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Sunday 3 July 2016

"Will The Circle Be Unbroken" by THE NITTY GRITTY DIRT BAND and FRIENDS (2002 Capitol 2CD Remasters) - A Review by Mark Barry...



"…Let's Do It The First Time And To Hell With The Rest Of It…" 

Hand me that Jack Daniels buddy and the phone number of Hank Williams’ booking agent… 

Bringing together the old and new worlds of Country, Bluegrass and Old Timey Music could have been a fool’s errand for The Nitty Gritty Dirt Band in 1972 – but as you can hear from this beautifully remastered 2CD set – the music transcends everything. 

What you get here is old-school musicianship steeped in eons of tradition (Doc Watson, Roy Acuff, Earl Scruggs, Merle Travis, Mother Maybelle Carter and Jimmy Martin) enjoying themselves with enthusiastic young bucks wanting to be respectful to people they love with every part of their DNA. It’s a feast of music, talent, characters and Americana…

And although the songs are mostly about the misery of whiskey, car crashes on the highway, coal mines, relatives and cattle going to that great gig in the sky, cheating women and even more untrustworthy husbands (while God oversees the whole shebang) – this is a jolly album – and with the giggling and friendly studio chatter in between takes  – a warm listen too. In fact as an event - you’re musically reminded of that other fantastic Old Timey Revival and Celebration some 30 years after this coming together – the Coens’ majestically filmed “O, Brother Where Art Thou?” from 2000  - a soundtrack that quietly nicked tunes from this 3LP set wholesale. Here are the black mountain rags and Tennessee studs…

Released May 2002 – “Will The Circle Be Unbroken” by THE NITTY GRITTY DIRT BAND and FRIENDS on Capitol 5351482 (Barcode 724353514822) offers the 3LP set Remastered onto 2CDs and fiddles and banjos its way into your heart as follows:

Disc 1 (57:28 minutes):
1. Grand Ole Pry Song [Jimmy Martin Lead Vocals]
2. Keep On The Sunny Side [Mother Maybelle Carter Lead Vocals]
3. Nashville Blues [Instrumental with Earl Scruggs on Leads Banjo]
4. You Are My Flower [Jeff Hanna, Les Thompson and Gary Scruggs on Lead]
5. The Precious Jewel [Roy Acuff on Lead Vocals]
6. Dark As A Dungeon [Merle Travis on Lead Vocals]
7. Tennessee Stud [Doc Watson on Lead Vocals]
8. Black Mountain Rag [Doc Watson on Lead Vocals]
9. Wreck On The Highway [Roy Acuff on Lead Vocals]
10. The End Of The World [Instrumental with Doc Watson and Earl Scuggs on Guitars and Pete “Oswald” Kirby on Dobro]
11. I Saw The Light [Roy Acuff on Lead Vocals – Hank Williams cover]
12. Sunny Side Of The Mountain [Lead Vocals and Guitar by Jimmy Martin]
13. Nine Pound Hammer [Merle Travis on Lead Vocals and Guitar with John McEuen on Banjo and Jimmie Fadden on Harmonica]
14. Losin’ You (Might Be The Best Thing yet) [Jimmy Martin on Lead Vocal and Guitar]
15. Honky Tonkin’ [Jimmie Fadden on Lead Vocals – Hank Williams cover]
16. You Don’t Know My Mind [Jimmy Martin on Lead Vocal and Guitar – Jimmie Skinner cover]
17. My Walkin’ Shoes [Jimmy Martin on Lead Vocals and Guitar]

Disc 2 (72:40 minutes):
1. Lonesome Fiddle Blues [Vasser Clements on Fiddle - Instrumental]
2. Cannonball Rag [Merle Travis on Guitar and Junior Huskey on Bass - Instrumental]
3. Avalanche [Vasser Clements on Fiddle and John McEuen on Banjo - Instrumental]
4. Flint Hill Special [Earl Scruggs on Banjo – Instrumental]
5. Togary Mountain [John McEuen on Banjo – Instrumental]
6. Earl’s Breakdown [Earl Scruggs on Banjo – Instrumental]
7. Orange Blossom County [Vasser Clements on Fiddle, John McEuen on Banjo]
8. Wabash Cannonball [Pete “Oswald” Kirby on Dobro – Instrumental]
9. Lost Highway [Jim Ibbotson on Lead Vocals and Guitar]
10. Doc Watson & Merle Travis First Meeting – Dialogue about albums and guitar styles
11. Way Downtown [Doc Watson on Lead Vocals and Guitar]
12. Down Yonder [Doc Watson on Guitar, Vasser Clement on Fiddle – Instrumental]
13. Pins And Needles (In My Heart) [Roy Acuff on Lead Vocals]
14. Honky Tonk Blues [Jeff Hanna on Lead Vocals – Hank Williams cover]
15. Sailin’ On To Hawaii [Pete Kirby on Dobro and Doc Watson on Guitar – Instrumental]
16. I’m Thinking Tonight Of My Blue Eyes [Mother Maybelle Carter on Lead Vocals and Guitar with Merle Travis on Guitar and Pete Kirby on Dobro – Carter Family cover]
17. I Am A Pilgrim [Merle Travis on Lead Vocals and Guitar]
18. Wildwood Flower [Mother Maybelle Carter on Lead Vocals and Guitar with Earl Scruggs on Guitar – Carter Family cover]
19. Soldier’s Joy [Earl Scruggs and John McEuen on Banjos – Instrumental]
20. Will The Circle Be Unbroken [NGDB with all Guests with Mother Maybelle Carter on Lead Vocals - Carter Family cover]
21. Both Sides Now [Randy Scruggs on Guitar alone – an Instrumental cover of a Joni Mitchell song]

PREVIOUSLY UNRELEASED TRACKS:
22. Foggy Mountain Breakdown [NGDB cover of an Earl Scruggs song]
23. Warming Up For “The Opry” (Dialogue with False Starts Of Music)
24. Sunny Side (Talk with Maybelle Carter and other musicians rehearsing)
25. Remember Me [Doc Watson on Guitar]

Produced for Reissue by original band member JOHN McEUEN – the first generation 30 IPS masters were transferred/remastered at 24-bit resolution by MARK WALDREP and the sonic results are just gorgeous. This is a beautiful sounding set – warm and full of presence- all are to be praised for exceptional work here.

