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Sunday, 12 July 2020

"The Sonet Anthology" by BRETT MARVIN AND THE THUNDERBOLTS featuring Terry Dactyl And The Dinosaurs and Jona Lewie – Featuring The Albums "Brett Marvin And The Thunderbolts" (May 1970), "12 Inches Of..." (May 1971), "Ten Legged Friend" (December 1973) as well as May 1970 BBC Sessions and Terry Dactyl And The Dinosaurs Material from 1971 to 1973 with Jona Lewie Solo Material from 1971 to 1977 and more (February 2020 UK Grapefruit Records 6CD Clamshell Box Set – Simon Murphy Remasters) - A Review by Mark Barry...









"...Ten Legged Friend..."

When I worked as a Rarities buyer at Reckless Records in Soho, London (a 20-year stretch) - Brett Marvin and The Thunderbolts albums didn't sell. Even in the 2018 Rare Record Price Guide, the first is listed at £15 and the second at £20 - peanuts really for albums spewed forth in 1970 and 1971 - 50 years ago. A strong contender for a top-ten placing in the worst artwork ever issued, the third LP called "Ten Legged Friend" from 1973 isn’t listed at all - even though I can count on one hand the number of times I’ve actually seen a copy across 40-50 years of collecting on all formats.

But here's the point - and it's one that's made in the 36-page booklet that accompanies this surprisingly brill 6CD box set. Although the music rocked and is a discovery many will thoroughly enjoy making in 2020 - the made-up-name of 'Brent Marvin and The Thunderbolts' complete with the cheesy artwork on their debut album that looked like some bad budget calypso compilation (the likes of which you used to see in Woolworth's for 69p) - did for the band. The music was ace - the presentation, a complete misfire. You look at that name and these records and think cheapo Rock 'n' Roll revivalists - when this British five-piece Blues Boom ensemble was one of the best good-time Boogie bands on the scene (and on vinyl records, damn good too). Hell, the first LP even has the magical Jo Ann Kelly giving it some downhome duet vocals - masquerading under the pseudonym of 'Memphis 'Lil'.

So what are we dealing with here musically – for the first three LPs think of the homemade percussion-stick-with-bells Jug Band stomp and fun of Mungo Jerry combined with the chromatic Harmonica of Canned Heat meets the Bluesy slide guitar of Duster Bennett on Blue Horizon records and then add the three-string gutbucket modern-day geetar-sound of Seasick Steve - and you get an idea of what's on offer here. Tony McPhee of The Groundhogs caught them in their natural live habitat, liked what he heard and with an invite (recorded June 1969), both founder members Graham Hine and Jim Pitts and the band all got some first-audio-outing tracks on the Blues Rock Sampler LP "I Asked For Water, She Gave Me GASOLINE" issued in October 1969 (Liberty LBS 83252 is in itself a collectable these days). They then signed to the Blues and Folk orientated Sonet Records of Sweden in early 1970, recorded the debut and it was in the shops by May.

They then morph into a sideshow group called 'Terry Dactyl & The Dinosaurs' for a one-off novelty track that was issued on Sonet in 1971 and dies. But talent hunter Jonathan King at UK Records smells a hit, licenses it for a July 1972 re-launch on UK R 5 and suddenly they have a huge No. 2 chart smash with "Sea Side Shuffle". From this two-band identity, John Lewis turns into the alter ego of Jona Lewie and goes into a solo career on Sonet until 1977 (he finally has a solo hit with "You'll Always Find Me In The Kitchen At Parties" on Stiff Records in 1980 - unfortunately outside the remit of this Box Set).

So it's all a bit mad really and actually rather brilliant too. With six discs, there's a boatload of seaside shuffles to wade through, so let's have at it...

UK released 28 February 2020 - "The Sonet Anthology" by BRETT MARVIN and THE THUNDERBOLTS featuring Terry Dactyl and The Dinosaurs and Jona Lewie on Grapefruit CRSEGBOX064 (Barcode 5013929186408) is a 6CD Clamshell Box Set of Remasters that plays out as follows:

CD1 (50:49 minutes):
1. Dust My Boom [Side 1]
2. Too Many Hot Dogs
3. Haven't Got Any Hay
4. Walking Blues
5. Eyesight To The Blind
6. Shave 'Em Dry
7. Drop Down Mama [Side 2]
8. Calcutta Got Beggar
9. Don't Start Me Talking
10. Cincinnati Cream
11. Highway 61
12. Hairy
13. Bye Bye Baby
Tracks 1 to 13 are their debut album "Brett Marvin And The Thunderbolts" - released May 1970 in the UK on Sonet Records SNTF 616. The album version of "Shave 'Em Dry" is 7:42 minutes and features duet vocals by 'Memphis 'Lil' who is JO ANN KELLY
BONUS TRACKS:
14. Shave 'Em Dry (Single Edit, 3:08 minutes) - 1970 French-Only 45 single on Barclay 061388 ("Too Many Hot Dogs" was the B-side)
15. Standing On The Platform - 1970 UK Non-Album 45 single on Sonet SON 2011 ("Too Many Hot Dogs" was the B-side)  

CD2 (45:15 minutes):
1. Take Your Money [Side 1]
2. I'm Coming
3. Southbound Lane
4. Love In Jest
5. Thoughts Of You
6. I'm Ready
7. Milk Cow Blues [Side 2]
8. County Jail
9. Little Red Caboose
10. Come On In My Kitchen
11. Goin' Back
Tracks 1 to 11 are their second studio album "12 Inches Of Brett Marvin And The Thunderbolts" - released May 1971 in the UK on Sonet Records SNTF 619
BONUS TRACK:
12. Coming Back - 1971 UK Non-Album 45 B-side to "Thoughts Of You" on Sonet SON 2015 ("Coming Back" is an Alternative Version of "I'm Coming" on the second album)

