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Music gives soul to universe, wings to mind, flight to imagination, charm to sadness, and life to everything.

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Tuesday, March 6, 2012

Roy Buchanan - Sweet Dreams The Anthology (1969-78 us, outstanding classic blues rock, double disc set)



Roy Buchanan seemed to come out of nowhere in 1972 when a laudatory article in Rolling Stone was followed by his first album, but it quickly became obvious that he had, as they say, been around the block more than once. For well over a decade Roy and his Telecaster had been grinding out a living among the hillbillies, rockabillies and wannabillies that—then as now—make up the infrastructure of the musk business. For a change, though, the hype mill was onto something when it lit upon Roy Buchanan.

When the spotlight hit Roy's careworn Tele it was clear that one was in the presence of greatness that bordered on the spiritual. "God is in the house," a fellow musician once said when jazz giant Art Tatuffl stepped up to play, and Roy evinced the same respect from his peers and his audience. Roy Buchanan was born in Ozark, Arkansas on September 23, 1939, but he grew up in Pixley, California, about fifty miles north of Bakersfield in the San Joaquin Valley. His father preached to exiled southerners at the Pentecostal Church of God, and Roy always said his mother sang better than Billie Holiday. "Once a month," he told Bill Millar, "they'd get together with the black church for a revival meeting, and that's how I got into black music.

I've always been partial to black guitar players—Blind Boy Fuller, Jimmy Nolen, Pete Lewis...the old black cats won't ever be beat." Buchanan learned the steel guitar when he was nine, and left home when he was fifteen, heading first for Los Angeles and then San Francisco. It was a tortuous path from there to his first recordings for Polydor fifteen years later one that we hope to explore in more detail on a later volume. There were landmarks along the way that deserve mention, though. These include Elvis Presley's Sun records—the first white music Roy loved ("He sounded like he'd been to the same church as me," Roy used to say).

Then there was Dale Hawkins, a go-for-broke rockabilly from Louisiana. The first canard surrounding Roy that's worth dismissing is that he crafted the anthemic lick that introduces Hawkins's only major hit, Susie Q. In fact, the lick was originated by James Burton, but, after Buchanan took Burton's place in Dale Hawkins's band, it was his job to replicate K twice a night. And then there was a stint in Canada with Dale Hawkins's cousin, Ronnie Hawkins. As Ronnie's original band, with the exception of Levon Helm, drifted back to Arkansas, he drafted new recruits, tantalizing them with the promise of low pay but "more pussy than Frank Sinatra." Roy worked with the Hawks for a month or so imparting some of his technique to Robbie Robertson who was to be the group's permanent guitarist.

Talking to Musician magazine, Robertson remembered Buchanan in these terms: "He was really very, very good, the most remarkable guitarist I had seen. I can remember asking him how he developed his style, and he said with a straight face he was half wolf. He was always saying he wanted to settle down, but he needed to find a nun to marry." As far as we know, Roy's first solo recordings were made for the lilliputian Bomarc label in 1959. One side was After Hours, one of Roy's favorite vehicles for his slow blues explorations. Originally written and recorded by pianist Avery Parrish with the Erskine Hawkins Orchestra in 1940, it was dubbed the national anthem of black America.

Roy would return to it endlessly, and the 1960 version shows that the elements of his style were in place very early. Already, he was experimenting with feedback, fuzztone and distortion, slicing his speaker cones to achieve some of his effects. By 1963, Roy was based in the Washington, D.C. area, his wife Judy's hometown. He played the local dubs, and worked as a barber in Bethesda, Maryland, when gigs were scarce. Hardy souls have tried to piece together his early recordings both as sessionman and featured player, but when he spoke to Bill Millar, Roy was typically dismissive of both, saying "Play 'em now, I feel like a good puke!" la judgment he later broadened to include most of Ms records).

One of Roy's early records, issued as The Jam by Bobby Gregg and Friends, actually cracked the Top 30 in 1962. The late '60s found Roy teaching guitar and playing regularly at the Crossroads club in Bladensburg, Maryland. The word about him gradually began filtering out, partly as a result of underground tapes. His arrival is usually dated to February 1971; it was during that month that Rolling Stone published an article by Tom Zito (reprinted from The Washington Post two months earlier) extolling Roy's virtues in unequivocal terms.

By then, though, the recording contract with Polydor, always supposed to have been a direct consequence of the Rolling Stone piece, was already in place. Polydor had been in business in the United States less than a year when they signed Roy Buchanan. The deal appears to have been negotiated by Bob Johnston, who, as Columbia Records' Nashville boss, had been responsible for Bob Dylan's Nashville sessions, and Leonard Cohen's Songs From A Room. Late in 1969, Johnston, now operating on his own, appears to have placed Buchanan with Polydor and assigned him to Charlie Daniels. Daniels too had a long and checkered career in the music business that had bisected Buchanan's at various points.

