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Tuesday 3 May 2016

"Shazam" by THE MOVE (2016 Esoteric Recordings 'Expanded Edition' STEREO 1CD Remaster) - A Review For Mark Barry...





"…Strange New Ideas Fill The Air..." 

In 2007 and 2008 - Salvo of the UK reissued The Move’s first three albums - "The Move" (April 1968), "Shazam" (March 1970) and "Looking On" (October 1970) with great sound and half-decent extras. Now in 2016 it's the turn of Esoteric Recordings (part of England's Cherry Red) to have a go.

I've nabbed and reviewed the 1CD 'Standard Edition' of the debut album "The Move" newly remastered from original first generation tapes in MONO with five relevant bonus tracks (there's also a 3CD Deluxe Edition). Here comes the 'Standard Edition' of their smashing second platter – the STEREO "Shazam" from early 1970 – again in a 1CD and ‘Deluxe Edition’ set of reissues. Here are the super-hero details...

UK released Friday, 29 April 2016 (6 May 2016 in the USA) - "Shazam" by THE MOVE on Esoteric Recordings ECLEC 2539 (Barcode 5013929463943) is a 'Standard Edition' Single CD Remaster in STEREO with eight Bonus Tracks. It plays out as follows (68:08 minutes):

1. Hello Susie
2. Beautiful Daughter
3. Cherry Blossom Clinic Revisited
4. Fields Of People [Side 2]
5. Don't Make My Baby Blue
6. The Last Thing on My Mind
Tracks 1 to 6 are their second album "Shazam" – released March 1970 on Regal Zonophone SLRZ 1012 (Stereo only).

BONUS TRACKS:
7. Wild Tiger Woman
8. Omnibus
Tracks 7 and 8 are the Mono A&B-sides of a UK 7" single released August 1968 on Regal Zonophone RZ 3012

9. Blackberry Way
10. A Certain Something
Tracks 9 and 10 are the Mono A&B-sides of a UK 7" single released November 1968 on Regal Zonophone RZ 3015

11. Curly
12.This Time Tomorrow
Tracks 11 and 12 are the Mono A&B-sides of a UK 7" single released July 1969 on Regal Zonophone RZ 3021

13. Hello Susie (abridged US Single version

14. Second Class (She's Too Good For Me)
Recorded at Olympic Studios on 23 September 1968 – Stereo Mix prepared by Rob Keyloch in 2007

Tracks 1 to 6 and 11, 12 and 13 - THE MOVE was:
CARL WAYNE – Vocals
ROY WOOD – Guitar, Keyboards and Vocals
RICK PRICE – Bass and Vocals
BEV BEVAN – Drums and Vocals

Tracks 7, 8, 9, 10 and 14 - THE MOVE was:
CARL WAYNE – Vocals
TREVOR BURTON – Bass, Guitars and Vocals – Drums on "Second Class (She's Too Good For Me)"
BEV BEVAN – Drums and Vocals

NOTE: there is also an April 2016 2CD 'Deluxe Edition' of "Shazam" on Esoteric ECLEC 22538 (Barcode 5013929463844)

Like the 'standard edition' single CD of "The Move" – the 16-page booklet has fab period photos and the usual reissue credits – but it feels lacking that there's no liner notes. These notes are massively extended on the 2CD 'Deluxe Edition' of course - as is the track list – but a few choice lines wouldn't have gone amiss on this 1CD 'standard edition'. MARK and VICKY POWELL of Esoteric have compiled and coordinated the reissues (press clippings, trade adverts for singles, the CD label looks like the old Regal Zonophone typeface) – nicely done. But it's about the audio here...

ROB KEYLOCH transferred the tapes and BEN WISEMAN did the 24-Bit Digital Remaster at Broadlake Studios - and a brill job has been done. I’d have to be blunt about this – the Salvo issue I've had all these years has fantastic sound on it. Yet it was to single out one thing with this new Esoteric transfer (the same for the first LP) – it’s the overall impact – the speaker punch. It hits you on every song. For instance I went straight to my crave – The Move's ubercool take on Tom Paxton's anthem to love’s cackhanded mistakes "The Last Thing On My Mind". As the Byrds-type groove works its way towards the seven-minute ending – Roy Wood starts soloing and harmonizing with Carl Wayne when he comes out of it. Wow is the only response I can give. There's huge power in this transfer while still retaining clarity (my cup of tea).

"Shazam" opens the full album version of "Hello Susie" and immediately it's a different band to the Pop singles of old. Almost Humble Pie or Robin Trower's version of Procol Harum circa 1970's "Home" – the sound is far more 'rawk' that Radio Luxembourg 'pop'. The band goes a little LOVE with the layered vocals and plucked strings of "Beautiful Daughter". The 'going off my mind' revisit to "Cherry Blossom Clinic..." (a track that ended Side 2 of "The Move" debut album in 1968) is now stretched to nearly eight minutes and comes complete with witty dialogue, nursery rhymes and hard rock. But that's as nothing to the one of the LP's centrepieces – the near 11-minute "Fields Of People" – a fantastic piece of recorded mayhem that fuses 60ts Harpsichords with Small Faces tomfoolery (lyrics from it title this review). By the time you get to the sitar-sounding guitar wig-out that finishes the song – you’re probably in need of fresh Joss sticks on the mantelpiece. Then just at the end you get mock 'Great Portland Street' comments recorded as a giggle - old ladies – taxi drivers – the put out city gent who comments "...catches one a bit off balance to be suddenly interrupted in the street..."

The pantomime ending of "Fields Of People" is immediately followed by an almost-Black Sabbath heaviness in the sledgehammer "Don't Make My Baby Blue" – a Barry Mann/Cynthia Weil song first sung by Frankie Laine on American Columbia 4-42767 in 1963 and The Shadows on Columbia DB 7650 in 1965 back in good old Blighty. Needless to say The Move take a two-minute bubblegum pop song and stretch it out into a 6:17 minute barrage of rock riffage – huge guitars and even bigger vocals. It’s possibly the heaviest the band’s ever sounded – like Cactus or Grand Funk Railroad given a day-pass to a speaker stack pilled up with too many orange buttons turned up to eleven. If you think that’s good – you’ll absolutely love their clever yet complimentary rearrangement of Tom Paxton's Folk song "The Last Time On My Mind" (1964 on Elektra Records) which The Move transmogrify into 7:38 minutes of Byrds-type guitar-jangle beauty. I love it when Carl Wayne harmonizes with Roy Wood on their nasal vocals (his best ever guitar work?) and the remaster is glorious too. I had the eight extras on other reissues – but they bolster up this 2016 CD newbee with the right kind of stuff.