CD3 (57:55 minutes):
1. Thunderbolt Rag [Side 1]
2. Bank Holiday
3. Bye Bye Baby
4. Wrong Man
5. Bay Roller
6. Drinking Song
7. She Walked Right Out Of The Blue [Side 2]
8. You Got Me On The Hook
9. Doo-Dah-Doo-Dah
10. The Clown
11. Make It To The Woods
12. Boys In The Band
Tracks 1 to 12 are their and final studio album of the period "Three Legged Friend" - released December 1973 in the UK on Sonet SNTF 651.
BONUS TRACKS:
13. Thunderbolt Rag (Alternative Version)
14. Caribbean Zob-Rock
Tracks 13 and 14 are the non-album A&B-sides of a March 1974 UK 45 Single on Sonet SON 2038
15. Blow Me Down
Track 15 is the non-album A-side of a May 1975 UK 45 on Sonet SON 2053 ("Take Your Money" from the 2nd LP was its B-side)
16. Hawaiian Honeymoon
17. If You Need Somebody Call On Me 
Tracks 15 and 16 are the non-album A&B-sides of an August 1975 UK 45 Single on Sonet SON 2062

CD4 (62:35 minutes):
1. Roll And Tumble
2. Short Woogie
3. Nervous
4. Walking Blues
5. Don't Start Me talking
6. Cincinnati Underworld Woman
7. Milk Cow Blues
8. Come On In My Kitchen
9. Little Red Caboose
10. Take Your Money And Go Down The Road
11. I'm Ready
12. Hot Weather
13. Too Many Hot Dogs (aka "Chicken A La Blues")
14. Walking Blues
15. Make It To The Woods
16. Spoonful
17. Phonograph Blues
Tracks 1 to 17 issued as the CD compilation "Vintage Thunderbolts" in October 1999 on Mooncrest CRESTCD 041Z (Barcode 766126804129)
BONUS TRACKS:
18. Brian Matthew trailer
19. Brian Matthew intro
20. Goin' Back
21. Too Many Hot Dogs
Tracks 18 to 21 are a May 1970 BBC Radio 1 Session with Brian Matthew – taken from Top Of the Pops Transcription Disc 291 – PREVIOUSLY UNRELEASED (2020)

CD5 "Boogie Street" (69:48 minutes):
1. Crossroads
2. No Worries
3. Be Ready When He Comes
4. Hurry Up Train
5. How Many More Years
6. You're Gonna Need Somebody By Your Side 
7. Little Red Rooster
8. Big City Beat
9. Free Again
10. Phonograph Blues
11. Greedy Woman
12. Devil And The Deep Blue Sea
13. Lost Lover Blues
14. Tough Times
15. A Change Is Bound To Come
16. Big City Beat (Remix)
Tracks 1 to 16 are the CD "Boogie Street" released 1993 on Habana HABCD 201 (Barcode 0045395000327)
17. King Bee
18. Hurry Up Train
19. Miss You
20. Dust Me Broom
Tracks 17 to 20 are the 1981 UK 4-Track EP "Brett Marvin And The Thunderbirds" on Sun House EJSP 9586

CD6 (47:26 minutes):
1. Sea Side Shuffle
2. Ball and Chain - TERRY DACTYL AND THE DINOSAURS 
Tracks 1 and 2 are the A&B-sides of a 1971 UK 45 Single on Sonet SON 2027 (its rare Picture Sleeve is shown on Page 30 of the booklet). Reissued July 1972 on UK Records UK R 5 in a UK Records label bag - that variant charted and rose to No. 2 in the UK Singles Charts. Originally non-album, both tracks were finally issued on the 1972 LP "Alias Terry Dactyl & The Dinosaurs" on Sonet SNTF 630. The two sides were reissued again as a single in May 1976 on UK Records UK 133.   
3. On A Saturday Night
4. Going Around The World - TERRY DACTYL AND THE DINOSAURS
Tracks 3 and 4 are the non-album A&B-sides of a November 1972 UK 45 issued on UK Records UK R 20 - it entered the charts in January 1973 and peaked at No. 45 some weeks later
5. She Left I Died
6. Too Self-Centred - TERRY DACTYL AND THE DINOSAURS Featuring JONA LEWI
Tracks 5 and 6 are the non-album A&B-sides is a May 1973 UK 45 on UK Records UK R 39 (it didn't chart)
7. Piggy Back Sue
8. Papa Don't Go - JONA LEWIE
Tracks 7 and 8 are the non-album A&B-sides of a 1974 UK 45 Single on Sonet SON 2048
9. The Swan
10. Custer's Last Stand - JONA LEWIE
Tracks 9 and 10 are the non-album A&B-sides of an October 1975 UK 45 Single on Sonet SON 2056
11. Hallelujah Europe (Parts 1 and 2)
Track 11 is the non-album A&M sides of a July 1976 UK 45 on Sonet SON 2081 (Part 1 is Side 2, Parts 1 & 2 is Side b)
12. Come Away (Bate O Pe)
13. Cherry Ring
Tracks 12 and 13 are the non-album A&B-sides of an October 1977 UK 45 on Sonet SON 2115
14. Rocking Yobs
15. After We Swun
Tracks 14 and 15 are the non-album A&B-sides of a December 1977 UK 45 on Sonet SON 2117