Those who bought the vinyl triple album when it came out in December 1972 on United Artists UAS 9801 in the USA were met with an elaborate package – a gatefold with an inner flap. Much of that detail has been transferred to the 16-page booklet with additional liner notes by the band in February 2002. Luckily someone has been smart enough to musician-credit every single song – otherwise you’d get lost as to who does what and where. I’ve filled out those details in my track list.

At first the studio-chatter and dialogue that precedes every track kind of throws you - but you very quickly twig why its there – it adds huge warmth to overly familiar Country songs – discussed with laughter and chat by the people who made them famous. It’s a clever trick and it works nine times out of ten. The first instrumental of many is a gem – “Nashville Blues” has Earl Scuggs tearing up a Lead Banjo storm while everyone else compliments the footstomping hoot. Back to songs and tunes as simply and as lovely as “You Are My Flower” hook you from the outset. Superlative acoustic playing and Norman Blake’s Dobro keep you there for the duration. So many are like this – just great tunes steeped in emotional longing and life struggle. Roy Acuff precedes “The Precious Jewel” with his policy for singing in the studio (dialogue titles this review)…

Then there are the ludicrously accomplished instrumentals like “The End Of The World” where Pete “Oswald” Kirby’s Dobro playing amazes. The frantic pace of all that picking is broken up very nicely by Mother Maybelle Carter doing two covers of Carter Family done-me-wrong ballads – “I’m Thinking Tonight Of My Blue Eyes” and “Wildwood Heart”. The dialogue between Doc Watson and Merle Travis is like eavesdropping on history – two giants of the genre enjoying each other’s art. Roy Acuff does his best Hank Williams impression on the Floyd Jenkins classic “Pins And Needles (In My Heart)” which is followed by an actual Hank Williams song – “Honky Tonk Blues”. Mother Maybelle Carter returns to lead the congregation on the massive title track. The whole rollercoaster ride ends on the loveliest and most peaceful of moments – Randy Scruggs on his lonesome with his Acoustic Guitar doing an instrumental of Joni Mitchell’s “Both Sides Now”. It last only two and half minutes but it feels perfect and reminds the listener of what brought them all together in the first place – music and a mutual love of tunes from whatever quarter.

All the musicians involved wanted their Country and Bluegrass musical heritage to be passed on to the next generation and you have to say they pulled it off. Thank God someone with skill was behind the control booth to document that poor boy paying the price for a life of sin…

"Now That Everything's Been Said" by THE CITY featuring CAROLE KING and DANNY KORTCHMAR - December 1968 US LP on Ode Records (October 2015 US Light In The Attic CD Remaster) - A Review by Mark Barry...







"...Wings Of Her Rhythms..."

After a full decade of writing winning hits with her husband and childhood sweetheart Gerry Goffin for other acts (Neil Sedaka, Chiffons, Shirelles, Crystals, Billy Fury, Bobby Vee, Drifters, Monkees, Aretha Franklin, Dusty Springfield all benefitted) - it was time for the consummate songwriter CAROLE KING to step out of the Brill Building machine and up to a microphone in a band of her own. Thus the ill-fated one-album group THE CITY was born - and it appears pretty much stopped dead in its tracks only months after it was unleashed on a public that barely registered its existence.

THE CITY was:
CAROLE KING – Lead Vocals and Keyboards
DANNY "COOCH" KORTCHMAR [ex The Fugs]
Lead Guitar and Backing Vocals - Lead Vocals on "Man Without A Dream"
Duet Vocals with Carole on "My Sweet Home" and "I Don't Believe It"
CHARLES LARKEY [ex The Myddle Class] – Bass
JIMMY GORDON – (Guest) Drummer

Far from being wanting on the material front (there's genuine beauty and brilliance on display here) - a combination of other factors saw the album never get a chance. It’s trying-to-drum-up sales arrival was initially announced in a full-page Columbia Records advert for Billboard in early January 1969 (released 18 Dec 1968)  - the three-piece band 'crouched in front of an abandoned car' artwork pictured alongside the eclectic likes of space cadets Spirit, barroom brawler John Kay from Steppenwolf and electronics noodler Terry Riley. But instead of having the publicity and promotional might of Columbia behind the record - Lou Adler's 'Ode Records' (to whom they were signed) changed distributers to A&M Records and left the 'Ode' label stranded and without people to promote the album. 

Listed as being released 18 December 1968 in the 1998 Carole King 2CD Anthology "A Natural Woman: The Ode Collection 1968-1976" - the LP is booked at over $80 in Price Guides. Why? It's said that "Now That Everything's Been Said" on Ode Records Z12 44012 barely made into the LP stores and no one seems to know how many copies of this elusive record was pressed in its original 'colour' sleeve (on the back of the massive success accrued by "Tapestry" - a black and white cover reissue appeared in 1971 with the same catalogue number). There was a distribution change from Columbia Records to A&M Records too which meant the album appears to have not been repressed or even distributed properly. As 1969 went into 1970, King was finally ready for a Solo career proper - and with the recording and release in September 1970 of "Carole King: Writer" - The City's lone album got lost in the singer-songwriter stampede.  

Ode tried two American 45s - "Snow Queen" b/w "Paradise Alley" in September 1968 on Ode ZS7 113 and then "That Old Sweet Roll (Hi-De-Ho)" b/w "Why Are You Leaving" the following year in May 1969 on Ode Records ZS7 119 – but neither took let alone received airplay. It wasn't that the material lacked somehow - because Columbia Records label mates Blood, Sweat And Tears would take "That Old Sweet Roll (Hi-De-Ho)" and shorten its title to simply "Hi-De-Ho" and make a No. 14 hit out of the song in July 1970 - long after The City's lone album had disappeared (the last CD reissue was a limited edition in 1999 that was deleted quickly). 

Which brings us to this fabulous sounding 2015 CD reissue from the revered 'Light in The Attic Records' of the USA who have done this overlooked and criminally forgotten obscurity a solid. Here are the urban details...

US released October 2015 –  "Now That Everything's Been Said" by THE CITY on Light In The Attic Records LITA 136 (Barcode 826853013628) is a straightforward CD Remaster of the 12-track 1969 Ode Records album and plays out as follows (37:48 minutes):

1. Snow Queen [Side 1]
2. I Wasn't Born To Follow
3. Now That Everything's Been Said
4. Paradise Alley
5. Man Without A Dream
6. Victim Of Circumstance
7. Why Are You Leaving [Side 2]
8. Lady
9. My Sweet Home
10. I Don't Believe It
11. That Old Sweet Roll (Hi-De-Ho)
12. All My Time
Tracks 1 to 12 are the album "Now That Everything's Been Said" - released 18 December 1968 in the USA on Ode Records Z12 44012 (no UK release). Produced by LOU ADLER - it didn't chart.