Fans might ask what's the point? If you already own the Salvo issue – then why buy this or even release it? I suspect that Esoteric have sourced a better tape than Salvo used – although I could stand corrected on that. But if you're all about the best sound – then I think this singular CD remaster is going to have to be in your bank-holiday basket right away. Or if your wallet can take it - go for the 2CD 'Deluxe Edition' with a huge wad of extras including Previously Unreleased...

"...Lock me in and throw the key away..." – Carl Wayne advises on the brilliant "Cherry Blossom Clinic Revisited" - the band running through the childhood nursery rhyme 'better not go down to the woods today' as he sings. Well I'd say you should listen to your inner nutter and purchase this fantastic sounding Remaster right away...

"Ennismore/Journey" by COLIN BLUNSTONE (2014 Voiceprint 2LPs on 1CD) - A Review by Mark Barry...





"...Something To Warm Me On A Lonely Winter's Night..."

A clever reissue this – the former Zombie's singer COLIN BLUNSTONE gets his 2nd and 3rd Solo albums on Epic Records from 1972 and 1974 reissued onto 1CD – both unavailable digitally since 2003 when the Sony Legacy issues were deleted.

Well licensed from Sony Music and featuring the talents of Chris White and Rod Argent of The Zombies and Argent and a guest appearance by Duncan Browne – they’re back via Floating World Music & Voiceprint – and sounding damn good (just as I remembered). Here are the miracles...

UK released July 2014 – "Ennismore/Journey" by COLIN BLUNSTONE on Floating World/Voiceprint VP604CD (Barcode 0805772060425) offers 2LPs on 1CD and plays out as follows (73:24 minutes):

1. I Don't Believe In Miracles
2. Exclusively For Me
3. A Sign From Me To You
4. Every Sound I Heard
5. How Wrong Can One Man Be
6. I Want Some More
7. Pay Me Later
8. Andorra
9. I've Always Had You
10. Time's Running Out
11. How Could We Dare To Be Wrong
Tracks 1 to 11 are his second Solo LP "Ennismore" – released November 1972 in the UK on Epic Records EPC 65278 and in the USA on Epic KE 31994. NOTE: Tracks 2 to 5 on Side 1 of the original LP are listed as a 'Quartet' with (a), (b), (c) and (d) parts. Rod Argent and Chris White of The Zombies (& Argent) produced the album.

12. Wonderful
13. Beginning
14. Keep The Curtains Closed Today
15. Weak For You
16. Smooth Operator
17. You Who Are Lonely [Side 2]
18. It's Magical
19. Something Happens When You Touch Me
20. Setting Yourself Up
21. Shadow Of A Doubt
22. This Is Your Captain Calling
Tracks 12 to 22 are his 3rd solo album "Journey" - released March 1974 in the UK on Epic Records EPC 65287 and in the USA on Epic KE 32962. CHRIS WHITE of The Zombies and Argent produced it. ROD ARGENT and PETE WINGFIELD play Keyboards, Guitars by Colin Blunstone and DEREK GRIFFITHS, Bass by TERRY POOLE, Piano by RICHARD KERR, Classical Guitar on "Keep The Curtains Closed Today" by DUNCAN BROWNE, Backing Vocals by THE KING SINGERS.

The 8-page booklet has new liner notes from noted writer ALAN ROBINSON and pictures cool stuff like the Dutch 7" single picture sleeve for "I Want Some More" which had "Pay Me Later" on the B (not released in the UK). "Andorra" and "Weak For You" also came out in Euro territories and they're here as well. There are old interview quotes from Blunstone discussing his association with Duncan Browne of Immediate and Rak Records fame (his "Journey" single is one of 'the' 70ts sublime moments). AUDIO - apart from a 'licensed from Sony Music' credit - there are no mastering/remastering credits at all - but one has to assume the audio is the Sony Legacy issues of old. This CD sounds amazing for the "Journey" album - whilst merely good to great for "Ennismore" (a tad hissy on some tunes)...

Named after a 'state-of-mind' and a beloved flat in Ennismore Gardens in London - "Ennismore" the album opens with the single and a firm fan fave - "I Don't Believe In Miracles". Epic UK put it out a month before the LP hit the shops - October 1972 on Epic EPC S 8434 with the album cut "I've Always Had You" on the flipside. Radio and the public liked it and rewarded the catchy falsetto chorus with a Number 31 placing on the UK charts (odd then that the album didn't follow suit). "Exclusively For Me", "A Sign For Me", "Every Sound I Heard" and "How Wrong Can A Man Be" made up the 'quartet' of songs on Side 1 - an arc-of-a-love-affair foursome - that like relationships blows hot and cold - my fave being the pastoral cellos of "Every Sound I Heard" where our Col hears his girl's name everywhere he turns his lugs. Side 1 ends with the zippy acoustic guitars and funky keyboards of "I Want Some More" - another potential hit 45. 

Side 2 opens with the happy/sarcastic "Pay Me Later" which features some great slide on the acoustic. One of the mysteries surrounding the album is that Epic didn't pick the cool/funk "Andorra" as a next single - nice beat and pace - and would have built momentum for the album. The audio on the quiet "I've Always Had You" is gorgeous - nice air around those high cat strings - his voice so clear as well. The beautiful "Time's Running Out" has always had that excessive hiss problem and this mastered version is no different - such a lovely song - but you do have to tolerate the transfer (doesn't stop the song from being a highlight on the LP). Epic tried "How Could We Dare To Be Wrong" as a 45 in the UK on Epic EPC 1197 in February 1973 achieving a modest 45 placing and staying on the charts for only two weeks.