Grapefruit Records is known for their in-depth and chunky booklets and with six CDs to explain, this is no different. Compiled and Annotated by DAVID WELSS with support from reissue specialist JOHN REED – there is new input from the leading BM light and Lead Guitarist GRAHAM HINE as well as the usual slew of rare photos (the boys doing the Abbey Road crossroads shoot) as well as 60ts shots of The Corsairs with John Lewis/Jona Lewie. There is a Sonet Records advert for the debut LP and single whilst a collage shot of concert posters (a double-page spread) shows their legendary support of Derek & The Dominoes (Clapton wanted to buy the National Steel but Hine wouldn’t sell), gigs with Caravan, tours as Terry Dactyl when Sea Side Shuffle became a huge hit - and most famous of all – headlining a 10 December 1975 (Vegetarian Buttery) gig at the City Polytechnic in London with some reprobates third on the bill called The Sex Pistols. The future Anarchists had only been together a month or so and it was their sixth or seventh gig – but their first (I believe) mention on a concert poster is enough to make that 70p admission piece of paper worth a bloody fortune. The Mastering is by SIMON MURPHY for Another Planet and the three studio albums sound great – with Number Two for me – sounding the best. To the music...

The debut is a mix of Blues Rock and Jug Band with a few touch points in-between. Bizarre and almost Beefheart in its nuttiness – imagine the keyboard intro to "Baba O'Riley" by The Who stretched out into a song and given muffled words and strange Indian-esque boogies. You get an idea of what "Calcutta Got Beggar" has in store for you as Jona Lewie almost goes Psych with the synths. We then get the utterly extraordinary Harmonica-nasty Blues Boogie cover of "Don't Start Me Talking" - a near eight-minute tour-de-force for the Sonny Boy Williamson infidelity classic. Like its Side 1 predecessor "Shave 'Em Dry" (minus the decidedly fruity lyrics) - it feels like Canned Heat with The Bear on vocals – but a CH that has gone all Mungo Jerry Jug Band whilst still rocking that piano, guitar and Harmonica. It is either genius or taking the piss and part of me thinks it's both.

Sonet issued the Pete Gibson-penned piano and guitar slow Chicken Shack Blues of "Thoughts On You" in early 1971 as a 45 with the album cut "Coming Home" on the B-side but it unfairly disappeared despite some glowing reviews. Just when you think they're dwelling too much on the Jug Band schtick - they hit you with an Acoustic Blues shuffling gem - "Southbound Lane". I love this track where Gregory Hine shows his playing prowess as he sings of a band at two in the morning travelling down the motorway - "Been playing up north trying to build ourselves a name...seen a hundred miles of cat's eyes in the road...every mile we travelled is a copy of a record we sold..."

By the time we get to album number three, the Jug Band sound has instead overstayed its welcome somewhat. Better than the cover versions are the original goodies like the Graham Hine written "Bank Holiday" and "Wrong Man" and the Pete Gibson lay all your love light on me "Bay Roller". Vaudeville and knees up Mother Brown codology comes in the shape of "Drinking Song", "She Walked Right Out Of The Blue" and "Doo-Dah-Doo-Dah" where they sound like The Bonzo Dog Doo Dah Band but not in a good way. Pete Gibson channels his inner Satisfaction as he Mick Jagger’s "The Clown" and sounds unconvincing when he sings of touring joy in "Boys In The Band". The singles give us the Scott Joplin entertainer piano romp "Thunderbolt Rag" while "Caribbean Zob-Rock" name-checks the Skiffle-type instrument called the Zob Stick that used to be once known as a lagerphone. Best of the bunch is the Foghat-ish Rock of "Blow Me Down" – slow ride slide guitars over a likeable rhythm. The Graham Hine guitar rocker B-side "If You Need Somebody Call On Me" is a good barroom boogie that redeems an otherwise disappointing Disc 3.

The "Rare Thunderbolts" CD compilation offers unidentified live recordings of Meade Lux Lewis covers alongside Willie Dixon, Robert Johnson and Sonny Boy Williamson - best of which is the muffled-vocals slide-guitar "Walking Blues" and "Come On In My Kitchen". If feels like some semi-bootleg recording for some better than average bar band - but no more. "Hello...do you dig the blues...well dig this!" Brian Matthew gives it some groovy Top Of The Pops intros for 50 and 20 seconds before the boys go into a grungy version of Leadbelly's "Goin' Back" - and actually the sound is excellent as in the fantastic lead-guitar. Bringing back the band for another intro - we get the band's original "Too Many Hot Dogs" which sounds great too.

Being 1993, the upgraded sound quality of the "Boogie Street" CD compilation comes as a blessed relief after much of Disc 3. It kicks off with a superb interpretation of Robert Johnson's "Crossroads" - our heroes flagging a raucous ride. The Gospel of the Lord comes sailing in like The Blind Boys Of Alabama on the cool groove that is "Be Ready When He Comes". All seven members of the ensemble wrote "Hurry Up Train" but better is the warbling gritty Harmonica of Howlin' Wolf's "How Many Years" - dogging me around - rather be six feet in the ground - a great boogie rendition. Equally slick is the electric slide menace in "Little Red Rooster" - too lazy to crow for days. The Blues Band comparisons continue with the 4-Track EP that tail ends Disc 5 - Slim Harpo and Elmore James covers doing the business even if the original "Hurry Up Train" doesn't quite work.

