalogue JOE GASTWIRT did the Remaster and Remix at OceanView Digital in 2001 and 'bully beef' comes to mind (he has handled Zeppelin, Stephen Stills, Yes and more). This thing Rocks and Rolls bringing alive that instrument interplay their live shows were famous for. To the tunes...

Recorded 27 February 1969 at The Fillmore West in San Francisco - Side 1 is dominated by the huge "Dark Star" - a beast that slides in all casual like at first. Bass and Guitar play off each other before the vocals take over - before they just trip off on random guitar notes punctured by keyboard fills. Side 2's "St. Stephen" was new - wherever he goes, the people all complain - a Rock-funky set of duet vocals. The improv guitars continue apace with "The Eleven" - a meandering piece that will have you seeing hippies shaking their heads in a concert crowd - stoned and digging the freeform groove.

"Turn On Your Love Light" gets the crowd hollering - its sexy R&B lyrics fun and sassy - the percussion doing battle with the vocals (come on baby please) - fifteen minutes of white boys enjoying their inner funky selves. The suitably doomy Gary Davis cover "Death Don't Have No Mercy" gives the Dead a decent shot at the Blues - their slow, deliberately funeral-paced rendition feeling like Janis Joplin (somehow) getting in deep.  As "And We Bid You Goodnight" fades out, we get that Hidden Bonus Track following - the studio version of "Dark Star" - so trippy and cool.

For absolute sure, there are those that will take one listen to this set of live improvs from 1969 and say no thanks - and I can understand that. But longstanding fans will know no shame and 'hurry hurry' (as the radio advert asks) to this superb-sounding HDCD reissue and shed a wee hippy tear...

Sunday, 7 June 2020

"Hot Runnin' Soul: The Singles 1965-71" by PAUL KELLY (30 January 2012 UK Ace/Kent Soul CD Compilation – Duncan Cowell and Nick Robbins Remasters) - A Review by Mark Barry...





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"...Just My Speed..."

Like most I came to Southern Soul Singer and ace songwriter Paul Kelly via his stunning 1970 single "Stealing In The Name Of The Lord" on Happy Tiger Records - a stinging and full-frontal attack on tele preachers tapping believers in their communities all over the USA at the time. In fact, at first, most race stations wouldn't touch the incendiary subject matter preferring to play and tap the softer flip-side "The Day After Forever" - a beautiful love song in the vein of Howard Tate and Curtis Mayfield. Kelly felt he'd over-stepped the mark - and sexy Tony Joe White piano and guitar funk hook or not - the single was doomed to obscurity y'all (God ain't gonna bless this one).

But Producer and entrepreneur Swamp Dogg (Jerry Williams, Jr.) took our bruised Paul to a Baltimore Radio Station (WWIN) where savvy DJ Rockin' Robin recognised the real hit and the need for its internally socially aware message. Rockin' Robin championed the catchy and pertinent tune until other stations followed playlist suit. And with months of momentum, both he and Kelly eventually saw the 45 hit Cashbox 13 June 1970 with Billboard the week after on the 20th of June - catching a zeitgeist. The Billboard R&B charts finally succumbed to big sales and saw it register the 4th of July 1970 where it took off and made for his highest chart placing weeks later at No. 14. When the mighty Bear Family of Germany were putting together their award-winning "Sweet Soul Music" CD-series from 1960 to 1975 – Bear's "1970" volume including this great song (see separate review).

But what else is there and does it match up – yes and no. This rather cool and brilliant CD compilation from Ace's Kent Soul label imprint gathers together the A&B-sides of twelve 45s from October 1965 on Dial Records through to June 1971 on Happy Tiger Records - many on CD for the first time anywhere. From 1968 onwards is giving me the chills and fever...here are the details...

UK released 30 January 2012 - "Hot Runnin' Soul: The Singles 1965-71" by PAUL KELLY on Ace/Kent Soul CDKEND 367 (Barcode 029667236720) offers twenty-four USA single-sides in Mono and Stereo and plays out as follows (64:51 minutes):