The "Journey" album opens with the slightly bombastic "Wonderful" that ends in a sort of Beach Boys "Smile" vocal refrain by a choir. The voices cleverly segue into the altogether more adventurous and lulling "Beginning" and in its own way - very Beach Boys. But when that classical guitar of Duncan Browne comes sailing in on "Keep The Curtains Closed Today" - the chills go up my arms. It all comes together - gorgeous song - voice - the accompanying backing vocals The King Singers. But then we get the super-produced but slightly overdone "Weak For You" and "Smooth Operator". Side 2 opens with "You Who Are Lonely" - a plaintive song about being 'in the hands of fate' - nice melody and gorgeous production values. My other fave on that side is the big acoustic strums of "Setting Yourself Up"...

Although more polished in every way - album No. 3 "Journey" is missing something that his 1971 debut "One Day" and its 1972 follow-up "Ennismore" possessed in spades. Still - it's a blast to have these forgotten 70ts singer-songwriter slices of magic back on my shelves - and in decent sound too...

Monday 2 May 2016

"The Smile Sessions" by THE BEACH BOYS (2011 Capitol '2CD' Mini Box Set Remasters) - A Review by Mark Barry...






"...Giving Me Excitations..."

Although I think the never-released Beach Boy's LP "Smile" is a victim of gross over-importance by historical revisionists (there's an awful lot of meandering faff on here – segments rather than actual songs) – on the evidence presented in this sweet sounding mini box set – there's an actual album lurking about in there somewhere. God only knows - but let's go try and find it...

UK released 31 October 2011 (November 2011 in the USA) – "The Smile Sessions" by THE BEACH BOYS on Capitol 5099902766324 (Barcode the same) is a 2 x HDCD Mini Box Set with a 36-Page Booklet, 15" x 20" Fold-Out Poster and a 'Smile' Button. It plays out as follows:

Disc 1 (79:20 minutes):
1. Our Prayer
2. Gee
3. Heroes And Villains
4. Do You Like Worms (Roll Plymouth Rock)
5. I'm In Great Shape
6. Barnyard
7. My Only Sunshine (The Old Master Painter/You Are My Sunshine)
8. Cabin Essence
9. Wonderful
10. Look (Song For Children)
11. Child Is Father Of The Man
12. Surf's Up
13. I Wanna Be Around/Workshop
14. Vega-Tables
15. Holidays
16. Wind Chimes
17. The Elements: Fire (Mrs. O'Leary's Cow)
18. Love To Say Dada
19. Good Vibrations

BONUS TRACKS:
20. You're Welcome
21. Heroes And Villains (Stereo Mix)
22. Heroes And Villains Sections (Stereo Mix)
23. Vega-Tables Demo
24. He Gives Speeches
25. Smile Backing Vocals Montage
26. Surf's Up 1967 (Solo Version)
27. Psycodelic Sounds – Brian Falls Into A Piano

Disc 2 (64:06 minutes):
1. Our Prayer "Dialogue" (9/19/66)
2. Heroes And Villains (Part 1)
3. Heroes And Villains (Part 2)
4. Heroes And Villains: Children Were Raised (1/27/67)
5. Heroes And Villains: Prelude To Fade (2/15/67)
6. My Only Sunshine (11/14/66)
7. Cabin Essence (10/3/66)
8. Surf's Up: 1st Movement (11/4/66)
9. Surf's Up: Piano Demo (12/15/66)
10. Vega-Tables: Fade (4/12/67)
11. The Elements: Fire Session (11/28/66)
12. Cool, Cool Water Version 2 (10/26-10/29/67)
13. Good Vibrations Session Highlights

Some have moaned about the hard card sleeves inside housing the 2 CDs (put the discs in protective plastics) – I think they look and feel great. I also love the way Capitol have given the "Smile" album that Capitol T 2580 catalogue number and what would have approximated its probable artwork (even if the track list on the rear is confusing). You certainly can't complain either about a near 80-minute playing time on Disc 1. The 36-page booklet is a chunky affair offering Brian Wilson's "Music is God's Voice" liner notes at the beginning - followed by some vacuous assessment of "Smile" by Tom Nolan which goes into 'myth' and 'artefact' babble. There's a plethora of period colour photos followed by lyrics for everything and detailed notes on the tortuous transfer process by compilation producers MARK LINETT, ALAN BOYD and DENNIS WOLFE. They explain that digital editing has now allowed Capitol to 'splice' the album together making sense of Brian Wilson's 'modules' of music (as he liked to call them).

The AUDIO is fabulous – Mixed and Mastered by MARK LINETT at 'Your Place Or Mine Recording' in Glendale, California (edited by ALAN BOYD). This is as clean and vibrant as I've ever heard this much bootlegged material - and the bare piano demo of "Surf's Up" on Disc 2 is a stupendous remaster.

It opens with what could only be track one – the beautiful Acapella "Our Prayer" – one minute and five seconds of gorgeous Beach Boys harmonies – like an opening salvo to a masterpiece. Personally I sequenced "Surf's Up" (which I would have called 'Brother John') next – surely one of the truly great finished songs on "Smile". Equally brill and complicated is the 4:52 minute version of the mammoth "Heroes And Villains". I personally like to follow that with the monk-like chant of "Love To Say Dada". I also dig the pretty clavinet 60ts feel to "Wonderful". And of course we then get the big one – "Good Vibrations". Having grown up like everyone else with the October 1966 seven-inch single mix at 3:59 minutes – how weird is it to hear this altered supposed 'full album version' at 4:15 minutes. It's good – but not nearly as sharp as the 45 released version. I know it only adds about 20-seconds but it actually lessens the song in my books – the single mix was tighter and more extraordinary. This version feels more of a meander – like too many of the album segments did. "Cabin Essence" is pretty as he sings "...I'll give you a home on the range..." and then goes off into yet another tempo change. Other faves include "Plymouth Rock" and "Look (Song For Children)" and the piano-cha-cha of "Child Is Father Of The Man" – brilliant piano breaks with a trombone sailing in over it (gorgeous Bass sound too). Stuff like "I'm In Great Shape" and "Barnyard" at 28 and 48 seconds are nonsense ditties to me but the string arrangements given to "You Are My Sunshine" are beautiful as are the heavy-vibe vocals.