NOTES: Tracks 1, 2, 5, 8, 11 and 12 written by Carole King and Gerry Goffin - Tracks 3, 7 and 10 written by Toni Stern and Carole King - Tracks 4 and 6 written by David Palmer and Carole King. The only cover version on the album is "My Sweet Home" written by Gospel singer Margaret Allison. Carole sings Lead Vocals on all tracks except three - "My Sweet Home" and "I Don't Believe It" which are duets with Danny Kortchmar - while Kortchmar takes the Lead Vocal wholly on "Man Without A Dream" with Carole providing some backing vocals during the chorus.

Produced for re-release by MATT SULLIVAN and PAT THOMAS - it comes in a card gatefold digipak with one of those annoying OBI bandana strips that isn't attached to the side of the digipak (who thought this was a good idea). The 24-page booklet has great liner notes from Los Angeles writer STEVE HOCHMAN that features newly attained interviews with Palmer, Kortchmar and Larkey. In truth the booklet is a little dull without photos (where are those singles, adverts etc) and it doesn't even bother with a catalogue number for the original LP? DAVE COOLEY did the 24-Bit/96kHz Remaster at Elysian Masters and its properly gorgeous. A gorgeous job done...

As well as Gerry Goffin - King started writing with two new lyricists for this album - David Palmer and Toni Stern. Guitarist Danny Kortchmar had been with The Fugs - Bassist Charles Larkey and New Jersey Vocalist/Songwriter David Palmer had both been part of THE MYDDLE CLASS who managed three 45s in 1966 on Tomorrow Records. Along with Carole King they formed the core of the group (the three on the cover). Legendary Drummer Jim Gordon was brought in for the sessions and was asked to join the band after the LP was completed but refused (went to the UK to Clapton to form Derek & The Dominoes).

Los Angeles tunesmith Toni Stern has had her songs recorded by huge names like Barbra Streisand, The Carpenters and The Isley Brothers but will be forever remembered for "It's Too Late" from Carole's "Tapestry" - often cited as one of the Top 100 tunes of all time. Her lyrical collaboration with Carole King began with The City LP and you can 'so' hear the beginnings of "It's Too Late" in the hurting melody "Why Are You Leaving". The more bopping element of "Tapestry" surfaces with the title track "Now That Everything's Been Said" (another co-write with Stern) - a finger-clicking tune about pain. "Paradise Alley" is excellent and is the first of two co-writes with Steely Dan's David Palmer. The other is "Victim Of Circumstance" but it's not as good.

The album's most famous song "Snow Queen" is a staggering beginning - a truly brilliant and very spacey song to have the 'Goffin/King' credit to its name. If I were trying to convince someone of the album's merit - I would play this first and it's hardly surprising that it became a (failed) lead off single. Ace Records of the UK quite rightly gave the song pride of place on their February 2014 CD compilation "LOU ADLER: A Musical History" - a fantastic set that covers the Producer's career and long-association with Carole King (see my separate review for Ace CDCHD 1384). The other track that sends me is the beautiful and moving "Man Without A Dream" sung by Danny Kortchmar with help on the choruses from Carole - the kind of hidden nugget that blows you away with its lovely melody. By their own admission the band was listening to every important album around at the time (1968) - Laura Nyro's "Eli And The Thirteenth Confession" comes shining through on "Lady" (piano and vocal runs) while they were definitely channelling the Stax Records output of The Staples Singers while recording the warbling guitar and vocals of "My Sweet Home" sounding like they auditioning for Pops Staples. They were consuming Miles Davis and John Coltrane - which explain the jazzier elements of "Snow Queen" - but "I Wasn't Born To Follow" (covered by The Byrds on their "Notorious" album) and the incessantly catchy "Hi-De-Ho" (covered by Blood, Sweat & Tears on their second self-titled album) is pure Goffin/King hit making material. The LP ends on the lovely "All My Time" - the remaster soaring as the melody plays. For sure the whole album is not all genius by any means - but the beauty is definitely there on many of the songs - and when it hits you - look out...

Danny 'Kootch' Kortchmar went with Charles Larkey into JO MAMA who had albums on Atlantic Records - Kortchmar would get his own solo album on Warner Brothers in 1973 not surprisingly called "Kootch" (Warner Brothers BS 2711 was reissued in 2008 by Wounded Bird and contains the excellent "Come Strollin' Now"). He would also be forever a part of the East Coast mafia of musicians who played with absolutely everyone of California singer-songwriter significance - Jackson Browne, James Taylor, Linda Ronstadt and Joni Mitchell to name but a few.

David Palmer would of course join the hallowed ranks of Steely Dan for their stunning October 1972 debut album "Can't Buy A Thrill" on ABC Records on which he takes Lead Vocals away from Donald Fagen for "Dirty Work", "Midnite Cruiser" and "Brooklyn (Owes The Charmer Under Me)". He sung backing vocals on their 1973 platter "Countdown To Ecstasy" and would later do vocal work with Big Wha-Koo on ABC Records - even punching out a single called "She's My Baby (And She's Outta Control)" with Timothy B. Schmit of The Eagles on the 1982 soundtrack to "Fast Times At Ridgemont High". More importantly he would join up with Carole again for the No. 1 album "Wrap Around Joy" where he co-wrote every song.

The City asked the legendary drummer Jimmy Gordon (who had played with The Everly Brothers and drummed on "Pet Sounds") to join the group but took a call instead from Eric Clapton and swelled the ranks of Derek & The Dominoes. He is credited as writing the beautiful piano-coda that centres "Layla" and also graced the ranks of George Harrison's "All Things Must Pass". Carole would release "Writer" in 1970 on A&M Records (with the Ode Records logo on the label) – another than nearly failed too - and then level all albums in sight with her magnificent "Tapestry" LP in 1971.

"...The key to my happiness...I let it slip away..." – Danny Kortchmar sang with Carole King on the beautiful and moving "Man Without A Dream".

Don’t let this happiness pass you by. And well done to the good bodies at LIGHT IN THE ATTIC for warming us with Carole King and The City's lone LP - available again after all these decades in the digital permafrost...

Saturday 2 July 2016

"Stones" by NEIL DIAMOND (Inside The 2002 MCA/Universal 3CD Set ‘Play Me: The Complete Uni Studio Recordings…Plus!’ - Erick Labson Remasters) - A Review by Mark Barry...