After all the Mungo Jerry Jug Band Blues and Seasick Steve slide guitar – the last disc with Terry Dactyl and Jona Lewie feels like a creature from another planet - albeit a welcome one. The big accordion-driven single "Sea Side Shuffle" by Terry Dactyl and The Dinosaurs sounds good in Remastered form as does its boozy 'you are driving me insane' B-side "Ball And Chain". I can't even remember the follow-up "On A Saturday Night" as a single, but its very obvious effort to reproduce what made "Sea Side Shuffle" great feels a little too contrived - Part 2 but not as good as Part 1. Better is the Fats Domino piano-boogie shuffle of the B-side "Going Around The World" where a catchy chorus is doubled with a slide-guitar – great little number and the Remaster rocks. The Jona Lewie solo stuff comes on like Jerry Lee Lewis – a chicken shack pumping piano is soon joined by a New Orleans band on "Piggy Back Sue" – while its B-side "Papa Don't Go" taps into "Going Up The Country" by Canned Heat both musically and vocally (top stuff and a cool Remaster). The rest are a combo of weird and quirky rhythms that kind of amaze and impress in equal quirky measure.

For sure, six discs of some unknown group from the early Seventies that can't decide whether they're Mungo Jerry's uppity younger brother or Canned Heat's mellowed whiskey older uncle will probably not get the knees a-shakin' in 2020. But there is so much to love here and that second album is a wee bit of a lost diamond in my book while the Lewie solo stuff, something of a pleasant discovery. 

Grapefruit Records of the UK go the hog once more for the musical underdogs, and we old bowsers are the ones to benefit...

Thursday, 9 July 2020

"WarChild" by JETHRO TULL – October 1974 US and UK LP on Chrysalis Records featuring Ian Anderson, Martin Barre, John Evan, Jeffrey Hammond-Hammond and Barriemore Barlow with Orchestration by David Palmer (November 2014 UK Chrysalis The 40th Anniversary Theatre Edition 2CD/2DVD Book Set Reissue – Steve Wilson Remixes and Remasters) - A Review by Mark Barry...







This Review Along With Over 310 Others Is Available In My
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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)


"...Skating Away On The Thin Ice Of The New Day..."

I dug the two-sided concept album "Thick As A Brick" in 1972 (slavered over that newspaper sleeve) but I found the mock-operatic "A Passion Play" in 1973 too dense and actually guilty of the codpiece pretentiousness that was being levelled at the band from all quarters. I sense principal leading light and songwriter Ian Anderson was aware of this and so "WarChild" returned to simpler shorter tunes and frankly benefitted from it.

But like many fans and despite the 'fun' of "Bungle In The Jungle" and the old-Tull cool of the fab "Skating Away On The Thin Ice Of A New Day" - I don't recall "WarChild" with any real sense of affection - more of a gradual boredom with Tull that had begun to creep in back in those mixed up multi-genre days.

So it's with a certain relief and even belated near five-decades-later pleasure that I find 'The 40th Anniversary Theatre Edition' of Tull's seventh studio album "WarChild" (like so many of these Book Editions) to be something of a revelation - especially those outtakes and the swathes of film version stuff on the DVDs. This is beautifully done and again maestro Steve Wilson has lifted up the core LP with a fabulous new remix and remaster. There is much to discuss, so let's skate away on the Book Set ice of a new reissue day...

UK released 24 November 2014 - "WarChild: The 40th Anniversary Theatre Edition" by JETHRO TULL on Chrysalis 2564621627 Warchild 1 (Barcode 825646216277) is a 2CD plus 2DVD 80-Page Book Set Reissue with Steve Wilson Remixes and Remasters that plays out as follows:

CD1 "WarChild" - A New Steven Wilson Stereo Remix (39:31 minutes):
1. WarChild [Side 1]
2. Queen And Country
3. Ladies
4. Back-Door Angels
5. SeaLion
6. Skating Away On The Thin Ice Of A New Day [Side 2]
7. Bungle In The Jungle
8. Only Solitaire
9. The Third Hoorah
10. Two Fingers
Tracks 1 to 10 are their seventh studio album "WarChild" - released 14 October 1974 in the USA and 26 October 1974 in the UK on Chrysalis Records CHR 1067 (same catalogue number in both countries). Produced by IAN ANDERSON - it peaked at No. 2in the USA and No. 14 in the UK.

CD2 "The Second Act" – Associated Recordings (78:20 minutes):
1. Paradise Steakhouse
2. Saturation
3. Good Godmother
4. SeaLion II
5. Quartet
6. WarChild II
7. Tomorrow Was Today
8. Glory Row
9. March, The Mad Scientist
10. Rainbow Blues
11. Pan Dance
WarChild Orchestral Recordings
12. The Orchestral WarChild Theme
13. The Third Hoorah (Orchestral Version)
14. Mime Sequence
15. Field Dance (Conway Hall Version)
16. Waltz Of The Angels (Conway Hall Version)
17. The Beach (Part I) (Morgan Master Recordings)
18. The Beach (Part II) (Morgan Master Recordings)
19. Waltz Of The Angels (Morgan Demo Recording)
20. The Beach  (Morgan Demo Recording)
21. Field Dance (Morgan Demo Recording)
NOTES:
Tracks 1 to 15 - A New Steven Wilson Stereo Remix
Tracks 16 to 21 Mixed To Stereo in 1974 by Robin Black
Tracks 1, 4 and 5 first issued on the "Nightcap” 2CD set in November 1993
Track 2 first issued on the "20 Years Of Jethro Tull" Box Set in June 1988
Tracks 3, 6 and 7 Previously Unreleased
Track 8 first issued on the "Repeat: The Best Jethro Tull Vol. II" LP in September 1977
Tracks 9 and 11 first issued on the "Ring Out, Solstice Bells" Vinyl EP in December 1976
Track 10 first issued on "M.U. The Best Of Jethro Tull" LP in January 1976
Tracks 12 to 21 all Previously Unreleased except Track 16, which was first released as "WarChild Waltz" on the October 2002 "WarChild" CD remaster