In some respects I actually enjoy Disc 2 more than 1. The dialogue featured in almost every song here gives you insight into their process - for instance one band member clearly feels "Our Prayer" is an ideal opening song while the other only feels it’s an intro to a song. Part 3 of "Heroes And Villains" is the 'ba boom' part that they've called "Children Are Raised" with the boys discussing being in Japan as they get the harmonies right. The "First Movement" of "Surf's Up" will thrill fans as they work out what many consider (outside of "Good Vibrations") to be the album's central masterpiece. It opens with piano and guitar and feels magical. Moving on - I experimented with iTunes edit on "Cool, Cool Water" starting it at 1:32.5. It gives the song that beautifully produced vocal intro (what a finished tune this would have made). The 8:19 minutes of the "Good Vibrations" Session Highlights is the stuff of legend - Brian breaking it down time and time again until they get it right. "OK - here we go - play hard and strong..." he directs - and they do. And those bits around 3:35 that aren't in the final mix - wow...

Frustrating, magical, unfinished business with too much time passed – "Smile" is all of these things and more. "The Most Anticipated Album In Rock 'n' Roll History" the outer sticker screams. Maybe so - but I still don't know if it's the great lost meisterwork everyone latterly claims it is. The true Beach Boys nutter can of course go after the 5CD full-on 'immersion' experience. But in the mean time – we mere mortals and musical Neanderthals can settle for this beautifully presented reissue – now with best ever Audio.

"...The laughs come hard in Auld Lang Syne..." – Brian Wilson sings on the gorgeous and unadorned Take 1 Piano Demo of "Surf's Up" on Disc 2. After all this time – don't those prophetic lyrics still ring true about this troubled slice of genius...

PS: Time to get really contentious - here's my version of the "Smile" LP by THE BEACH BOYS on Capitol T 2580
Side 1:
1. Our Prayer
2. Surf's Up [credited as "Brother John"]
3. Heroes And Villains
4. Love To Say Dada
5. Wonderful
6. Good Vibrations

Side 2:
1. Cool, Cool Water [Edit at 1:32.5]
2. Child Is Father Of The Man
3. Cabin Essence
4. Do You Like Worms (Roll Plymouth Rock) [as "Plymouth Rock"]
5. Vega-Tables
6. Wind Chimes
7. Look (Song For Children)

"The World Is A Ghetto: 40th Anniversary Expanded Edition" by WAR (December 2012 Universal/Avenue CD Remaster) - A Review by Mark Barry...





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"...Where Was You At..."

(A review of an iconic American LP from a UK point of view)

It strikes me as extraordinary that "The World Is A Ghetto" didn't make any real mark in the UK – a country that loves its Soul Music with a rabid passion. I say this because it's incredibly rare that a US Soul album crosses over so hugely from the R&B charts to the notoriously hard-to-break into Rock charts.

Yet that's what "...Ghetto..." did in November 1972 – hitting the coveted Number One spot on both counts. Not Marvin Gaye's "What's Going On" (1971), Al Green's "Let's Stay Together" (1972) nor Stevie Wonder's "Innervisions" (1973) ever achieved this - legendary titles or no. You have to back Isaac Hayes and his genre-busting "Shaft" Blaxploitation double in 1971 on Stax or Curtis Mayfield's brilliant social-statement "Superfly" in 1972 on Curtom to get simultaneous Numbers 1's on both charts. It would take until February 1973 for the British vinyl LP to arrive – by which time all momentum was gone (it didn't dent any chart in Blighty).

Having said all that - Universal's 'Avenue Records' of the USA seems to think "The World Is A Ghetto" is a masterpiece of the genre and have given it a proper sonic makeover - a '40th Anniversary Expanded Edition' CD reissue that absolutely rocks. Here are the inner city details y'all...

US and UK released December 2012 – "The World Is A Ghetto: 40th Anniversary Expanded Edition" by WAR on Universal/Select/Avenue Records/Far Out B0017703-02 (Barcode 602537194964) is a Remaster and plays out as follows (69:38 minutes):

1. The Cisco Kid (4:35 minutes)
2. Where Was You At (3:25 minutes)
3. City, Country, City  (13:18 minutes)
4. Four Cornered Room (8:30 minutes) [Side 2]
5. The World Is A Ghetto (10:10 minutes)
6. Beetles In The Bog (3:51 minutes)
Tracks 1 to 6 are the album "The World Is A Ghetto" – released November 1972 in the USA on United Artists UAS-5652 (No.1 Pop & R&B charts) and February 1973 in the UK on United Artists UAS 29400 (didn't chart). It was Produced by JERRY GOLDSTEIN with all track were written by WAR.

BONUS TRACKS – GHETTO JAMS (All Previously Unreleased):
7. Freight Train Jam (5:41 minutes)
8. 5 8 Blues (5:29 minutes)
9. War Is Coming (Blues Version) (6:15 minutes)
10. The World Is A Ghetto (Rehearsal Take) (8:06 minutes)

WAR was:
HOWARD SCOTT – Guitars, Percussion and Vocals
LEE OSKAR – Harmonica, Percussion and Vocals
LONNIE JORDAN – Organ, Piano, Timbales, Percussion and Vocals
CHARLES MILLER – Clarinet, Alto, Tenor and Baritone Saxophones, Percussion and Vocals
PAPA DEE ALLEN – Conga, Bongos, Percussion and Vocals
B.B. DICKERSON – Bass, Percussion and Vocals
HAROLD BROWN – Drums, Percussion and Vocals

HARRY WEINGER has produced the '40th Anniversary Expanded Edition' and provided the short but enlightening essay on the LP and its 1972 impact in the 8-page booklet. But the big news is first generation master tapes provided by the original LP producer – JERRY GOLDSTEIN – that have uncovered four lengthy jams – all Previously Unreleased. PETER DOELL of Universal has remastered the CD and it sounds truly fantastic – kicking on every level. When you're in the middle of one the funky workouts – the instruments are pumping – not overdone or over trebled – just there. This is a warm remaster and I love the way it sounds. My only real complaint would be that there are 7" single four-minute edits of "The World Is A Ghetto" and its flipside "Four Cornered Room" (USA United Artists 50975) – a single edit/mix of "The Cisco Kid" and Promo-only 'Mono' mixes of "The Cisco Kid" and "The Whole Is A Ghetto" - that could have been added on as Bonus Material (but alas).