"...The Feeling's Laid Back..."

If you're a fan - or even casually browsing Neil Diamond's early career - you will probably notice the photos that accompany the Amazon entry for this 80's MCA CD of his 1971 album "Stones". It features that dreaded plain rear sleeve. In means the single disc offered here is from the first vanguard of CD reissues and most 'weren't' remastered - leaving you the listener with decidedly average sound. If you want the 'actual' best audio for "Stones" - you have to look elsewhere and spend a few quid (but it will be well worth it).

Using Discs 2 and 3 - the very best audio variant of the "Stones" LP by NEIL DIAMOND can be found within "Play Me: The Complete Uni Studio Recordings…Plus!" on MCA/Universal 088 112 824 2 (Barcode 008811282424) released in the UK and USA in May 2003 (use the Barcode supplied to get the right issue). Here are the details...

Disc 2 (77:26 minutes):
21. I Am…I Said [Neil Diamond song]
22. The Last Thing On My Mind [Tom Paxton cover]
23. Husbands And Wives [Roger Miller cover]
24. Chelsea Morning [Joni Mitchell cover]

Disc 3 (77:27 minutes):
1. Crunchy Granola Suite [Neil Diamond song]
2. Stones [Neil Diamond song]
3. If You Go Away [Jacques Brel – Rod McKuen cover]
4. Suzanne [Leonard Cohen cover]
5. I Think It’s Gonna Rain Today [Randy Newman cover]
6. I Am…I Said (Reprise) [Neil Diamond song]
Tracks 21 to 24 on Disc 2 combined with Tracks 1 to 6 on Disc 3 are Sides 1 and 2 of the album "Stones" – released November 1971 in the USA on Uni Records 93106 and December 1971 in the UK on Uni Records UNLS 121. Produced by TOM CATLANO – it peaked at No. 11 in the US LP charts and No. 18 in the UK.

The 24-page 'Play Me' booklet has full Discography info including mini pictures of the album artwork and incisive liner notes by ROBYN FLANS (of People Magazine). But the big news is the 96K/24bit remasters by ERICK LABSON of Universal – a man who has over 1200 Audio restoration credits to his name including most of the Chess Label and huge swathes of Universal's monster back catalogue (Mama's & Papa's, Steppenwolf, Buddy Holly, Etta James, Bobby Bland, Bo Diddley, Joe Jackson, Three Dog Night, Wishbone Ash, The Who - the list of his accomplished transfers is long and illustrious). The sound quality here is awesome and adds huge power to every track - but especially to the beautifully produced "Stones" LP - the most underrated album of Neil Diamond's on-going catalogue.

As you can see from the track list provided above - of the 9 songs (the last is a 'Reprise' of "I Am...I Said") - only three are Neil Diamond originals - but all are proper corkers. 
You get "I Am...I Said", "Stones" and "Crunchy Granola Suite" – each taken by Uni and flogged as successful 45s. The other seven songs are covers of the best contemporary artists of the day - Tom Paxton’s plaintive and lovely “The Last Thing On My Mind", Joni Mitchell's upbeat and summery "Chelsea Morning" (not as good as her original it has to be said) and Randy Newman's aching and sad "I Think It's Going To Rain Today". 
We even get a go at Roger Miller’s domestic morality tale “Husbands And Wives” and Leonard Cohen’s mumbling shagpad classic “Suzanne”. And on all - Diamond manages to respect the original while adding his own slice of Neil-ness to the proceedings.

I've often thought that the beautiful ballad "Stones" should have been a number 1 - backing on the B-side by the "dig!" of "Crunchy Granola Suite" - the closest he ever got to Rocker-Cool. And what can you say about "I Am...I Said" – surely the album’s penultimate song. It's cheesy I know - but it's my kind of Gorgonzola and Wensleydale – still tickles me. Hell - he even looks good in his bare feet on the cover...

"...L.A.'s fine…the sun shines most the time…and the feeling's laid back…"

The 2003 American MCA 3CD haul of "Play Me: The Complete Uni Studio Recordings...Plus!" is probably more Big D than most can handle (a single disc "Best Of" would most likely suffice that also includes his later Columbia/CBS stuff). But if you're prepared to dig a bit deeper and embrace your inner Neil - the good stuff like the “Stones” album is truly great.

More forgotten and overlooked album goodies include May 1969's "Brother Love's Travelling Salvation Show" and November 1970's "Tap Root Manuscript". And that audio quality will blow you away…

"Countdown To Ecstasy" by STEELY DAN (2008 and 2011 Japan Universal SHM-CD in 5" Mini LP Artwork) - A Review by Mark Barry...






"...I Detect The El Supremo..."

How do you follow a debut like "Can't Buy A Thrill" - classy, precise, rammed to the gills with tunes that still stand up a whopping 44 years? And it had two-headed sucker punch of tunes - the Farfisa organ twinkle of "Do It Again" and Elliott Randall's Guitar pyrotechnics on "Reelin' In The Years". How do you follow one of the best starts? Simple – for round two - you go one better.

Yet their second platter of brilliance "Countdown To Ecstasy" (along with 1975's "Katy Lied") always seems to lag behind - overlooked for the obvious genius of 1976's "The Royal Scam" and especially 1977's meisterwork - "Aja". Yet of all the albums I play to death from that Golden Era - it's "Countdown To Ecstasy" that amazes me the most. With the twin vocalists of Don Palmer and Donald Fagen on the debut reduced to just Donald Fagen - this record feels like the first 'real' Steely Dan album - a Becker/Fagan album - their sound - their songs - done their way. Which brings us to this gorgeous Japan-Only SHM-CD reissue...

This review is for the 25 June 2008 SHM-CD Issue of "Countdown To Ecstasy" by STEELY DAN on Universal/Geffen UICY-93518 (Barcode 4988005518309). 

It comes in 5" Mini LP Repro Artwork (the US album on ABC Records) and includes a repro of the lyric insert that came with original copies (41:13 minutes total playing time). There's an outer OBI band with reissue details, the fold-out colour booklet that came with the 1998 Becker/Fagen CD Remasters (their caustic liner notes) as well as a separate 16-page Japanese booklet in white (all details in Japanese). Please also note that this SHM-CD of "Countdown To Ecstasy" was reissued 29 December 2011 with the same catalogue number and Barcode (to confuse matters) and there's been a further Platinum SHM-CD version too from July 2014 using a new remaster.