DVD 1 (Audio & Video) - Region 0 (Region Free) - NTSC Aspect Ratio 16:9 (except Film Footage 4:3)
"WarChild" remixed into 5.1 Surround and presented in DTS 96/24, AC3 Dolby Digital and 96/24 LPCM Stereo.
A Flat Transfer from the Original 1974 LP Master in 96/24 LPCM Stereo.
A Flat Transfer from the Original 1974 QUAD LP (with additionally "Glory Row" and "March, The Mad Scientist") in DTS 96/24 5.1 (4.0) and Ac3 Dolby Digital Surround Sound.
Video clips of a Montreux Photo Session and Press Conference on 11 January 1974 and "The Third Hoorah" Promo Footage with remixed Stereo audio (19:20 minutes).

DVD 2 (78:18 minutes duration, 61:47 minutes in Surround)
An Additional eleven group recordings from the WarChild sessions and later - remixed in 5.1 Surround and presented in DTS 96/24 and AC3 Dolby Digital and 96/24 LPCM Stereo.
Six additional orchestral recordings mixed by Robin Black in 1974 in 96/24 LPCM Stereo. 

The first thing that smacks you over the head with a steel Roman Aquila banner is the presentation - 80-pages of photos, essays, track-by-track annotation by Ian Anderson, lyrics, tape boxes, recording studio venues, recording info and tour dates from November 1973 to April 1975. There is discussion of the garish artwork (band members, girlfriends, models, dummies - all in Panto costumes on the rear sleeve as well as memories of 15-years on the road by the band's electronics man David Morris called "Batteries Not Included: Hammers Are Allowed". You get interviews by Don Needham with Kathy Thulborn and Bridget Procter of the touring string quartet, foreign picture sleeves for the singles, film script synopsis and loads of rare and previously unseen photos.

Anderson also discusses the revelations in the 5.1 Surround Mix unleashing the too-dense string section and how "WarChild" became the first Tull album to be mixed into Quadrophonic back in 1974 (Chrysalis CH4 1067). You get a 20-person collage map as to who appeared on the rear cover (18 is a stuffed Seal in case you were wondering) and there's even a saucy article called "Pan Dances" with a photo of the Top of the Pops girls "Pan's People" at the back. Choreographed by the legendary Flick Colby, they did dance routines to "Witch's Promise" and "Living In The Past" in front of an audience with costumes that appeared to leave little to the imagination. A shoulder-strap malfunction did allow one boob to be displayed, but dancer and fan-fave Babs took it like a trooper and the crowd seemed very appreciative and declared in one voice 'there is a God'. To the music...

A war siren and 'a cup of tea dear' conversation followed by guns and bombs outside opens the album - "WarChild" dancing the days and nights away. The Steve Wilson Remix and Remaster feels like a power surge has been inserted into the Prog Rock chorus - Roxy Music type Saxophone and Strings upping the oomph as it progresses. Anger at England's wild taxation laws (signed our souls away) seeps through the angry "Queen And Country" while that shushed acoustic guitar opening of "Ladies" now sings along with the flute passages (lovely transfer). Chrysalis issued "Bungle In The Jungle" b/w the next song "Back-Door Angels" on the same day as the album - 14 October 1974. Chrysalis CRS 2010 sure proved to have legs staying on the US singles charts for months peaking at No. 12 in the week ending 11 January 1975. That great rock geetar riffage that comes in the middle of "Back-Door Angel" combines with a warbling synth solo and feels like the Tull of "Aqualung" are suddenly back in your living room - leery and sneering. The US market also got "Skating Away On The Thin Ice Of The New Day" b/w with Side 1's final cut "SeaLion" as a 45 - Chrysalis CRS 2013 issued 17 February 1975. Balance the world on the tip of your nose, Anderson sings as the strings threaten to overwhelm the mix. There is no business like the show we're in.

Side 2 opens with "Skating Away On The Thin Ice Of The New Day" and at last its gorgeous acoustic whimsy sounds like the bomb here - only Jethro Tull making this unique sound - brilliant. Tull would feature the meanwhile back in year one "Skating Away..." on the "M.U. Best Of..." in January 1976  - cup of tea beginning and all. Wilson has done wonders with it. You can so hear why American Radio latched onto the silly "Bungle In The Jungle" - it was the kind of 'rawk' they could use - lions and tigers waiting in the shadow - catchy chorus ahoy. The one and half minute "Only Solitaire" also hankers back to those acoustic-driven snippet-tracks that worked so well on albums like 1971's "Aqualung" and the 1972 new-and-old double-album splurge of "Living In The Past". Out comes the clavinet and familiar guitar riffage combo for "The Third Hoorah" - a stormer in this new sound. And it ends with five minutes of "Two Fingers" - one of the LPs latest recordings - done 24 February 1974. Again the Remix is absolutely kicking as Anderson sings of the good ship Earth, hard headed miracle-workers and underpants you best leave to trusted friends.