Originally from North Carolina, Daniels had covered all the bases from bluegrass to psychedelia by the time he fetched up in Nashville. Johnston had encouraged him to move there, giving him session work on albums by Dylan, Cohen and others. "I'd met Roy when he was Dale Hawkins's guitar player," says Charlie. "There had always been an underground buzz thing with him. All the guitar players knew who he was—the inside people. Nobody had done anything with him, though." It appears that Roy's stature among fellow pickers was such that even Les Paul had come to Maryland to hear him play. In some ways it was typical of Buchanan's career that his first album wasn't released.

He and Daniels worked at it onand- off for several months, beginning with Baltimore (originally titled Big Bad Bach] in October 1969. tt was a track that featured Daniels playing the Claptonesque lead part with Buchanan as his foil. The other songs included Leonard Cohen's Tfce Story of Isaac and, more interestingly, Black Autumn Vat contained the lick that later became the centerpiece of Hie Messiah mil Come Again. There was general dissatisfaction with the album (tentatively titled The Prophet), but it probably reached test pressing stage before it was canned.

The way that Daniels remembers it is that "some critic from Baltimore heard the tapes and said it was shit, and that scared everyone at Polydor to death. I just stopped working on it, and then it got so I couldn't get in touch with Roy so I thought, piss on this." Between the time The Prophet was recorded and the time it was scheduled for release, Roy had sold out Carnegie Hall (probably the only act to do so without a record on the market), and both Roy and his new manager, Jay Reich, as well as Polydor's A&R staff agreed that The Prophet was unrepresentative of his music. Tom Ztto produced another set of tapes around March 1971, but a second projected a\bum, featuring part of Roy's Gaston Hall concert, was also canned.

The first album to appear, modestly titled Roy Buchanan, was recorded (Roy said in five hours) in July 1972 and released that September. More than anything else, its curious mix of songs reflected Roy's live sets. A year later, it had sold a respectable 200,000 copies. As he would with most of his albums, Roy professed himself disappointed with Roy Buchanan. For those of us who didn't know what else he was capable of, though, it was an astonishing calling card. Roy clearly knew the value of playing few notes with frightening precision, but could also spit out notes like bullets from a machine-gun at double or even quadruple time without sacrificing a sense of order.

He had refined his touch so that he could isolate overtones by playing one string with a pick, simultaneously brushing that, or another, string with his fingernail. His trademark, though, was the searing note that spun up out of the silence as he hit the string, bent it and cranked up the volume. The Second Album was cut in November and December 1972 and released the following February. Most of the originals had been composed on the way to New York by Roy and his pianist Dick Heinbe.

Production was handled by Polydor's A&R director, Peter Siegel, who paired Roy and Heintze with some sessionmen. The result was perhaps Roy's most cohesive and consistently satisfying album. The focus was on the blues, and it became his most successful album too, eventually selling over haff-a-million copies. By this point, the invitations were tempting Buchanan far from Maryland. Back in 1969, the Rolling Stones had offered him the job of replacing Brian Jones, and John Lennon had asked him to sit in on a Plastic Ono Band session, a chance Roy blew by OD'ing on downers and passing out on the console.

He starred in two NET specials centered around his music, though; the first, The Best Unknown Guitarist in the World', aired in November 1971, and helped to create an advance buzz for his Polydor debut. "This star business," he said at the time, "scares the hell out of me." As a matter of preference, Roy would play small bars close to home, but if he had to go out on the road, he would play big venues for the maximum return so that he could head back to Maryland as quickly as possible. Success seemed to both attract and repel him. In May 1973, Roy went to Europe for the first time.

His version of Street Dream (that he (earned from Tommy McLain's swamp-pop record—not Patsy Cline or Don Gibson) was on the charts in England, and the local branch of Polydor recorded a live set at the Marquee club from which the previously unissued C.C. Ryder is drawn. The problem Roy never convincingly licked was that of finding a singer to front his band. Someone had told him that instrumental albums didn't sell, so for his third album. That's What I Am Here For, he used Billy Price who sometimes gave the impression that he and Roy were at cross purposes. Price and the rest of the band {with the exception of Heintze) came from Jay Reich's hometown, Pittsburgh. Reich also produced the album which was, as he says, "a blatant attempt to sell some 45s"; as such, it was trashed by Rolling Stone.