What is a SHM-CD and does it sound better than the standard 1998 issue that's available very cheaply? Some say yes, others say it's a con. It was developed in 2008 by JVC as a brand new form of CD with far better retrieval capabilities. The problem is that they are ONLY available in JAPAN and usually at considerably higher cost. Also one of the biggest arguments put forward 'against' them is that you need a high-end player to get the best out of these CDs. I don't agree. I own about 15 of these beauties and the sound on all is more than impressive - it's in the musicality - it's in the details. I would say however that if the remaster is recent - and its on SHM - and you've a half decent player - then the combo of all 3 will produce wonderful sonic results (see my recent review for James Taylor's "Mud Slide Slim And The Blue Horizon" on Japanese SHM-CD). Let's get to the album itself and the Audio on this 2008 and 2011 SHM-CD reissue...

1. Bodhisattva
2. Razor Boy
3. The Boston Rag
4. Your Gold Teeth
5. Show Biz Kids
6. My Old School
7. Pearl Of The Quarter
8. King Of The World
Tracks 1 to 8 are their 2nd studio album "Countdown To Ecstasy" - released July 1973 in the USA on ABC Records ABCX-779 and September 1973 in the UK on Probe Records SPB 1079 (reissued October 1974 in the UK on ABC Records ABCL 5034). Produced by GARY KATZ and Engineered by ROGER NICHOLS - it peaked at No. 35 on the Pop Charts in the USA but didn't chart in the UK.

It opens with utter brilliance - "Bodhisattva". Described on their lyric insert as 'Diaz the Bebopper meets Baxter the Skunk beneath the Bo Tree in this altered Blues' - you're immediately walloped with the clarity of Jim Hodder's Drums and both Denny Dias and future Doobie Brother Jeff "Skunk" Baxter tearing it on their respective guitars. As Guitar Rock goes – it’s a stormer. The Victor Feldman Vibes and Donald Fagen Piano playing on "Razor Boy" is startling - that beautifully tight rhythm section too sailing out of your speakers with a sexy swagger. In August 1973 both ABC in the States and Probe Records in the UK put it on the B-side of “Show Biz Kids” as a 45 (ABC Records 11382 vs. Probe PRO 602). On the strength of the A-side – it peaked at No. 61 in the USA.

Brilliant is the only word to describe the deceptively simple Guitar run that works its way throughout the whole of "The Boston Rag". You can now also hear those Acoustic Guitars played by guest musician Ben Benay. I’ve still no idea what the “...Lonnie was the Kingpin...” lyrics are about - but given those guitar solos and clever keyboard breaks – I get the lyric insert explanation telling us that ‘several members of The Dan get to “stretch out”’ on the song. Side one ends with the seven-minute chug and shug of "Your Gold Teeth". A wickedly groovy keyboard jaunt with Donald disdainfully sneering as he sings "...Torture is the main attraction...I don't need that kind of action..." I'd also forgotten how good the guitar flicks throughout are - that keyboard solo - and the treated backing vocals of Sherlie Matthews, Myrna Matthews, Patricia hall, David Palmer, Royce Jones, James Rolleston and Michael Fennelly - it all sounds amazing on this SHM-CD.

Probably the bitterest and most self-knowing of songs in their amazing repertoire – "Show Biz Kids" lays into self-obsessed party types and showcases the extraordinary Slide Guitar of Rick Derringer who gives the song the kind of muscle and magic Elliott Randal gave to “Reelin’ In The Years”. As the girls chant "...it's only life's wages..." and sing "...while the poor people sleepin' with the shade of the light...all the stars come out at night..." - many of them wearing Steely Dan teeshirts as they make films about themselves. The chipper "My Old School" features a four-man Brass Section arranged by Jimmie Haskell and was also chosen as an A-side on both sides of the pond in November 1973 (ABC Records 11396, Probe Records PRO 606). As it jaunt and funks along like its Tower Of Power meets Steely Dan - the lyrics tell us that Daddy is going to be "...quite surprised to find you with the working girls in the County Jail..."(nice). “My Old School” is a brilliant little bopper and an emotional upper on a largely sarcastic album.

The lovely pedal steel of "Pearl Of The Quarter" (the B-side of "Show Biz Kids" on both sides of the pond) bolsters up a gorgeous melody and the closest the album gets to an actual 'love song'. The audio on this baby perhaps impresses most. It ends on the weird yet thrilling wah-wah rhythms of "King of The World" - treated guitars and keyboards while Jim Hodder keeps it so tight on the drums. The Remaster brings out all those guitar and keyboard parts as Fagan sings "...no marigolds in the promised-land...there's a hole in the ground where they used to grow..." And that stomping break towards the end is f**king brilliant...

Even now - with a distance of 43 years - I'm gobsmacked at the musical accomplishment on "Countdown To Ecstasy". Rooted in the brilliance of their October 1972 "Can't Buy A Thrill" debut LP and yet advanced a million miles away from it in less than nine months.

You can get the 1998 CD for peanuts - but if like me you have to have the best when it comes to the best band of the Seventies - then these dinky Japanese SHM-CDs are the 'gold teeth' for you...

"Rosemary Lane" by BERT JANSCH (2001 Sanctuary/Castle Music CD Remaster) - A Review by Mark Barry...





"...Your Heart Is Filled With The Pain Of True Love..."

Given the predominately 'Rock and Prog' musical landscape of May 1971 when it was released (George Harrison's "All Things Must Pass" in February, "The Yes Album" by Yes in March, "Sticky Fingers" by The Rolling Stones in April and Mountain's "Nantucket Sleighride" in May) - is it any wonder that no-one on either side of the pond paid any attention to a purely Folk-Acoustic album on Transatlantic Records by BERT JANSCH (resplendent in its stippled-effect sleeve or not).

"Rosemary Lane" was an LP out of time in Blighty's May 1971 and the Ex Pentangle guitarist saw his seventh studio album sink without a ripple or a lifeboat. Yet I'd argue it's a total gem in a sea of noise (great noise mind you) - a beautiful, romantic and peaceful thing that's ripe for rediscovery. And this dinky little CD remaster of it from Sanctuary Records of the UK (part of Castle Music) - is an overlooked gem. Here are the dulcimer details...