The booklet cleverly features the lyrics to the Additional Songs on CD2 that opens with "Paradise Steakhouse" - a cracking very-Tull rocker that first appeared on the "Nightcap" double-CD in 1993 and could so easily have been a cracking "WarChild" LP track or even B-side to "Bungle In The Jungle". Recorded in December 1973, the major riffage continues with "Saturation" - Martin Barre letting rip on the axe. Originally called 'D Bass & Vibes One' - "Quartet" comes on like an English Chamber Ensemble has just invaded your sonic pantry and announces that its actually likes ELP and wants to emulate their brand of Prog Rock. An accordion accompanies the whimsical opening of the previously unreleased "WarChild II" before it quickly descends into a teacup rocker. Far better is the two thousand travellers of "Tomorrow Was Today" - a genuine rocking JT find - and given that it was recorded 24 February 1974 - could have enlivened the album considerably. There is gorgeous acoustic clarity to "March, The Mad Scientist" while the "M.U. Best Of" exclusive cut "Rainbow Blues" has 'get me to the stage on time' power in all areas. As we romp to the end of CD2, I suspect the orchestral stuff is going to be very much an acquired taste. Personally much of it is too twee for me and I know I won't be returning to it any time soon.

When you play DVD 1 – you find the 4th part is the Video elements – an 11 January 1974 press conference given by a fountain in Montreux in Switzerland with the 5-piece British Rock Band looking like a bunch of drug-addled dandies (rainbow suits, silk scarves and cigarette holders the length of a autobahn) who shouldn't be allowed near anyone's daughter (or domestic pet) let alone a city landmark. Probably because the audio is either too boring, corrupted or lost completely – Ian Anderson has decided to do the 2014 monologue for it all himself as the footage then segues into a press conference at the Euro Hotel where the group is handing over a cheque to build a studio for uppercoming Swiss kids (they had toured there in 1972). As you can imagine and given the distance of decades - his deliberations on the way they look, ludicrous English taxes, offers of Swiss citizenship and press junkets with bored tank-top wearing reporters looking to the sandwiches and wine - are erudite, intelligent and at times ball-breakingly funny. Terry Ellis of Chrysalis Records is there as is Tull's champion and organiser of the Jazz Festivals in Montreux - Claude Nobs – sadly lost to the world in 2014. It's great fun and I'll leave the rest for you to discover.

Despite its No. 2 chart placing in the States – the LP "WarChild" has always been treated as something of a snotty return here in Tull's own Blighty – a guilty pleasure of sorts after two albums of excess – and bettered too by bigger albums to come. But like all of these multi-disc Tull reissues – they amaze and restore the faith...

Wednesday, 8 July 2020

"Riley, Riley, Wood and Waggett" by SHAPE OF THE RAIN – July 1971 UK Debut Album on RCA Neon Records NE 7 featuring Keith Riley, Len Riley, Brian Wood, Iain 'Tag' Waggett and Pete Dolan with guests Eric Hine, Bob Skelland, Nip Healey and David Brookfield (22 May 2020 UK Grapefruit Records 3CD Deluxe Edition Reissue with an Unreleased Second Album, Demos and Rehearsals and Live Material – 61 Tracks with 17 Unreleased and Many Other Rarities – Oli Hemingway Remasters) - A Review by Mark Barry...






This Review Along With 352 Others Is Available In My
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GET IT ON - 1971
 
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"…Rusty Road..."

Seen as Country Hick and terminally unhip by much of the buying public - RCA Victor's answer to the progressive rock craze that was sweeping music in the late Sixties and early Seventies was the ill fated RCA Neon label. With its beautiful Venus In A Shell logo, jet-black labels and inner bags - this home of the obscure and supposedly Avant Garde managed only 11 albums in 2 years (1971 to 1972) and the first was a reissue of an LP initially released in 1970 (Fair Weather's "The Beginning Of The End").

Complete with staggeringly dull please-don't-buy-me because I want to be obscure gatefold sleeves (obligatory for all these releases it seemed) - names such as Fair Weather (NE 1), Chris McGregor's Brotherhood Of Breath (NE 2), Indian Summer (NE 3), Tonton Macoute (NE 4), Dando Shaft (NE 5), Spring (NE 6), Raw Material (NE 8), Centipede (NE 9), Mike Westbrook Orchestra (NE 10) and The Running Man (NE 11) - don't exactly role off the tongue - even now. I have an October 1973 RCA Victor product catalogue and only NE 9 and NE 10 were listed as available for sale – all others were deleted. None of them sold jack and the one-album-then-we-died SHAPE OF THE RAIN effort on RCA Neon NE 7 was no different. They weren't even Prog. SOTR music was West Coast Country Rock via the Byrds meets British Folk Rock via Matthews Southern Comfort, Cochise and Brinsley Schwarz – not an Elf nor a Manticore nor a bank of noodley synths anywhere in sight.

Still - up steps our UK reissue heroes Grapefruit Records in 2020 and they think – screw those I woke up this morning with the post-pandemic woke-generational blues

What the hell – let's give these Northern mining-village reprobates and their Seventies Big Star-ish Americana music a whopping great 61-track 3CD anthology and damn the accounting torpedoes. We can even give the album a gatefold card repro sleeve (the public will just love that legal firm LP title that absolutely no one will remember), throw in an unreleased second album complete with homemade artwork of the period, demos, rehearsals and badly-recorded live material before they finally broke up in 1973 and Remaster the damn lot like the flashy gits we are. And who am I to disagree with wiser and hairier men than I. Let's get shapely...