Producer Ed Freeman, who had worked on Gregg Allman's successful solo album, brought in another singer, Bill Sheffield, for Roy's final Polydor studio album, In The Beginning (issued in Europe as Rescue Me). Cut at the Record Plant in Sausaltto, R had a mellower flavor, and Roy's versions of the 1970 Cannonball Adderiey hit Country Preacher and the old folk tune Wayfaring Stranger showed the delicate touch that branded him as unique among what were termed the Heavy Axes of the day. Roy's swansong on American Polydor was Live Stock, mostly cut in New York in November 1974. Roy wanted to be free from Polydor so that he could take up Ahmet Ertegun's offer to join Atlantic. Polydor agreed to release him provided that they could get a live album and retain worldwide rights to his records outside North America.

Unusually for a parting shot, Live Stock was on the money, highlighting the fact that Roy was never entirely comfortable watching the studio clock tick away. He stepped up to the mike to sing I'm Evil, a song based loosely on Elvis Presley's Trouble. Billy Price sang a version of Al Green's I'm A Ram and a lengthy unreleased version of Neil Young's Down By The River, containing what was surely one of Roy's most expressive solos. Trivia buffs may care to note that I'm Evil had actually been recorded in Chicago on the same tour—not in New York as the jacket stated. In March 1976, Roy signed wttti Atlantic Records.

Ahmet Ertegun had assigned him to Arif Mardin who had produced the mega-selling Average White Band albums. H was the AWB feel that Roy and his new company were striving for on his first Atlantic album, titled with grim irony A Street Called Straight. When the breakthrough didn't happen, Ertegun persuaded Roy to let Stanley Clarke produce him. Clarke was a jazz fusion bassist who had starred in Return To Forever; unfortunately, Clarke didn't understand blues—a fact that grew increasingly apparent as the sessions wore on. Some cuts were made at Clover Studios in Los Angeles, owned by Steve Cropper.

Clarke didn't know who Cropper was, but Roy and his management insisted that the Stax veteran come out of the office to play a duet on Green Onions. In June 1977 Roy cut a live album for Polydor Japan that featured Hey Joe, a song he had long used in concert as a tribute to Jimi Hendrix. When asked, Roy usually cited Live In Japan as the album that contained his best work, although few were able to test that assertion. The final Atlantic album, You're Not Alone, appeared the following year, rounding out Roy's first decade as a solo album performer. It was a decade he followed with a two-year lay-off from recording, which was in turn followed by a solitary and undistinguished album for Waterhouse Records, and then a five-year lay off.

In 1985, Roy began an affiliation with the Chicago-based Alligator Records. In interviews toward the end of his life, Roy seemed at pains to emphasize that he was free of the drug and alcohol abuse that had plagued him for years. Those assertions made his death in August 1988 inexplicable to those who weren't privy to the fact that Buchanan's "street called straight" never ran for more than a few blocks. The official verdict was that he had been thrown into the drunk tank after being arrested close to his Reston, Virginia home, and had hanged himself there. Judy Buchanan challenged that conclusion, but others indicated that the nature of his deathwhile tragic—was consistent with another suicide attempt and a history of self-destructive behavior.

If Roy Buchanan's psyche was hard to penetrate, his work was a glorious stew of what has become known as American roots music. It ran the gamut from the wordless vocalized screams of the Pentecostal church to the sustained trailing notes of the hilbilly steel guitar, all filtered through a brilliant, unfettered imagination. During the sessions for Roy Buchanan in 1972, Roy gave the engineer and producer a twelve minute primer on his music that closes this set. Lacking the climactic fury of some of his greatest solos, the stilling moments of Dual Sottloqtty are a fitting epitaph for the man who spoke most eloquently through his instrument. Was there ever a more soulful guitarist?
by Colin Escott, Toronto, March 1992
With special acknowledgments to David Booth, Bill Millar, Jay Reich and Alan Scheflin.


Tracks
Disc 1
1. Baltimore (Charlie Daniels) - 3:31
2. Black Autumn (Charlie Daniels) - 4:25
3. The Story of Isaac (Leonard Cohen) - 5:48
4. There'll Always Be (Charlie Daniels) - 4:50
5. Sweet Dreams (Don Gibson) - 3:32
6. Pete's Blue (Buchanan) - 7:15
7. The Messiah Will Come Again (Buchanan) - 5:53
8. Tribute to Elmore James (Buchanan) - 3:25
9. After Hours (Mark Gordon, Erskine Hawkins, Avery Parrish) - 6:14
10.Five String Blues (Buchanan) - 6:24
11.C.C. Ryder (Live) (Traditional) - 6:49
12.My Baby Says She's Gonna Leave Me (Buchanan, John Harrison, Billy Price) - 3:21
13.Please Don't Turn Me Away (Buchanan, Billy Price) - 4:47
14.Country Preacher (Joe Zawinul) - 3:28
15.Wayfaring Pilgrim (Buchanan, Ed Freeman) - 5:07