UK released December 2001 - "Rosemary Lane" by BERT JANSCH on Sanctuary/Castle Music CMRCD335 (Barcode 5050159133529) is a straightforward 13-track CD Remaster of the 1971 album and plays out as follows (37:28 minutes):

1. Tell Me What Is True Love?
2. Rosemary Lane
3. M'Lady Nancy
4. A Dream, A Dream, A Dream
5. Alman
6. Wayward Child
7. Nobody's Bar
8. Reynardine [Side 2]
9. Silly Women
10. Peregrinations
11. Sylvie
12. Sarabanda
13. Bird Song
Tracks 1 to 13 are his 7th studio album "Rosemary Lane" - released May 1971 in the UK on Transatlantic TRA 235 and in the USA on Reprise RS 6455. Produced by BILL LEADER - all songs written by Bert Jansch (a co-write with John Renbourn on "Peregrinations") except the English Traditional covers of "Rosemary Lane", "Reynardine" and "Sylvie" - with "Alman" by British 16th Century Lute player Robert Johnson and "Sarabanda" by Italian violinist Archangelo Corelli.

The 12-page booklet has warmly written and informative liner notes from COLIN HARPER - Author of "Dazzling Stranger: Bert Jansch And The British Folk And Blues Revival" on Bloomsbury in 2000. There are several black and white snaps of Bert in his flat making tea and tuning his guitar. Beneath the see-through CD tray is a photo of the battered Transatlantic Records Master Tape Box and we get a truly beautiful Remaster by SEAN COTTER and ANDY PEARCE done at Masterpiece Mastering. The album is entirely acoustic and requires the deftest of touches and that's what you get - clarity and warmth and air around the gentle strums and guitar plucks. It's a top job done...

Keeping it simple yet interesting is a hard thing to get right - but that's where "Rosemary Lane" wins. None of the songs feature anything more than Acoustic Guitar and Voice - so the songs have to be strong to hold your attention let alone stroke the old soft machine. It opens with a firm fan fave-rave - the lovely "Tell Me What Is True Love?"  It's followed by another gorgeous melody sung in that minstrel twang by Jansch - "Rosemary Lane" - a tale of a service man who meets a sailor and the maid "Pretty Polly" and that's when his misery began (oh dear).

"M'Lady Nancy" is the first of three instrumentals on the album - another being "Peregrinations" - a co-write with that other great stalwart of English Folk - John Renbourn. The Italian Violinist Archangelo Corelli penned "Sarabanda" way back in 17-hundred-and-something and provides us with the third instrumental. Another of my poisons is the lovely Traditional "Reynardine" which is so simple - so beautiful - a rambler song. His own "Bird Song" finishes the album on a quietly magisterial note...

A deeply old-fashioned LP rooted in the oldest of Traditions - one man, his guitar, his voice and his interpretations of old and new songs. "Rosemary Lane" is as lovely as it sounds. And well done to those Remaster Engineers (Sean Cotter and Andy Pearce) for making it sparkle anew...

Friday 1 July 2016

"Hermit Of Mink Hollow" by TODD RUNDGREN (2014 Edsel 'Case Bound Book Edition CD' Reissue - Rhino/Peter Rynston Remaster) - A Review by Mark Barry...



"…Heartbreak’s Never Easy To Take..."

Back in May 2014 - Edsel of the UK began celebrating TODD RUNDGREN albums with ‘Deluxe Edition’ packaging upgrades – hardback book editions of key albums in his extensive back catalogue. The first three were "Something/Anything?" (a double-album from 1972), "A Wizard A True Star" (a single album from 1973) and "Todd" (another double from 1974). So here’s the next batch of three for September 2014 – "Runt" - his debut solo album from December 1970 on Ampex Records now extended into a double-CD edition with bonuses – "Initiation" from June 1975 (see review) and this - "Hermit Of Mink Hollow" from May 1978 on Bearsville Records – one of his most popular Seventies albums. Here are the people who can’t be friends…

UK released 9 September 2014 (16 September in the USA) - "Hermit of Mink Hollow: Deluxe Edition" by TODD RUNDGREN on Edsel EDSA 5033 (Barcode 740155503338) is a single-CD reissue of their February 2012 2CD set which combined  "Healing" and "The Ever Popular Tortured Artist Effect" - only this time it's just the album straight in a 'Case Bound Hardback Book' Edition (35:48 minutes).

1. All The Children Sing
2. Can we Still Be Friends?
3. Hurting For You
4. Too Far Gone
5. Onomatopoeia
6. Determination
7. Bread [Side 2]
8. Bag Lady
9. You Cried Wolf
10. Lucky Guy
11. Out Of Control
12. Fade Away

The attached 12-page booklet within has liner notes by Paul Myers from his superb tome "A Wizard, A True Star – Todd Rundgren In The Studio" and is an excellent read. There's photos of Rundgren's house on Mink Hollow Road in Lake Hill where he built his Utopia studio and recorded the album. The front and rear sleeve artwork of the May 1978 Bearsville vinyl album is here (BSR 6981 in the USA and K 55521 in the UK) – as are the lyrics. The hard card case bound book has a details sticker on the outer shrink-wrap that easily peels off (if you want to attach it to the book cover). There are no extras.

There is no new remaster that I can hear – this is the Edsel February 2012 version - that in itself was a Peter Rynston UK master using the 1993 American Rhino remasters. Don't get me wrong – the sound is superb. The only upgrade here is the cool-looking book packaging – which is a rather lovely thing to behold…

After the full-on Synth and Prog excesses of "Todd Rundgren's Utopia" (1974) and "Initiation" (1975) – Rundgren seemed to get back to 'tunes' with 1978's "Hermit Of Mink Hollow" – containing as it does some of his most beloved songs to this day – "Hurting For You" and the magical "Can We Still Be Friends?" (lyrics above). Other goodies include "Too Far Gone" – even the silly-word song "Onomatopoeia" is great fun. "Determination" combines that 'guitar-and-keyboards' sound he gets into a cool upbeat song that would have made a great single too. He called Side 2 "The Difficult Side" and it opens with a song about poverty – the brilliant "Bread". But my favourite – and for my money one of his greatest songs – is the aching homeless anthem "Bag Lady" ("...fifty cents rent goes pretty far when you live in a subway car…"). The hurting "Lucky Guy" is excellent too. It finishes with "Out Of Control" and "Fade Away" – a superb duo of layered deep melodies.

1978's "Hermit Of Mink Hollow" was a 'return to form' for many (a return to songs). Personally I think Rundgren never left – like Bowie he just went in musical directions most wouldn’t have tried - and I for one dug them all.

