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"...Grumbly Grimblies..."
It seems strange even now
that in midst of spring 1971 (April to be exact) when all things Prog Rock really
began to explode - that the release of Caravan's third and most beloved of
album's "In The Land Of Grey And Pink" effectively tanked.
In fact Canterbury's finest
(and Decca for that matter) would have to wait until album number seven
"Cunning Stunts" to see some chart action - and even then it did so
for one week in August 1975 at No. 50 and then buggered off again (they made a
similarly anaemic entry in the States managing only No. 134 with the same LP).
The band had played huge festivals in Europe after their second
delightfully-titled platter from September 1970 "If I Could Do It All
Again, I'd Do It All Over You" and built up a steady and fiercely loyal
following at home in Blighty.
And while the Side Two
23-minute opus "Nine Feet Underground" is most definitely Proggy in
nature - parts of Side One are more Pop than Avant Garde and even (dare we say
it) 'pleasant'. Which is I suspect why the album has stuck in so many people's
hearts ever since and remained on Decca and Universal's catalogue for nearly
five decades now. So a little like Camel – Caravan have always skirted around
the danger zones of success instead of kicking the doors in like Yes, ELP and
Genesis did in those halcyon years of the early Seventies.
So what do you get? This
quietly uplifting album still sounds poignant and wonderfully eccentric in a
very English kind of way – here given a storming CD Remaster, genuinely decent
Bonus Tracks and a hefty playing time. As the original Deram LP sleeve note
royally pronounced on the 'Deluxe Edition' gatefold inner (the boys ambling
over some hill somewhere with their hands raised in the air like some
drugged-up pied-pipers) - "...Those of you who haven't heard the group
before are in for a very enjoyable initiation." Amen to that baby - let's
get to the grumbly grimblies...
UK released February 2001 -
"In The Land Of Grey And Pink" by CARAVAN on Universal/Decca 8829832
(Barcode 042288298328) is a Reissue CD Remaster of their third album from 1971
with Five Bonus Tracks and plays out as follows (74:45 minutes):
1. Golf Girl [Side 1]
2. Winter Wine
3. Love To Love You (And
Tonight Pigs Will Fly)
4. In The Land Of Grey &
Pink
5. Nine Feet Underground
[Side 2]
A 22:40-minute track
consisting of the following sections:
Nigel Blows A Tune/Love's A
Friend/Make It 76/Dance Of The Seven Paper/Hankies/Hold Grandad By The
Nose/Honest I Did!/Disassociation/100% Proof
Tracks 1 to 5 are their
third studio album "In The Land Of Grey And Pink" - released April
1971 in the UK on Deram SDL-R 1 and July 1971 in the USA on London PS 593.
Produced by DAVID HITCHCOCK – it didn’t chart in either country.
BONUS TRACKS:
6. I Don't Know Its Name
(alias "The Word")
7. Aristocracy
8. It's Like To Have A Name
Next Week (Instrumental of "Winter Wine")
9. Group Girl (First Version
of "Golf Girl" with Different Lyrics)
10. Disassociation/100%
Proof (New Mix)
Tracks 6 to 10 are
PREVIOUSLY UNRELEASED
CARAVAN was:
RICHARD SINCLAIR - Bass and Acoustic Guitar and Vocals
PYE HASTINGS - Electric and
Acoustic Guitars and Vocals
DAVID SINCLAIR - Organ,
Piano, Mellotron, Harmony Vocals
JIMMY HASTINGS - Flute,
Tenor Sax and Piccolo
DAVE GRINSTEAD - Cannon,
Bell and Wind
RICHARD COUGHLAN - Drums and
Percussion
The 12-page booklet features
all the relevant original LP/reissue CD details these Decca reissues do -
illuminated even further by superb MARK POWELL liner notes (he runs the Prog
and Avant Garde specialist reissue label 'Esoteric Recordings' for Cherry Red)
alongside Trade adverts for the album, a Scarborough concert poster from
December 1971 with guests Hookfoot and DJ Compere John Peel, period photo and a
repro of the inner sleeve's liner notes. Powell's liner notes detail the band's
history from 1968 up to the fourth album "Waterloo Lily" and includes
contributions from band members Pye and Hastings. It's all very well done - as
is the wonderfully clear and meaty Remaster from original tapes by PASCHAL
BYRNE. Those Sinclair keyboard flourishes as you get into the first
nine-minutes of the epic "Nine Feet Underground" over on Side 2 are
really punchy - the notes rising and falling with clarity as they sail out of
your speakers. To the music...