War's music appears to be that strange hybrid – not quite Soul and not quite Rock – but somewhere in-between. And that's ably demonstrated by the album's lead off track "The Cisco Kid". Brilliant stuff and an obvious single - United Artists USA released it January 1973 on UA-XW163-W with "Beetles In The Bog" as its B-side (April 1973 in the UK on UP 35521 with the same flip). It peaked at No. 5 on the US R&B singles charts - but cruised up to No. 2 on the Pop side. Blessed with an irresistible funky keyboard backbeat aligned with street lyrics about 'kids on Sunset' and 'outlaws' (complete with spoken Mexican) – "The Cisco Kid" is typically War – very hip and very cool. A loose piano/harmonica/guitar jam – "Where Was You At" again hits that finger clickin' sweet spot when he sings "...I looked around for someone to help me...where was you at..." (it also has an almost Capt. Beefheart break which is brilliant). "City, Country, City" is the first of those lengthy funky workouts and really makes the Remaster shine – sounding just incredible when that breathy harmonica kicks in (it ends Side 1). As the liner notes state - it's a 'go to track' if you need convincing - and after a few saxophone flourishes fill your speakers in this 13-minute instrumental – you're also in no doubt as to how good Peter Doell's transfer is – brilliant stuff.

"Four Cornered Room" is my crave on this album – the guitar, bass and warbling Oskar harmonica sounding mean and alive. It's a fantastic groove and showcases everything that’s brill about this seven-piece band (it's similar in feel to the Crusaders-sounding instrumental "Vibeka" on the 1971 "War" album). Alongside "Low Rider" - the album's title track "The World Is A Ghetto" is probably their most famous song and I'm taken aback at how good it sounds here – beautifully clear – all those harmony vocals filling your living room - accompanied by that chunky backbeat. The album ends "Beetles in The Bog" where the band sound more like Malo meets Santana than War.

The Four Bonus Tracks are 'funky funky' nirvana – wildly good. "Freight Train Jam" feels like James Brown's JB's having a wig-out on a wah-wah guitar – all brilliant licks underpinned by a slick-as-Mister Cool backbeat (the piano fills from Lonnie Jordan are wicked too – what a winner). "5 8 Blues" is a harmonica driver about a dubious acquaintance. Sounding not unlike Little Walter having fun with a funky bunch of cats – you get saucy gender-bender lyrics like "...Did you see my big legged lady...walking across town...she's got a long blond wig...weighs about 125 pounds..." I can see why it was left off the album – too much like good-time Chess and Cadet R&B of the 60ts (not in keeping with the album) – but that doesn't stop it from being a genuine bonus in more than name. But even better is a 'Blues Version' of "War Is Coming" – six-minutes of grinding Soul-Blues. A version of would eventually show up on the "Platinum Jazz" LP in 1977. The 'Rehearsal Take' of "The World Is A Ghetto" is a couple of minutes shorter than the finally released album cut (runs to 8-plus but still wonderful) – and is presented here with truly gobsmacking audio quality.

Our US compatriots have always dug WAR and their 1972 Number 1 platter - "The World Is A Ghetto". I can’t help thinking that it’s about time their UK buddies got streetwise too. And this fabulous '40th Anniversary Expanded Edition' is the place to do just that. Wonderful stuff...and peace in all ghettos the world over...

Sunday 1 May 2016

"The Move" by THE MOVE (2016 Esoteric Recordings 'Standard Edition' MONO 1CD - Ben Wiseman and Rob Keyloch Remaster) - A Review by Mark Barry...






"…Mist On A Monday Morning…" 

In 2007 and 2008 - Salvo of the UK reissued The Move’s first three albums - "The Move" (April 1968), "Shazam" (March 1970) and "Looking On" (October 1970) with great sound and half-decent extras. Their debut was even given a 2CD variant.

Now it's the turn of Esoteric Recordings (part of England's Cherry Red) to have a go – this time concentrating on the rare MONO mix of the debut album "The Move" – newly remastered from original first generation tapes. And this reissue throws in five relevant bonus tracks into the bargain (4 single sides and one withdrawn B-side/outtake). Here are the 'Flowers In The Rain' details...

UK released Friday, 29 April 2016 (6 May 2016 in the USA) - "The Move" by THE MOVE on Esoteric Recordings ECLEC 2537 (Barcode 5013929463745) is an 'Expanded Edition' Single CD Remaster of the 'MONO' LP with five Bonus Tracks (Standard Edition). It plays out as follows (49:45 minutes):

1. Yellow Rainbow
2. Kilroy Was Here
3. (Here We Go Round) The Lemon Tree
4. Weekend
5. Walk Upon The Water
6. Flowers In The Rain
7. Hey Grandma
8. Useless Information
9. Zing Went The Strings Of My Heart
10. The Girl Outside
11. Fire Brigade
12. Mist On A Monday Morning
13. Cherry Blossom Clinic
Tracks 1 to 13 are their debut album "The Move" – released April 1968 on Regal Zonophone LRZ 1002 (Mono) and Regal Zonophone SLRZ 1002 (Stereo). This CD remasters only the 'MONO' mix.

BONUS TRACKS:
14. Night Of Fear
15. Disturbance
Tracks 14 and 15 are the Mono A&B-sides of a UK 7" single released December 1966 on Deram DM 109

16. I Can Hear The Grass Grow
17. Wave The Flag And Stop The Train
Tracks 16 and 17 are the Mono A&B-sides of a UK 7" single released March 1967 on Deram DM 117

18. Vote For Me
Track 18 was recorded at Advision Studios in April 1967 and was meant to be the non-album B-side of a UK Regal Zonophone 7" single with "Cherry Blossom Clinic" on the A-side (no catalogue number allocated). The single was withdrawn. It first appeared as a rarity on CD in 1998 on the "Movements: 30th Anniversary Anthology" 3-Disc set on Westside WESX 302.