Disc 2
1. Down By The River (Live) (Neil Young) - 9:17
2. I'm A Ram (Live) (Al Green, Mabon Teenie Hodges) - 4:24
3. I'm Evil (Live) (Buchanan) - 6:15
4. Good God Have Mercy (Billy Roberts) - 4:05
5. If Six Was Nine (Jimi Hendrix) - 3:46
6. Green Onions (Steve Cropper, Al Jackson, Jr., Booker T. Jones, Lewis Steinberg) - 8:09
7. Soul Dressing (Live) (Booker T. Jones) - 7:00
8. Hey Joe (Live) (Billy Cox) - 8:19
9. Fly...Night Bird (Buchanan, Andy Newmark, Jean Roussel, Raymond Silva, Willie Weeks) - 7:42
10.Turn To Stone (Terry Trebanth, Joe Walsh) - 5:46
11.Dual Soliloquy (Buchanan) - 12:06

Musicians
*Roy Buchanan - Guitar, Vocals
*Steve Cropper - Guitar
*Charlie Daniels - Guitars, Harmonica, Vocals
*Ned Davis - Drums
*Tim Drummond - Bass
*Donald "Duck" Dunn - Bass
*Byrd Foster - Drums
*Ray Gomez - Guitars
*John Harrison - Bass, Vocals
*Dick Heintze - Keyboards
*Karl Himmel - Drums
*Teddy Irwin - Rhythm Guitar
*Neil Larsen - Keyboards
*Malcolm Lukens - Keyboards
*Robbie Magruder - Drums
*Gerry Mercer - Drums
*Andy Newmark - Drums
*Don Payne - Bass
*Billy Price Keystone Rhythm Band - Vocals,
*Jean Roussel - Keyboards
*Gonzalo Sifre - Drums
*Bill Stewart - Drums
*Kenny Tibbetts - Bass
*Peter VanAllen - Bass
*Willie Weeks - Bass
*Bob Wilson - Keyboards
*Ernie Winfrey - Percussion, Tympani

Sunday, March 4, 2012

Warm Dust - Warm Dust (1972 uk, progressive jazz rock, brilliant 3rd album, digipack remastered edition)



Imagine a mixture between Caravan and early Chicago (around 1970) and you get an idea of their music. When they go into longer tracks, they develop an excellent, dense music dominated by flute and saxes, the great organ by Paul Carak and the deep and strong vocals by Dansfield Walker.


Tracks
1. Lead Me To The Light - 5:22
2. Long Road - 4:50
3. Mister Media - 3:10
4. Hole In The Future - 8:40
5. A Night On Bare Mountain - 1:06
6. The Blind Boy - 18:17
....Trouble in t mill - 5:20
....Clogs and Shawls - 3:20
....Blind Boy - 4:05
....Slibe - 5:05
....Dustbust - 1:06

Warm Dust
*Paul Carrack - Keyboards
*Les Walker - Vocals
*Terry "Tex" Comer - Bass
*Alan Solomon - Keyboards, Sax, Vocals
*John Surguy - Guitar, Saxophone, Vocals
*Dave Pepper - Drums

1970  Warm Dust - And It Came To Pass

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Saturday, March 3, 2012

Various Artists - Revenge Of The Amphetamine Generation (1964-67 uk, mod, freakbeat, R'n'B gems, vinyl limited edition 230/800)



From the same archive that brought you the amazing Purple Heart Surgery series, this latest installment features upgraded packaging and equally righteous, never before released UK Beat/R&B acetates circa 1965-67. The set opens with "I Need You" and "View From The Circle", a couple of fuzz-scorched Mod R&B shakers, featuring soulful vocals and the kind of hard-drivin' drumbeats that instantly fill a dance floor: dynamite stuff by an unnamed band on a Phil Solomons-produced acetate.

Equally boggling to the mind is Thor's "Lindsay Davis", a moody freakbeat piece featuring eerie harmonies and great organ sounds suspended over a relentless charging jungle drum beat: breathtaking! The Birmingham-based Psychotic Reaction came up with some decidedly psychotic action on their two-sided acetate; both "Oh Misery" and "Be My Girl" are tough, rough-round-the-edges garage punkers - almost American-sounding, in fact. Of the "known" identities, listeners will no doubt be familiar with David John & The Mood, but not this previously unreleased version of "Diggin' For Gold", a Lee Dorseyesque, atmospheric R&B performance which pre-dates the vastly different version they cut with Joe Meek.