The opening salvo of
Canterbury whimsy "Golf Girl" was used as a Caravan representative
track on the superb 2002 Universal Box Set "Legend Of A Mind - The
Underground Anthology" (see separate review) and it's easy to hear why.
With his preppy voice and lyrics about girls handing out cups of tea as he
fancies a swing at her putting area - it's five minutes of cool swinging
Mellotron-Rock-Pop. The acoustic guitar and vocal combo that opens the near
eight-minutes of "Winter Wine" is gorgeous (a great transfer) and
when the band kick-in - the punch is huge. Dragons roamed the land and knights
in armour saved damsels in distress - "Winter Wine" has always been a
smoking dream of a tune - nymphs dancing as the high-hats patter - young men
dreaming of things to come (and don't you just love those piano roles as he
sings 'you're close to me' followed by that brilliant-sounding organ solo). The
3-minute ditty "Love To Love You (And Tonight Pigs Will Fly)" is
alarmingly Pop - like Caravan had suddenly become Marmalade by way of Sparks
and 10cc.
Those mumbling voices that
open the title track "In The Land Of Grey & Pink" are a little
clearer now - Acoustic Guitars then introducing nasty grumbling grimblies
climbing down your chimney - a lovely piano solo soothing your worst 'there are
monsters in the stacks' fears. Speaking of which - you would think that a
22:40-minute song consisting of large amounts of keyboard soloing would test
even the most committed - but the monster that is "Nine Feet
Underground" confirms the flashes of brilliance evident in the
instrumental passages of "Winter Wine" and more on Side 1. And it
just has that 'Caravan' sound that I love so much - brilliant stuff.
I'm amazed at the quality of
the Unreleased Material - great saxophone work on "I Don't Know Its
Name..." - a six-minute ambler tune similar to "Winter Wine"
recorded December 1970 at AIR Studios in London. "Aristocracy" opens
with a few words of studio banter - another outtake recorded 14 December 1970 -
falsetto vocals making them sound like The Moody Blues sniffing helium gas. But
for me (and fans) the instrumental variant of "Winter Wine" is so
damn cool - Sinclair humming the melody in lieu of actual lyrics - clashing
symbols and shivering notes trundling along as they flesh out the tune - a fab
keyboard solo awaiting you as it boogies to a finish. It's eight minutes of
Caravan composing - at work - and its genuinely fascinating stuff.
Great album, fond memories,
kicking audio and a cheap-as-chips price tag. Yummy. In the pink on this one -
yes...
The UK and Europe 2000
to 2002 Universal CD
'Extended Edition' Reissues and Remasters for CARAVAN
include:
1. "Caravan"
(February 1969 Debut LP)
Released April 2002 on
Universal/Verve Forecast 8829522 (Barcode 042288295228) - features Mono and
Stereo LP Versions and A Bonus Track
2. "If I Could Do It
All Over Again, I'd Do It All Over You" (September 1970)
Released February 2001 on
Universal/Decca 8829682 (Barcode 042288296829) with Four Bonus Tracks
3. "In The Land Of Grey
And Pink" (April 1971)
Released February 2001 on
Universal/Decca 8829832 (Barcode 042288298328) with Five Bonus Tracks
4. "Waterloo Lily"
(May 1972)
Released February 2001 on
Universal/Decca 8829822 (Barcode 042288298229) with Three Bonus Tracks
5. "For Girls Who Grow
Plump In The Night" (October 1973)
Released February 2001 on
Universal/Deram 8829802 (Barcode 042288298021) with Five Bonus Tracks
6. "Caravan & The
New Symphonia" (April 1974)
Released February 2001 on
Universal/Decca 8829692 (Barcode 042288296928) with Four Previously Unreleased
7. "Cunning
Stunts" (July 1975)
Released February 2001 on
Universal/Decca 8829812 (Barcode 042288298120) with Three Bonus Tracks
8. "Where But For
Caravan Would I"
A 2CD Anthology Covering
1968 to 1975 - released July 2000 on Decca 524 755-2 (Barcode 731452475527)
includes Previously Unreleased material