NOTE: there is also a April 2016 3CD 'Deluxe Edition' of "The Move" on Esoteric ECLEC 32536 (Barcode 5013929463646)

THE MOVE was:
CARL WAYNE – Vocals
ROY WOOD – Guitar and Vocals
TREVOR BURTON – Guitar and Vocals
CHRIS "Ace" KEFFORD – Bass and Vocals
BEV BEVAN – Drums, Percussion and Vocals

ROB KEYLOCH transferred the tapes and BEN WISEMAN did the 24-Bit Digital Remaster at Broadlake Studios - and a brill job has been done - definite improvement. When I play Disc 1 of my old Salvo issue – the Mono is good – but here there's clarity and most especially - a singular punch as each song plays. When you first spin "Yellow Rainbow" - the manic opening is a barrage of backwards tapes and double-tracked voices – but now I can that sitar-sounding guitar way back in the mix (it's more prevalent somehow). The solar plexus kick from "Kilroy Was Here" is huge – those drums and tambourine-rattles threatening my speakers with a rowdy-boy attitude. Tracks like their speeded-up cover of Eddie Cochran's "Weekend" and the 'watch their minds drift away' druggy feel to "Walk Upon The Water" all sound better too. By the time you get to the pied-piper clavinet and cellos of the hugely 60ts atmospheric "Mist On A Monday Morning" – you’re won over – all instruments to the fore and beautifully clear.

I had the five extras on other reissues – but they bolster up this 2016 CD newbee with the right kind of stuff. "Night Of Fear" was always such a crude recording to me – that grungy guitar sound and heavy bass thump. But both it and "I Can Hear The Grass Grow" have huge kahunas here – those drum rolls jumping out of my speakers. The Kinks or The Who would have been proud of the withdrawn flipside "Vote For Me" - and its aggressiveness matches the photos in the booklet of the band wrecking things on stage (naughty boys).

Fans might ask what's the point? If you already own the Salvo double – then why buy this or even release it? I suspect that Esoteric have sourced a better tape than Salvo used – although I could stand corrected on that. But if you're all about the best sound – then I think this singular CD remaster is going to have to be in your bank-holiday basket right away. 

Or if your wallet can take it - go for the 3CD 'Deluxe Edition' (Barcode number supplied above) which comes armed with the 'Stereo' mix and a huge wad of extras including some Previously Unreleased...

Friday 29 April 2016

"Dada" by DADA [featuring Elkie Brooks, Paul Korda & Pete Gage] (2016 Esoteric Recordings CD Remaster) - A Review by Mark Barry...




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"...Take Me Up And Put Me Down Big Dipper..." 

Derided and beloved in equal measure – England's DADA made only one LP in late 1970 for a confused Atlantic Records. A hybrid of styles encompassing Brassy Prog, Holy Roller Rock and Rotary Connection-style vocal gymnastics (and a few points beyond those) - like the eclecticism suggested by their band name – the music was impossible to pigeonhole and of course drove both the record company nuts and the public into the nearest bar.

Most Rock geezers like me know our Dada through the 99p we spent on Atlantic Super 2464 013 – "The Age Of Atlantic" label sampler LP put out in October 1970. Amidst the Zeppelin, Yes and Dr. John - there they were. Track 2 on Side 2 was Dada's Hair-like cover of The Rolling Stones 1965 "The Last Time" - a bopper radically rearranged into something more interesting and ever so slightly out there. The whole album is like that – a mishmash of 5th Dimension meets Julie Driscoll with Brian Auger and The Trinity meets Rotary Connection and a few other musical experiments along the way. Don't get me wrong – I love it – there is much to cherish here. It's not Rock for sure and it's not completely Psych either. It's a mixture of many styles – immediately dated yet actually very cool too. Here is the exploratory cross-pollination existential Dadaist details man (and that's just the left leg)...

UK released Friday 22 April 2016 – "Dada" by DADA [featuring Elkie Brooks, Paul Korda, Pete Gage and Don Shinn] on Esoteric Recordings WECLEC 2543 (Barcode 5013929464346) is a straightforward CD Remaster and transfer of their lone album (37:17 minutes):

1. Big Dipper
2. The Last Time
3. This Is My Song
4. Seed Of Peace
5. Organ Interlude
6. Tonite Is
7. She Walks Away [Side 2]
8. Aspen, Colorado
9. Eyes Of The Warren
10. Jasamin
11. Dada
Tracks 1 to 11 are their lone album "Dada" – released December 1970 in the UK on Atlantic 2400 030 and in the USA on Atco SD 33-352.

Paul Korda had a hand in writing In "Big Dipper" and "This Is My Song" (both co-writes with Pete Gage) - "Seed Of Peace" and "Tonite Is" are co-writes with Keyboardist Don Shinn and he solo wrote "Jasamin" and "Dada". Don Shinn wrote "Organ Interlude" and "Eyes Of The Warren". "The Last Time" is a Rolling Stones cover and "Aspen, Colorado" is a Tony Joe White cover. "She Walks Away" is written by Pete Gage and Ivan Zagni.

Taking its moniker from an art movement formed at the outbreak of the First World War – DADA was the brainchild of PETE GAGE - a Guitarist and Arranger heavily involved with Geno Washington and The Ram Jam Band in the mid Sixties. Deliberately choosing not to have one central singer but enough people to handle the diversity of the music (they weren't called Dada for nothing) – founder member Pete Gage decided on three sets of voices – and what a trio they were. ELKIE BROOKS had been working the cabaret circuit and doing jazz-outs with Humphrey Lyttleton's band as well as studio stints with Jody Grind – Tim Hinkley's Prog Rock act signed to Transatlantic Records. The second set of pipes belonged to the all-round eccentric and hugely creative PAUL KORDA – a falsetto singer who’d worked in the "Hair" cast and was a prolific song/lyric writer. The third was JIMMY CHAMBERS who was a Percussionist as well. DON SHINN supplement those singers with Keyboards and MARTIN HARRYMAN played Drums. Other musicians included BARRY DUGGAN on Saxophones & Flutes, MALCOLM CAPEWELL on Tenor Sax & Flute with ERNIE LUCHLAN on Trumpet & Flugelhorn.