You'll also hear The Muleskinners, featuring future Small Face Ian MacLagen. "Need Your Lovin'" is an excellent R&B cut that was later re-recorded for release on Fontana. The Quakers' "She's Alright", a strong R&Beat shouter, actually saw a vinyl release circa `65, albeit on the tiny Studio 36 label (this track also crops up on English Freakbeat Vol 3), as did The Poison Ivy's crude, stompin' version of "Sure Know A Lot About Love", on Cambridge-based Granta. What else? Well, Teddy Wadmore's "Buzz With The Fuzz" easily outbuzzes Chris Farlowe's (later) version; there's more Punk R&B from the Blues Conqueroos and The Plebs, a great demo version of The Flies' "House Of Love", and... well, why go on? I honestly can't think of a single reason why anyone reading this shouldn't buy Revenge Of The Amphetamine Generation immediately.
by Mike Stax


Musicians - Tracks
1. Unknown - I Need You - 2:24
2. Unknown - View From The Circle - 2:37
3. Unknown - Tiger Girl - 2:05
4. Thor - Lindsay Davis - 2:59
5. Unknown - House Of Love - 3:13
6. Psychotic Reaction - Oh Misery - 2:58
7. Psychotic Reaction - Be My Girl - 3:50
8. The Quakers - She's Alright - 2:38
9. The Saxons - Right Throughly 1:53
10.David John & The Mood - Digging For Gold (Demo Version) - 2:47
11.The Poison Ivy - Sure Know A Lot About Love - 3:10
12.Blues Conqueroos - Pretty Polly - 3:00
13.The Plebs - I'm A Man - 2:21
14.Teddy Wadmore - Buzz With The Fuzz - 2:13
15.The Muleskinners - Need Your Lovin' - 2:02

Artists - Credits
Unknown #1
Regretably nothing is known about the group behind this double-sided slab of freakbeat from '66 except that they weren produced by Phil Solomons.

Unknown #2
Again the identity of the group behind this next gem - "Tiger Girl", a Mod Punk stomper - has been lost with time. Its flip contains an interesting cover of a Country Joe and The Fish number which dates this recording to '67.

Thor
Rather than the late sixties pop evident on their other acetate (compiled on "Syde Tryps Three"), this mysterious Berkshire group this time deliver a real psych-trip complete with pounding drums and generous helpings of organ.

Unknown #3
Written by Grainger/Jones, this recording possibly represents an earlier demo by THE FLIES - who went on to record this number as the A-side of their second single in early '67 (Decca, F.12594) - albeit in a much more polished form.

Psychotic Reaction
These deranged 1966 recordings from the Hollick & Taylor studios in Handsworth, Birmingham more than justifies this obscure groups moniker who surely were the amphetamine generation...

The Quakers
Billed as "Almost Legendary Quakers" - this Melton, Leicestershire group's first vinyl excursion more than justifies the self congratulation. Recorded privately in August '64 at Northampton's Studio 36, both sides perfectly captures their wild R and B sound - which is somewhat lacking in their Oriole debut from 29th January 1965.
Personnel:
Dave Dene - vocals, Terry Muse - bass guitar,
Howard Perks - drums, Mick White - lead guitar

The Saxons
Not the five man group who recorded a Joe Meek produced single for Decca in '65 - but an entirely different group from Exeter, whose only recording is this privately recorded E.P. from '64. Described as "a song of heartbreak and despair a lament of love's labours lost" the poetic sleeve notes give little warning of the distorted punk track to come!
Personnel:
Chris Cooper - lead guitar, Chet Devlin - vocals,
Brian Ellery - rhythm guitar, John Townsend - drums

David John And The Mood
This highly reknown R and B group from Preston managed to record 3 now much sought after singles between '64-'65, that last two of which were produced by Joe Meek. David John was none other than W.C. Charnley - who wrote the A-side of their first and B-sides of their subsequent singles. The sound evident on this more melodic demo was never quite captured on the released single which was otherwise swamped in a typical RGM production.

The Poison Ivy
The Granta label from Cambridge has previously been linked with members of the early Pink Foyd who in 1964 were students in the city - though this is likely to be the only connection between the two groups. The four tracks contained on the E.P. feature spirited cover versions marred only by the primitive nature of the recording facilities.

Blues Conqueroos
Apart from it being recorded at a small studio in Soho, London, there are few other details available concerning this group - though one member may have been Dave Manvell.