I’ve loved rehearing this gem of an LP again – a very sweet and pretty looking CD reissue…

PS: see also my reviews for "Runt" (1970), "Something/Anything?" (1972), "A Wizard, A True Star" (1973) and "Todd" (1974) in this series of 'Book Edition' CD reissues...

Thursday 30 June 2016

"Tim Rose/Through Rose Colored Glasses" by TIM ROSE (1997 Beat Goes On '2LPs on 1CD' Remaster) - A Review by Mark Barry...






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"...You Done Me Wrong..."

Tim Rose's November 1967 self-titled debut album "Tim Rose" did bugger all business chart-wise - but cast a huge shadow then and ever since.

Propelled by his gritty strangulated 'I gargle gravel for breakfast' vocals - (he sounds like the love child of John Kay from Steppenwolf and David Clayton-Thomas from Blood, Sweat & Tears) - the pre-LP 7" single "Hey Joe (You Shot Your Woman Down)" from June 1966 clocked up covers by Love, The Byrds and of course most famously by Jimi Hendrix - the song practically launching his career. "Morning Dew" (written by Canadian Folk singer Bonnie Dobson) from February 1967 would be covered by artists as diverse as Lee Hazelwood and England's Nazareth - but again was made famous by Jeff Beck's supergroup for the "Truth" LP which featured the then relatively unknown Rod Stewart on Vocals.

More shadows came from the single released the same month as the album - November 1967 for "Come Away, Melinda" - an Anti-Vietnam War anthem written by Fred Hellerman of The Weavers with Francis Minkoff. In a very Phil Spector-sounding production - Rose caresses the song at first - but a minute or so into it and he starts to let rip with the rage of a generation done wrong (it was a rendition that tapped into the national zeitgeist). In fact Rose and his music is like this - slightly angry - slightly macho - engaged yet still cool and aloof - like a man with a grudge against the world and its two-timing daughter. 

Hell even Australia's Nick Cave has name-checked him as an influence and covered the 'Hey Joe' sounding murder song "Long Time Man" on his 1986 LP with The Bad Seeds "Your Funeral...My Trial" And yet despite all this peripheral activity and chart action for other people (as well as positive reviews) - "Tim Rose" steadfastly refused to ignite as a seller. Which brings us to this rather cool 'twofer' CD reissue. Here are the 'shot my woman down' details...

UK released November 1997 - "Tim Rose/Through Rose Colored Glasses" by TIM ROSE on Beat Goes On BGOCD 378 (Barcode 5017261203786) offers 2LPs Remastered onto 1CD and plays out as follows (72:48 minutes):

1. I Got A Loneliness
2. I'm Gonna Be Strong
3. I Gotta Do Things My Way
4. Fare Thee Well
5. Eat, Drink And Be Merry (For Tomorrow You'll Cry)
6. Hey Joe (You Shot Your Woman Down) [Side 2]
7. Morning Dew
8. Where Was I?
9. You're Slipping Away From Me
10. Long Time Man
11. Come Away, Melinda
12. King Lonely The Blue
Tracks 1 to 12 are his debut LP "Tim Rose" - released November 1967 in the USA on Columbia CL 2777 (Mono) and Columbia CS 9577 (Stereo) and February 1968 in the UK on CBS Records S BPG 63168 (Mono) and CBS Records S BPG 63168 (Stereo) - the STEREO Mix is used for this CD. Produced by DAVID RUBINSON - it failed to chart in either country.

13. The Days Back When
14. Roanoke
15. Hello Sunshine
16. When I Was A Young Man
17. What'cha Gonna Do
18. Maman
19. Let There Be Love [Side 2]
20. Baby Do You Turn Me On?
21. Apple Truck Swamper
22. Angela
23. You'd Laugh
24. You Ain't My Girl No More
Tracks 13 to 24 are his 2nd studio album "Through Rose Colored Glasses" - released July 1969 in the USA on Columbia CS 9772 (Stereo) and in the UK on CBS Records S CBS 63636. Produced by JACK TRACY - it didn't chart in either country.

There's no card slipcase and the 8-page inlay has informative liner notes from noted writer JOHN TOBLER and Musician Credits for the "Tim Rose" LP but none for the follow-up (it came with no credits and no one seems to know who played on what?). There are no mastering/transfer credits - but the Audio is amazing – clear as bell and very powerful. Always a bit of a Phil Spector-ish belter - songs on the "Tim Rose" LP swoop up with huge brass and string flourishes then mellow down into Spanish Acoustic guitar plucks - and back again. This BGO CD sounds brill – a really clean and well-transferred set of albums. Engineered by Sy Mitchell and Jerry Hochman - the seconds sound even better (although the music leaves summit to be desired).

The 12-track debut features the 10-sides of five 45s Rose put out prior to the album - so much of the material was known to Radio. Six are Tim Rose originals - "I Got A Loneliness", "Fare Thee Well", "You're Slipping Away From Me" and "Long Time Man" with "I Gotta Do Things My Way" a co-write between Rose and the Bassist Richard Hussan. Written by the songwriting duo Barry Mann and Cynthia Weil - the cover "I'm Gonna Be Strong" was a hit for Gene Pitney in 1965 while "Morning Dew" is by Bonnie Dobson (despite Rose' duo songwriting credit which would cause legal consternation for decades to follow). The legendary Doc Pomus co-wrote "King Lonely The Blue" with Bobby Andriani and it was issued by the Bitter End Singers in August 1965 on Emerald 72469 (called The Emeralds in the UK) - while "Eat, Drink And Be Merry..." is written by Celia and Sandra Ferguson and made a Country hit by Porter Wagoner. I don't know who 'N. Martin' is – the writer of  "Where Was I?" - but it's a gorgeous song and the audio on it is fabulous.

The 2nd album comes in for serious stick and after the eclectic and creative high of the debut - it's easy to hear why. Although most are Rose originals and songs like "Roanoke" is very Blood, Sweat & Tears circa the 2nd album - his cover of "Maman" is a big mistake. Penned by Edward Thomas and Martin Charnin in 1967 - it's a spoken poem said by the character 'The Young Soldier' in the musical "Mata Hari". Rose has rattling drums like a death march behind his strained vocals but instead of sounding contemporary or hip - it's sounds dated and preachy even. His cover of The Bee Gees "Let There Be Love" just doesn't suit him while convenience rhymes in lyrics like "...Angela called me last night...she wanted me to hold her tight...we made love for hours...then went walking in the flowers..." are just plum awful. Better is his quirky and even commercial cover of "You'd Laugh" - a song put out by French crooner Gilbert Becaud in 1965 called "Je T'aime (You'd Laugh)". It’s about a man pinning to touch a woman he worships but he’s terrified of her response – and Rose milks its angst as he rasps out the pain –very 60ts but also very cool. Along with "When I Was A Young Man" and the decidedly Tom Waits odd/violent "Apple Truck Swamper" (written by William Henderson) - they just about salvage the album from total reviewer savagery.