The 16-page booklet has new liner notes by SID SMITH that feature informational interviews with founding member Pete Gage discussing the formation of the band – the eclectic styles and the tours of America in 1971 that saw Robert Palmer join the ranks and would eventually go on with Elkie to form the much-loved Vinegar Joe on Island Records. There are no photos but quotes from Dada exponents like Huelsenbeck, Blosche, Hugo Ball and Andre Breton. BEN WISEMAN has carried out the 24-bit digital remaster at Broadlake Studios and this disc rocks.

It opens very strongly with "Big Dipper" which is a brilliantly arranged Prog Rocker with Blood, Sweat & Tears brass thrown in and all three vocalists featured. Their adventurous cover of The Rolling Stones "Last Time" has clever breaks that feel very Lydia Pense and Cold Blood. The acoustic opening to "This Is My Song" is beautifully handled on the remaster as is the "Hair" chorus and keyboards – a genius tune – I'm reminded of good 5th Dimension or a cool Charles Stepney production of Rotary Connection circa "Hey, Love". I love the duet of vocals between Brooks and Korda on "Seed Of Peace" – another sort of holy-roller peace anthem that cries out to be in "Jesus Christ Superstar". The side ends on two short 'n' curlies - the 54-second "Organ Interlude" by Don Shinn that feels like the beginning to an ELP opus done on a local church organ. That immediately leads into "Tonite Is" – another one minute of hippy claptrap vocals.

Side 2 opens with the wicked "She Walks Away" – a very Rotary Connection "Hair" production song with great brass fills and multiple vocals. Tony Joe White's "Aspen, Colorado" originated on his 1968 "Black And White" LP in 1968 on Monument Records while others might recognise it as the B-side to the more famous "Pork Salad Annie". In the hands of Dada - its 2:50 original playing time is stretched to 5:03 minutes and becomes almost unrecognisable (but in a good way). Sung with real Soul by all – it features cool treated keyboards and complimentary brass. "Aspen Colorado" is a definite highlight on here. Shinn's "Eyes Of The Warren" has a great keyboard break – while the acoustic 'sweetness of a million roses' that pours off the twee "Jasamin" may be too much free-love for most (even with that great vocal ending). The album ends on "Dada" – an upbeat Blood Sweat & Tears vibe – again feeling like another 'Hair' outtake that almost made the set list.

Historically - Paul Korda appeared as one of the Lead Vocalists in the 1968 stage show of "Hair" - made a couple of solo albums in the 70ts - "A Passing Stranger" released June 1971 in the UK on MAM Records MAM-AS 1003 and "Dancing In The Aisles" released 1978 in the USA on Janus JXS-7038. He also guested on "Ride A White Horse" and "One Of The Boys" for The Who's Roger Daltrey in 1975 and 1978. Personally - I knew his name from the song "Seagull (The West Coat Oil Tragedy Of '68)" which Dave Edmund's Love Sculpture covered on their 1970 second LP "Forms And Feelings". Korda is still active and put out 2 CDs in 2009 covering his early years and new material.

It's not all great for sure - but there is genius in its midst. I never thought I'd see the day that this obscure LP would finally receive a decent CD remaster (there is a Wounded Bird issue in 2010 but I heard bad reports about its audio). So not everyone's just Joss Stick – but if you feel like sticking a flower in a child's hair or sharing your baubles and dandelions collection with the world - then the brill and hippyish "Dada" is the earth-mother for you.

I dig it baby and I still think the Stones nicked their logo design in part from the cover painting...

"Firefall/Luna Sea/Elan" by FIREFALL (2016 Beat Goes On 2CD Remasters) - A Review by Mark Barry...




"...Sold On You..."

Hailing from Boulder in Colorado (formed in 1973, debuted in 1976) - the 5-piece FIREFALL rode the shirttails of soft Country-Rock blazed by bands like America and The Eagles in the preceding five years. Firefall featured members of The Flying Burrito Brothers (Singer Rick Roberts and Drummer Mike Clarke), Mark Andes of Spirit, Jo Jo Gunne and later Heart - and two great axemen in Larry Burnett and Jock Bartley. Mick Clarke has also played in The Byrds. They certainly had the players and musical history to pull it off.

The three albums on this amazing sounding 2CD Beat Goes On Reissue were originally released on Atlantic Records and sound like the less snotty brother of Jo Jo Gunne - a milder Crosby, Stills & Nash but not quite as good as Manassas or other obvious bands of that ilk. Now considered 'yacht rock' – when Firefall were good they made a very pleasurable racket indeed. Here are the harmonious details...

UK released Friday, 29 April 2016 (May 2016 in the USA) – "Firefall/Luna Sea/Elan" by FIREFALL on Beat Goes On BGO 1234 (Barcode 5017261212344) offers 3LPs Remastered from Original Master Tapes onto 2CDs and plays out as follows:

Disc 1 (60:35 minutes):
1. It Doesn't Matter
2. Love Isn't All
3. Livin' Ain't Livin'
4. No Way Out
5. Dolphin's Lullaby
6. Cinderella [Side 2]
7. Sad Ol' Love Song
8. You Are The Woman
9. Mexico
10. Do What You Want
Tracks 1 to 10 are their debut album "Firefall" – released April 1976 in the USA on Atlantic SD 18174 and in the UK on Atlantic K 50260. It peaked at No. 28 on the US charts in early May 1976 (didn’t chart UK).

Tracks 2, 4, 6, 7 and 10 written by Larry Burnett – Tracks 3, 5, 8 and 9 written by Rick Roberts
"It Doesn't Matter" is a Stephen Stills and Manassas cover version (written by Stephen Stills and Chris Hillman).

11. So Long
12. Just Remember I Love You
13. Sold On You
14. Someday Soon
15. Just Think
Tracks 11 to 15 are Side 1 of their 2nd LP "Luna Sea" – released August 1977 in the USA on Atlantic SD 19101 and in the UK on Atlantic K 50355.

Disc 2 (58:48 minutes):
1. Getaway
2. Only A Fool
3. Head On Home
4. Piece Of Paper
5. Even Steven
Tracks 1 to 5 are Side 2 of their 2nd LP "Luna Sea" – released August 1977 in the USA on Atlantic SD 19101 and in the UK on Atlantic K 50355. Rick Roberts wrote Tracks 11, 12 and 14 on Disc 1 and 2 on Disc 2. It peaked at No. 27 on the US LP charts (didn’t chart UK).
Larry Burnett wrote Track 13 on Disc 1 and Tracks 1, 3 and 4 on Disc 2. Track 5 on Disc 1 co-written between Roberts and Burnett
Track 15 written by Firefall.