The Plebs
Judging from the crude sound evident on this L.P. from '65, it would seem unlikely this is the same group whi delivered a rather accomplished performance as their Decca debut from October '64 - Bad Blood c/w Babe I'm Gonna Leave You (F. 12006). Their interpretation of "I'm A Man" is a rather deranged version of this old standard and is the strongest track on the L.P.
Personnel includes:
Dandy Horn - drums, Edward Lond - ?, Neal Steeper - bass guitar, (plus two others)

Teddy Wadmore
Suitably, this demonstration acetate from June '64 was initially sent to the headquarters of the satirical "Private Eye" magazine - predating the version by Chris Farlowe And The Thunderbirds (Columbia, DB 7614) from July '65 which was itself hastily withdrawn as a consequence of pressure from the establishment for fear of ridiculing the police force. Teddy Wadmore never officially recorded (and is presumably still doing time).

The Muleskinners
We close the L.P. with a track from the legendary private E.P. by cult Hounslow R and B group The Muleskinners - most memorable for including in their line-up Ian McLagen prior to him joining The Small Faces. The group penned "Need Your Lovin'" - was recorded in a much more restrained form as the B-side of their sole reel-to-reel tape demo of "Muleskinner Blues" and later went on to record "I Am The Giver Of All Things" as a flexidisc for "OZ" magazine in '66 though all copied were destroyed the group splitting soon after.
Personnel:
Terry Brennan - vocals, Peter Brown - bass guitar, Mick Carpenter - drums, Ian McLagen - rhythm guitar and organ, Dave Pether - lead guitar, Nick Twedell - harmonica

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Grand Theft - Hiking Into Eternity (1972-73 us, hard raw zeppelinesque blues rock)



The Northwest has always been a fertile environment for popular music. From Bing Crosby to Pearl Jam, many bonafide superstars have emerged from the area and countless talented bands of the rock era left their mark locally. By most accounts, Tacoma's Wailers were the first teens to bash it out. They hit in 1959 nationally, and spawned literally hundreds of other groups in their wake.

Looked upon locally as the "Beatles of the Northwest," their sound and influence cannot be overestimated. Others went on to achieve success – some more than the Wailers - and much of this cultural richness is well documented in the annals of Northwest music. Stars from our area are many: The Sonics, Paul Revere and the Raiders, Jimi Hendrix, the Kingsmen, Heart, and Nirvana are but a few. But bands like the Crystal Sect. Easy Chair, the Henchmen, the Army and the Bluefield Doughboys left their mark with only a few fondly remembered performances or obscure recordings The Northwest is interesting geographically.

Seattle is pretty much the hub and is sandwiched between Puget Sound on one side and Lake Washington on the other In the middle of the lake is the city of Mercer Island. With a population of 25,000. "poverty rock" (as Mercer Island is fondly called) is one of the more exclusive suburbs. With the rock explosion of the sixties and seventies, Mercer Island had plenty of local teen bands. Some of these were: Spring Fever, the Bassics. the Thymes, Bluebird. Goldrush. English Rib, Great Whale, the Twelfth of Never, the Bandits. Blue Light, Double Image and Beautiful Joe. But the most legendary of these Mercer Islanders has to be Grand Theft. Emerging out of a dark practice basement, they were originally called Grand Theft Auto.

It was early 1972 and these musicians were enamored with the heavier sounds of the day. Led Zeppelin. Grand Funk, the Who and Black Sabbath were all influences. There is still some mystery about the group but several facts have been pieced together. Grand Theft was led by the guitar and vocal genius of Crowbar Mahoon, who also did most of the writing. The melodic rocksoiid bass was played by Riley Sedgemont Hi and their drummer was the phenomenal PK. Skins.

Like the best power trios, Grand Theft's crack rhythm section was essential to the complete sound - Sedgemont's innovative bass runs and Skins' thunderous percussion skills were second to none. Others who were involved with the Grand Theft sound include producer D B Fader's occasional writing piano ard vocals and roadie Cheese Toasters immortal opening on 'Scream (It's Eating Me Alive)" And who is Heff T. Berger, the writer of 'Closer to Herty's?" A second guitarist, Loudus Volumous, was added later and some say he was the most mysterious of the bunch Loosely affiliated with the "hip" AM/FM radio station KOL, Grand Theft was able to enjoy some advantageous promotional opportunities Their only 45 ("Closer to Herty's/Scream") was a "Pick Hit of the Week." and the station ran a "Win a Dream Date with Grand Theft" contest.