1. Chills And Fever
(1965 US 45 originally on Lloyd 007. Reissued October 1965 US 45 on Dial 4021, A-side - see 6 for B-side)
2. It's My Baby (1965 US debut 45 on Lloyd 226, A-side - see 4 for B-side)
3. Since I Found You (February 1966 US 45 on Dial 45-4025, A-side - see 5 for B-side)
4. The Upset (1965 US debut 45 on Lloyd 226, B-side - see 2 for A-side)
5. Can't Help It (February 1966 US 45 on Dial 45-4025, B-side - see 3 for A-side)
6. Only Your Love
(1965 US 45 originally on Lloyd 007. Reissued October 1965 US 45 on Dial 4021, B-side - see 1 for A-side)
7. I Need Your Love So Bad
8. Nine Out Of Ten Times (tracks 8 and 7 are the A&B-sides of a November 1966 US 45 on Philips 40409 – note running order)
9. Sweet Sweet Lovin'
10. Crying For My Baby (tracks 9 and 10 are the A&B-sides of a May 1967 US 45 on Philips 40457)
11. You Don't Know, You Just Don't Know
12. If This Old House Could Talk (tracks 12 and 11 are the A&B-sides of a September 1967 US 45 on Philips 40480 - note running order)
13. Glad To Be Sad
14. My Love Is Growing Stronger (tracks 13 and 14 are the A&B-sides of a March 1968 US 45 on Philips 40513)
15. We're Gonna Make It (After Awhile)
16. Call Another Doctor (On The Case) (tracks 15 and 16 are the A&B-sides of a December 1968 US 45 on Dial 4088)
17. Stealing In The Name Of The Lord
18. The Day After Forever (tracks 17 and 18 are the A&B-sides of an April 1970 US 45 on Happy Tiger HTS-541)
19. 509
20. Sailing (tracks 19 and 20 are the A&B-sides of an August 1970 US 45 on Happy Tiger HTS-555)
21. Hot Runnin' Soul
22. Poor But Proud (tracks 22 and 21 are the A&B-sides of a November 1970 US 45 on Happy Tiger HTS-568 - note running order)
23. Soul Flow
24. Hangin' On In Here (tracks 23 and 24 are the A&B-sides of a 1971 US 45 on Happy Tiger HTS-573)
NOTES
Tracks 1 to 14 and 16 are MONO - Tracks 15 and 17 to 24 are STEREO

The 12-page booklet has quality TONY ROUNCE liner notes with help from DAVID COLE - TR clearly enjoying his subject matter. There are photos of those American 45 labels and even a rare UK November 1965 stock copy of Atlantic AT 4053 that carried his first outings - the Northern Soul "Chills And Fever" b/w "Only Your Love" - a twofer that was reissued by Atlantic in the UK in January 1973 at the height of the Wigan dance scene. They even have photos of both sides to the promo-only photo for "Nine Out Of Ten Times" on Philips 40409 informing the US public of "who's new and exciting?" The Remasters are care of two hugely experienced Audio Engineers - DUNCAN COWELL and NICK ROBBINS - and typically they punch on the Mono and sound spaciously fab on the later STEREO cuts. Those Happy Tiger and Philips masters are in fine shape...

I'd admit that the first two 45s will probably only appeal to diehard Northern Soul nuts who will slaver over their copycat Motown dancer vibe. But by the time you get to 1966's "Nine Out Of Ten Times" coupled with "I Need Your Love So Bad" where Kelly began penning the tunes himself (stepping out of the shadow of Clarence Reid and Willie Clarke) - then things start to cook. Tunes like 1968's "Glad To Be Sad" (dig that descending guitar) b/w with the wicked "My Love Is Growing Stronger" - you're getting A&B-sides of really great Sixties Soul - neck-jerking R 'n' B with punchy rhythms - girly vocal backing - yeah baby. Got no money, payday far away, job strikes threatened, both the rent and hock man are at the door - poor Paul pleads with his lady to hang on in there until times get better in the brass-upbeat "We're Gonna Make (After Awhile)". The blood pressure and pulse beating too fast B-side "Call Another Doctor (On The Case)" is good rather than great. 

You're then hit with the double-whammy winner that is "Stealing In The Name Of The Lord" b/w "The Day After Forever" - a fantastic Soul Single that makes my top 50 with a wallet-wallop. "509" is another cool A-side - our hero standing at the train station with a preacher man to finally nail his lady love when she steps off the "509" (its flip-side being a less-convincing plea for peace in the ghetto in troubled times). Better is the compilation's title tune "Hot Runnin' Soul" with its Staple Singers at Stax vibe (but with more guitars). Born in the ghetto and always on the skid - "I've always lived a simple life, worked hard for what I got..." Kelly sings in full-on Curtis Mayfield social commentary mode - thankful for what he's got even if he is "Poor But Proud". 

It ends on a great Sly & The Family Stone funkin' moment with the wild-guitar driven "Soul Flow" - a sort of Rare Earth meets Norman Whitfield Temptations groover - a winning combo in my books. Still trying to make it, Kelly goes balladeer in the truckload of trouble song "Hangin' On In There" - a very cool flip-side that combined with "Soul Flow" makes for damn good 7" single.

There are definitely two PAUL KELLY Soul periods here - the slightly innocent mid-60ts stuff that is more Northern Soul and Motown-ish than Southern Soul gentleman bemoaning his girl or his fate. But that second half floats my boat completely – just my speed - over and over again. And that's a winner to me...

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