UK released Friday, 22 May 2020 - "Riley Riley Wood and Waggett (Deluxe Edition)" by SHAPE OF THE RAIN on Grapefruit Records CRSEG067T (Barcode 5013929186705) is a DELUXE EDITION 3CD 61-Track Reissue and Anthology of Remasters that plays out as follows:

Disc One – The Album Plus Bonus Tracks (79:13 minutes):
1. Woman [Side 1]
2. Patterns
3. Castles
4. Wasting My Time
5. Rockfield Roll
6. Yes
7. Dusty Road [Side 2]
8. Willowing Trees
9. I'll Be There
10. Broken Man (a) Every One A Gem (b) After Collapsing At Kingsley's
Tracks 1 to 10 are their debut and only album "Riley, Riley, Wood and Waggett" - released July 1971 in the UK on RCA Neon NE 7 (no US release). Produced by ERIC HINE and TONY HALL - it didn't chart.

BONUS TRACKS:
11. My Friend John – 29 October 1971 UK Non-Album 45 Single A-side on RCA Victor RCA 2129 with an edit of the LP cut "Yes" on the B-side (last minute lopped off) and the group now credited as SHAPE
12. The Very First Clown *
13. What You Gonna Do Now? *
14. You're The One *
15. From Me And From You *
16. No Use Cryin' Again *
17. Watercolour Sunshine *
18. Nothin' You Could Do *
19. We Can Put It Right *
20. Lady Of My Dreams *
21. It All Depends On You *
22. Listen To Your Heart *
23. Now's The Time To Start *
24. Don't You Know *
25. Second Time Around *
Tracks 12 to 25 (*) are all PREVIOUSLY UNRELEASED

Disc Two – The CD "Shape Of The Rain" (aka "The Red Album" 1966-1973) (79:40 minutes):
1. Broken Man (Demo Version)
2. I Don't Need Anybody
3. I'll Be There (Demo Version)
4. We're Not The Boys
5. Hallelujah
6. Hello 503
7. I Doubt I Ever Will
8. Willowing Trees (Demo Version)
9. Canyons
10. Spring
11. Words
12. Look Around
13. Advertising Man
14. Go Around And See It
15. It's So Good Here
16. Big Black Bird
17. Everyone The Fool
18. You Just Call
19. It's My Life
Tracks 1 to 19 previously issued in 2001 as the CD "Shape Of The Rain" (aka "The Red Album") on Background HBG 123/14

BONUS TRACKS:
20. Dusty Road (Demo Version)
21. Too Many Lies
22. Yes (Demo Version)
Tracks 20 to 22 are PREVIOUSLY UNRELEASED

Disc Three – Previously Unreleased Live Recordings (1968-1973) (76:26 minutes):
1. Willowing Trees
2. Passing Of Time
3. Imagination
4. I've Been Wrong
5. Spring
6. Everyone The Fool
7. Vanishing Cottage
8. Calling
9. Big Black Bird
10. Go Around And See It
11. Say It's Goodbye
12. Woman
13. We're Not The Boys
14. Hello 503
Tracks 1 to 8 recorded live at Alfreton hall, in England, 2 May 1970
Tracks 9 to 13 recorded live at Manchester University circa 1973
Track 14 is a Live Acetate recorded at Velvet Underground/Down Broadway clubs in 1968

SHAPE OF THE RAIN was:
KEITH RILEY - Lead Guitar, 12-String Guitar and Vocals
LEN RILEY - Bass Guitar
BRIAN WOOD - Pedal Steel Guitar, Bass and Vocals
IAIN 'Tag' WAGGETT - Drums and Percussion
PETE DOLAN on Guitar and Bass from 1973

GUESTS included:
ERIC HINE - Electric Piano on Tracks 5, 7, 8 and 10 on Disc One
BOB SKELLAND - Bass on Track 5 on Disc Two
NIP HEALEY - Drums on Tracks 2, 4 and 11 on Disc Two
DAVID BROOKFIELD - Synths of some of the Keith Riley Home demos - Tracks 12 to 25 on Disc One

Once out of its shrink-wrap (I put the titled sticker on the booklet, difficult peeling it off) - the outer lightweight slipcase holds three card sleeves inside and a 24-page colour booklet. They give the LP the Keef artwork gatefold sleeve (apparently an outtake from the set of the Oliver! film) while the other two are singles with credit details on the rear of those cards instead of taking up pages in the booklet. DAVID WELLS of Cherry Red's Grapefruit Records (and Esoteric Recordings) gives us new January 2020 liner notes with contributions from band players and associates - Keith and Linda Riley, Tag Waggett and Pete Dolan. You get several black and white period photos, Melody Maker reviews, Acetates pictured, the labels for their two singles from May and October 1971 pictured, homemade artwork for the aborted second album and even a calling card for an early embryo of the group as 'The Gear' in a 1965 village hall. There is also a superb two-page collage of support tour press adverts with the likes of Love, Fleetwood Mac, Jethro Tull, Curved Air, Mighty Baby, Elton John and even Pink Floyd in March 1971 at Chesterfield's St. James Hall. It's a classy and in-depth display, as one would expect from Grapefruit. Wells also makes no bones about management mistakes that put the band on the Prog-obscure Neon label (thereby guaranteeing dismal sales figures for an album that deserved better) instead of the more commercially viable RCA Victor label with the likes of David Bowie, Sweet, The Kinks, Jefferson Airplane and Nilsson to name but a few. It’s an entertaining and informative read.