They played live only twee, at nearby Bellevue’s Olde Town Tavern and Woodinville's Gold Creek Dome, location of the 1969 Seattle Pop Festival. Apparently tour offers were tendered but Mahoon felt their sound was too intricate to replicate live so they continued to woodshed in their basement lair. Presumably Volumous was deputized to heip augment Grand Thefts legendary sound. But it was not to be.

With their high creative standards and unrelenting musical quality control, they could rot bring themselves to deliver less to their rabid fans than perfection. So Grand Theft was content to play only with themselves as their own harshest critics. Thankfully, they had the foresight to roll tape during some of these infamous sessions Produced by the enigmatic D B Fader, their self-titled album was released In mid 1972, and has become one of the most coveted recordings in Northwest history. Earlier embryonic rehearsal material survives and is heard here in ail its genius for the first time. We've also included their complete album, making its compact disc debut.

The band's demise is puzzling, as other recording projects are logged in the tape archives Sadly, the album "It Doesn't Take Talent" has never been located, but we're proud to present (also for the first time) selections from the aborted "Grand Theft II.." Grand Theft has long been a mystery. Four obviously talented musicians passed through these hallowed ranks in the early seventies, yet nothing has been heard from them since With their instrumental brilliance, lyrical philosophies and son-c mastery, it's one of music’s injustices they never became famous Maybe with “Hiking Into Eternity" Grand Theft will finally gain some of the critical and commercial success they've waited twenty-plus years to receive,
by W. Bismark O’Halleran


Tracks
1. Leavin' This Town - 6:54
2. Chain Driven Baby - 5:56
3. Damn the Nation - 10:13
4. Anxiety - 6:12
5. Scream (It's Eating Me Alive) - 4:39
6. Closer to Herfy's - 10:14
7. Log Rhythms / Meat Midgets - 7:28
8. Depression City RFD / Ohms - 8:16
9. Return of the Meat Midgets - 5:37
10.Ben the Rat Meets Led Zeppelin - 8:08
Tracks 1-4 early basement tapes 2/1972
Tracks 5-8 entire 1st album 5-6/1972
Tracks 9-10 unreleased 2nd album 4/1973


Grand Theft
*Crowbar Mahoon (David Baroh) - Guitar, Vocals
*Loudus Volumous - Guitar
*Riley Sedgemont III (Kevin Marin) - Bass
*P.K. Skins (Phil Klitgaard) - Drums
*D.B. Fader - Keyboards, Vocals

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Friday, March 2, 2012

Megaton - Megaton (1971 uk, good heavy prog rock with some glam flashes)



A thrilling, no-holds-barred, heavy rock treatment of a clutch of riff-based but fairly commercial pop tunes, Megaton'ssole album has plenty of admirers these days. Perhaps this should be a rock label staple, but the LPs origins are more pop than that with more akin to those ranks of over looked production library classics recorded for one purpose and taking on a different guise and importance to collectors years later.  

One of the rarest Decca albums gets a legit release. Megaton was a one-off hard rock exploitation album recorded by Les Humphries and JImmy Bilsbury with unknown musicians in tow. Apparently Humphries and Bilsbury have a bit of a history in the European music scene - and not in a good way. They hit on success right after this album with The Les Humphries Singers. They seemed to dabble in different genres looking for a hit. Megaton was one of those projects. Its a curious affair that is obviously influenced by Led Zeppelin and Black Sabbath. Don't know who the singer is but he's pretty damn good! "Wanna Be A Hero" features a cool Iommi style riff with a neat flute solo laid on top.

Although the tracks aren't particularly long they do feature some killer guitar work and soulful "my woman don't understand" vocals. This is one to consider alongside Human Beast, Head Machine, Incredible Hog - although not quite of that caliber. Great liner notes spill the beans on the whole story of Humphries/Bilsbury. File under: Guilty Pleasure.


Tracks
1. Out of Your Own Little World - 3:45
2. Niagara - 4:32
3. Wanna Be a Hero - 3:43
4. Fairy Tale Song - 3:21
5. Coo Cooki Choo - 4:46
6. Carry It On to the End - 3:54
7. Woman I’m Gonna Make You Mine - 3:12
8. Man In an Aeroplane - 3:11
9. Life Was Easy Yesterday - 4:02
10.Tomorrow Never Comes My Way - 3:20
All songs written by John Lesley Humphreys and Jimmy Bilsbury.

Megaton
*John Lesley Humphreys - Vocals, Guitar
*Jimmy Bilsbury - Vocals, Keyboard
other musicians remain unknown.