6. Strange Way
7. Sweet And Sour
8. Wrong Side Of Town
9. Count Your Blessings
10. Get You Back
11. Anymore [Side 2]
12. Baby
13. Goodbye, I Love You
14. Sweet Ann
15. Winds Of Change
Tracks 6 to 15 are their 3rd album “Elan” – released October 1978 in the USA on Atlantic SD 19183 and in the UK on Atlantic K 50494. It peaked at No. 27 on the US LP charts (didn’t chart UK).

Tracks 6, 9, 11, 13, 14 and 15 written by Rick Roberts – Tracks 8, 10 and 12 written by Larry Burnett.

Track 7 is a co-write with Jock Bartley and Rick Roberts – track 11 a co-write between Mark Andes and Rick Roberts.

As you can see from the notes above beneath the track lists – Firefall featured two hugely prolific songwriters – Rick Roberts and Larry Burnett. Roberts had in fact released two solo LPs before forming Firefall in 1973 - 1972's "Windmills" on A&M SP-4372 and 1973's "She Is A Song" on A&M SP-4404. The first LP famously featured a ludicrously stacked set of musicians – Jackson Browne, Henley, Meisner and Leadon of The Eagles, David Crosby, Marc Benno and members of Stephen Still's Manassas (oddly neither LP charted). Guitarist Burnett is still active – releasing CD albums "Confidence Game" in 2004 and "Guitar & Vocals" in 2009. Also prominent across all three albums is Jock Bartley – a guitarist who'd toured with Gram Parson and The Fallen Angels and replaced Tommy Bolin in Zephyr. His wicked slide can be heard to great effect on "Sold On You" where he's aided and abetted by keyboard player David Muse giving it some great Harmonica warbles. Timothy B. Schmidt gets an early look in before he joined The Eagles providing backing vocals on "Just Remember I Love You" on the "Luna Sea" album. The Memphis Horns provide Brass backing for that whole record too. The Manassas percussionist Joe Lala guests on the "Elan" album - while Steve Forman shakes various tambourines alongside Lala on the same LP. Joe Mason produced the first two platters with number three handled by the equally legendary helmsman Tom Dowd – so production values are top notch on all – something the remaster from original tapes makes the absolute most of.

As always with BGO releases there’s an outer card slipcase lending the release a classy feel (the cover art is the three albums centred against a plain blue backdrop – I say this because there appears to be another sleeve which uses the artwork of "Luna Sea" as its backdrop). The 24-page booklet is substantial – full album credits, lyrics to all three LPs, artwork, band photos and new liner notes from noted writer JOHN TOBLER that reference the complicated musical history of the band members (Spirit, Jo Jo Gunne, The Byrds, The Flying Burrito Brothers, Gram Parsons Fallen Angels and more). But the big news is new 2016 ANDREW THOMPSON High Res Remasters from Original Tapes – and man does it show. The Audio Quality on these babies rocks – clear, warm, all the instruments filling your room with clarity. A top job done...

Back in 2009 Rhino Europe featured Firefall's accomplished cover of the Stephen Stills Manassas song "It Doesn't Matter" as part of Volume 1 of their "California Groove" series of 4CD reissues. Not surprising really – the guitars are great and the production beautiful (Atlantic UK issued it as an A-side on K 10798 in July 1976 – their first 45 in Britain). "Love Isn't All" is a little too lightweight with its whiny vocal and flute passages – things buck up with the acoustic jaunt of "Livin' Ain't Lovin'" – a very radio-friendly tune complete with a tasteful Saxophone solo. Funky Rock fiends will dig the boogie of "No Way Out" – the boys allowed to rock it out with the slides. The poppy but irritating "You Are The Woman" was the 2nd UK 45 on Atlantic K 10814 in August 1976 and not surprisingly didn’t chart. Better was "Cinderella" b/w "Dolphin's Ballad" in October 1976 on Atlantic K 10853 – a hooky 'god damn' melody with nice harmonica and mood changes. The band gets a bit Outlaws with the finisher "Do What You Want" – again showcasing great guitar playing bolstered up with funky brass fills.

The second LP "Luna Sea" is the best of the bunch in my opinion. "So Long" and "Just Remember I Love You" are very Eagles territory and I'm a sucker for that fab Bartley guitar work on the rocker "Sold On You" – sounding utterly amazing here. Some very nice orchestration on the 'steal away' song "Someday Soon" while the boys discover their inner Marshall Tucker Band with "Just Think" and rock to that chugging riffage. More slide and sax underpin "Getaway" where "Only A Fool" sounds closest to the Eagles circa "One Of These Nights" (beautifully produced too). Like a jaunty Joe Walsh song circa the "...But Seriously Folks" album - "Head On Home" bops along with great slide (the playing sounding not unlike England's Bryn Haworth circa 1978's "Grand Arrival" on A&M Records). Time for the inevitable 'she done me wrong' ballad – "Piece Of Paper" and back to the upbeat melodic rock of "Even Steven".

"Elan" had Tom Dowd at the production helm and you can hear his skill in the Crosby, Stills & Nash acoustic bop of "Sweet And Sour" – a lovely listen. Larry Burnett put up the jaunty harmonica boogie of "Wrong Side Of Town" – a great builder with clever lyrics and a beautiful remaster transfer. Burnett lets the guitars rip for the Jo Jo Gunne-sounding "Get You Back" where he's determined to rectify a mistake and win his lady back. Rick Roberts and Mark Andes co-wrote "Anymore" – a plucky little funk-rock number about walking the line and not falling off again. "Baby" is the ballad (ala America) and it's a little too saccharine and produced for my palette. Yacht Rock fans however will get droopy for "Goodbye I Love You" while the band finishes proceedings with the excellent rocker "Winds Of Change".

Not as musically memorable as America or The Eagles – but on the evidence presented here - Firefall clearly had their equally melodic moments. And fans will love the Remasters and quality presentation. Another tasty BGO reissue...


INDEX - Entries and Artist Posts in Alphabetical Order