OLI HEMINGWAY has handled the Remastering of the album while Audio Engineers KEITH KNIVETON, KEITH RILEY (of the band) and JONATHAN KIRKPATRICK digitised and remastered the Acetate, Home Demos and Live stuff. It's a very mixed bag. The album sounds good but the sheer haphazard nature of the rest is ok to good only. To the music...

Neon tried to pre-empt interest in the band and the album by issuing Side 1's opener "Woman" as a 45 - but the 21 May 1971 UK 7" single on RCA Neon NE 1001 with "Wasting My Time" on the flipside did no business. Bob Stanley and Pete Wiggs of St. Etienne featured the "Wasting My Time" B-side on their "Occasional Rain" CD and 2LP compilation for Ace Records just recently (May 2020) - thinking highly of the pleasant acoustic strummer. Maybe "Patterns" would have been a better choice - its Byrds-like jangling-guitars with Pedal Steel overtones hitting that Matthews Southern Comfort crowd with a lovely and catchy tune. "Castles" offers the first hint of Genesis-type acoustic-guitar Prog (only hints mind) - gorgeous 12-string strums rattling around your speakers - build your castles in the air - and yet another possible single.

Things start to clavinet boogie with the short and jolly instrumental "Rockfield Roll" - but soon return to something way more substantial with truly excellent "Yes". It's album-sized Big Star-sounding jangle-and-strut groove of 5:51 minutes was cut by one minute as an edit for the stand-alone single in October 1971 of "My Friend John" - the band momentarily returned to the orange RCA Victor label and now called just SHAPE. In fact when you play the Country-Funky Pedal Steel bopper that is "My Friend John" and you throw in the excellent "Yes" B-side, you can't help thinking the public missed a trick on this one. We go full on Country Rock with "Dusty Road" – a clavinet and distant vocal that could almost be Poco Americana in its delivery (Riley sounds like a young Matty Healy from The 1975 with his 'time' regional twang) – another sweet melody on an album packed with them. Despite some great ideas in the melody, "Willowing Trees" feels badly produced, all those clever guitar moments lost in a muddy mix. "I'll Be There" talks of giving a hand in another potential mid-tempo single. The album ends on the only real rocker on the record "Broken Man" - a good guitar chugger but again with a vocal that lacks muscle or definition. 

I hadn't expected much of the thirteen unreleased tracks that come as Bonuses on Disc One but shockingly Shape Of The Rain sound like another set of tune makers who didn't get the recognition they deserved - Unicorn - over on Transatlantic and Harvest Records. There isn’t anything Prog or Psych about these – all acoustic guitars and at times Pedal Steel. There is even traces of Duncan Browne in the lovely and hooky "The Very First Clown" and the brokenhearted "What You Gonna Do Now?" The well-recorded America-sounding "Now's The Time To Start" is a 'we can make it if we try' song.

The audio drops more than a tad on the looking for a hit "You're The One" and the peaceful (but hissy) "From Me And From You". Best of the others are the decidedly Matthews Southern Comfort vibe to the wash my soul of "Watercolour Sunshine", the how can we tell them "We Can Put It Right" and the McCartney strum/doubled vocals of "Lady Of My Dreams" - all good but needing full realisation in a studio. And you can't help thinking that "Second Time Around" would have been a melody pace setter for that Badfinger meets Brinsley Schwarz-sounding second album.

The first nineteen tracks of Disc Two covering recordings from 1966 through to 1973 was first issued as a stand-alone CD in 2001 as "The Shape Of Rain" on Background HBG 123/14 (Barcode 5032379231421) and typically it comes on as a good compilation with recording values fluctuating from great to poor. The four demos of album tracks "Broken Man", "I'll Be There", "Dusty Road" and "Yes" were recorded in 1970 at DJM Studios by Rodger Bain and Tony Hall - the last of the four being incredibly poor audio so not surprising its been left in the can all these years. "I Don't Need Nobody", "We're Not The Boys" and "Words" were recorded in 1973 at Phonogram Studios and show Shape Of The Rain still playing melodic Folk-Rock tunes with a West Coast influence. Beatles Engineer Geoff Emerick recorded the decidedly poppy "Hello 503" at Abbey Road with Tony Hall as co-producer.

Despite the muddy recordings, there were tunes going a begging in 1969 with "I Doubt I Ever Will", "Canyons" and "Spring" - its just a shame they never got the last especially into a real studio and onto the LP. Sixties Who leaps out at you with "Look Around" recorded in 1966 in Nottingham (Pete would either have been proud of them or ready to punch their copycat lights out). Better is a home recording made at Brian Wood's house in 1972 in the shape of "Go Around And See It" - a hit in the making had it been Badfinger.

The first eight songs from 1970 on the live disc are disappointingly little more than bootleg quality, distant vocals, not much fidelity and therefore not something you’re going to return to any time soon. By the time we reach 1973 the band recordings are marginally better and the playing much tighter and more accomplished. And while "Woman" rocks rather well, the whole of Disc Three is very disposable.

SHAPE OF THE RAIN devotees will love the all-guns-blazing splurge of new material while Seventies-curious Badfinger nee Big Star worshipers will probably find much to love here even if not all of it is essential. But whatever your musical poison, once again, Grapefruit Records of the UK has gone the full hog here and they are to be praised for it...

INDEX - Entries and Artist Posts in Alphabetical Order