Very much a disc of two halves - a genius and exciting debut album "Tim Rose" - followed by a strange damp squid two years later - "Through Rose Colored Glasses". Yet despite the let down of LP Number Two – there's that amazing and influential debut which in 2016 still sounds so 'out there' still.

I've always thought Tim Rose to be impossibly special and just a little acid-dingbat in the cranial area. But I like my heroes that way – nuts - but in a good way...

"Eli And The Thirteenth Confession" by LAURA NYRO (2002 Columbia/Legacy 'Expanded Edition' CD Remaster) - A Review by Mark Barry...





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"...A Little Magic...A Little Kindness..."

A rare beauty and typically gone too soon. Laura Nyro's 2nd album - the wonderfully named "Eli And The Thirteenth Confession" scraped a No. 181 position on the US LP charts in August 1968 months after its March release (it was an improvement on the the total non-chart placement of her 1966 set "More Than A New Discovery"). And in truth I know people who can't bear her busy arrangements and that voice you either love or loathe. Yet you have to say that Columbia have done her memory and musical legacy proud with this elegant and beautiful sounding CD reissue. Here are the testimonials unveiled...

UK released August 2002 - "Eli And The Thirteenth Confession" by LAURA NYRO on Columbia/Legacy 508068 2 (Barcode 5099750806821) is an 'Expanded Edition' CD Remaster with three Previously Unreleased Bonus Tracks and plays out as follows (52:23 minutes):

Side 1: Part 1
1. Luckie
2. Lu
3. Sweet Blindness
4. Poverty Train
5. Lonely Women
6. Eli's Comin'

Side 2: Part 2
7. Timer
8. Stoned Soul Picnic
9. Emmie
10. Woman's Blues
11. Once It Was Alright Now (Farmer Joe)
12. December Boudoir
13. The Confession
Tracks 1 to 13 are her 2nd studio album "Eli And The Thirteenth Confession" - released March 1968 in the USA on Columbia CS 9626 (Stereo) and August 1968 in the UK on CBS Records S 63346 (Stereo). Produced by CHARLIE CALELLO and LAURA NYRO - all songs written by Laura Nyro.

BONUS TRACKS (all Previously Unreleased):
14. Lu (Demo recorded 29 Nov 1967)
15. Stoned Soul Picnic (Demo recorded 29 Nov 1967)
16. Emmie (Demo recorded 29 Nov 1967)

The CD Reissue is Produced by AL QUAGLIERI - the 12-page booklet features affectionate and informative liner notes (with a rear sleeve note from singer Phoebe Snow) - a photo of her at the piano with Miles Davis - lyrics to the songs and recording dates - a photo beneath the see-through tray and the usual reissue credits. It feels classy right from the off...

The last time the album has a CD transfer was in May 1997 on Columbia 487240 2 – an album-only reissue. But this new 'Expanded Edition' on their Legacy imprint from 2002 comes with a fresh remaster involving two very experienced Audio Engineers - MARK WILDER and SETH FOSTER. A pretty ballad like "Emmie" and "Lonely Women" have quite passages and the tape hiss is evident in places ("Poverty Train" too) - but nothing too much to detract. In fact re-listening to stuff like the brass arrangements on "Woman's Blues" is a stunning experience - the remaster is beautiful - as is the music (you can 'so' hear where Blood, Sweat & Tears got their musical signatures from).

Although she couldn't seem to get arrested with regard to sales of her own records - her songwriting prowess soon got noticed. Laura Nyro was one of those songsmiths where her odd melodies and tunes had a Soulfulness that others hooked into and could bring out – even make better. The 5th Dimension famously picked up on two songs – "Stoned Soul Picnic" and "Sweet Blindness". Their cover of "Stoned Soul Picnic" hit the US singles charts in June 1968 on Soul City 766 and crashed the top ten - eventually settling at an impressive No. 3. They followed this success in October 1968 with their cover of Nyro's irrepressible and busy bopper "Sweet Blindness" on Soul City 768 (lyrics from it title this review). It peaked at No. 13. Later the following year those great interpreters Three Dog Night took "Eli's Coming" to a No. 10 slot on Dunhill/ABC 4215 in November 1969. Obscurities - Linda Hoyle of the British Jazz Fusion ensemble Affinity issued "Eli's Coming" as a British 45 on the Prog label Vertigo 6059 018 in 1970 - while Ronnie Dyson's debut September 1970 album "(If You Let Me Make Love To You Then) Why Can't I Touch You" on Columbia Records featured a cover of the mellow vibes tune "Emmie" - probably one of the loveliest songs on the “Eli...” album.

Album highlights include the staggering hurt in "Lonely Women" where "...no one hurries home to..." these aching ladies - the fuzzed-up guitars in the brilliant and political "Poverty Train" and the piano/brass chug-and-stop of "Once It Was Alright (Farmer Joe)" - a song that starts out rocking but goes off into soaring vocals and different rhythm tangents. There's hiss on the beautiful "December's Boudoir" but its quickly forgotten as those gorgeous strings and plucked harp notes swirl around your speakers. Her vocals on this song are 'so' soulful. It ends on "Confession" - more vocal pyrotechnics and frantic arrangements that sound like no one else. In fact the whole album is like that...

But the big prize for fans is the three beautifully recorded demos - all recorded 29 November 1967 and Previously Unreleased. They feature Laura on piano with doubled vocals - and that's it. They sound and feel utterly amazing - and I'd push the boat out by saying that I prefer this 'piano and voices' version of "Stoned Soul Picnic" version to the finished result. "Emmie" has always been a ballad hidden in the bowls of the album. Here it's even more intimate with just her on Piano producing something that's Todd Rundgren/Tori Amos beautiful (if you know what I mean). Wow - what a find...

On the song "Time And Love" from her next album "New York Tendaberry" (September 1969) - Laura Nyro would sing "...nothing cures like time and love..."

Laura Nyro passed in 1997 aged only 47 from Ovarian Cancer. She was impossibly special and her music is a musical cure waiting to be discovered again and again...

INDEX - Entries and Artist Posts in Alphabetical Order