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Thursday, March 1, 2012

Madura - Madura (1971 us, fabulous progressive jazz rock, 1st album, 2006 remaster)



Madura was a 1970s rock/fusion band from Chicago, United States. After the break up of Bangor Flying Circus (1969), Alan DeCarlo and Hawk Wolinski formed Madura. Only one personal change was made: drummer Michael Tegza was replaced with one of the best renowned drummers in the world: Ross Salomone. David "Hawk" Wolinski, previous Shadows of Knight member, Alan DeCarlo and Ross Salomone recorded two albums produced by the Chicago producer James William Guercio.

Hawk Wolinski later became a member of Rufus and Chaka Khan, and a successful producer and songwriter. Alan DeCarlo and Ross Salomone both appeared on Chicago keyboard player Robert Lamm's 1975 solo album "Skinny Boy," and Ross Salomone also appeared on albums by Chicago, Air Supply, Gerard, and Hollins & Star. Madura can be seen and heard live on a short concert scene in J.W. Guercio's movie Electra Glide in Blue (1973) playing a part of Free from the devil.

This is also included on the album from the movie. David Wolinski also appears as an actor in the movie, playing the part of "David, the VW bus driver." The band's name "Madura" was inspired by the Meenakshi temple in Madurai


Tracks
1. Hawk Piano (instrumental)
(David Wolinski) - 1:23
2. Drinking No Wine
(David Wolinski) - 4:18
3. Dreams
(David Wolinski) - 4:24
4. Plain as Day
(David Wolinski) - 5:35
5. My Love is Free
(David Wolinski) - 7:09
6. Free from the Devil
(A.J. DeCarlo) - 2:10
7. My My What a World (A.J. DeCarlo) - 1:01
8. Stimulation (instrumental)
(R.A. Salomone) - 3:56
9. Don't Be Afraid (A.J. DeCarlo) -2:01
10.Damnation
(David Wolinski) - 3:49
11.See for Yourself (A.J. DeCarlo) - 5:59
12.I Think I'm Dreaming (A.J. DeCarlo) - 4:23
13.It's a Good Time for Loving
(David Wolinski) - 4:55
14.Trapped
(David Wolinski) - 7:45
15.Johnny B. Goode
(Chuck Berry) - 6:02
16.Realization (David Wolinski) - 3:17
17.Man's Rebirth through Childbirth Part I
(David Wolinski) - 2:52
18.Man's Rebirth through Childbirth Part II
(David Wolinski) - 1:12
19.Joy in Old Age by Way of Self Observation
(David Wolinski) - 4:03
20.Talking to Myself (David Wolinski) - 4:53

Madura
*David "Hawk" Wolinski - Keyboards, Vocals
*Alan DeCarlo - Guitar, Vocals
*Ross Salomone - Drums, Vocals


Madura II
Related Act
1966  The Shadows Of Knight - Gloria
1965-70  Shadows Of Knight - Dark Sides
1968-69  The Shadows Of Knight - Shake! (2009 remaster)

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Wednesday, February 29, 2012

The Joint - Freak Street (1967 uk, proto progressive freak psych gem)



The Joint were created in July 1967 out of the Folkestone band The Lonely Ones, who had included in the early line up Noel Redding, who of course went of fame and fortune with Jimi Hendrix Experience, also Jim Leverton, who Played with The Yardbirds and Rick Davies who become famous as a member with the Supertramp.

During European dates in 1967 the band made up with film writer David Llewelyn and director/composer George Moorse and went on to record soundtrack material for a series Munich underground movies in Germany, including “Jet Generation” and “Der Griller”.

Most of the recordings of The Joint were long presumed lost, this release has been taken from a ¼ inch demo tape, it has been degenerated over time and the sound quality suffers in some places as a consequence, but to bring this great lost band to light again -after almost 40 years- feel sure is worth it.


Tracks
1. Freak St (Williams, Moorse) - 5:10
2. Dinosaur (Llewelyn, Moorse) - 2:55
3. Runman Gunman (Williams, Moorse) - 3:53
4. Laura's (Llewelyn) - 3:24
5. On The Other Side (Davies, Moorse) - 4:24
6. Chariot Of Mercury (Andrews) - 3:58
7. No Sweat (Llewelyn) - 2:55
8. Cheap Freedom Joy (Llewelyn, Moorse) - 2:28
9. Turnstile (Llewelyn) - 8:07
10.Joint Melody (The Joint) - 1:51

The Joint
*John Andy Andrews - Lead Vocals
*Trevor Willians - Guitar, Vocals
*Rick Davies - Keyboard, Vocals
*Keith Bailey - Drums
*Martin Vinson/Steve Brass - Bass
*Tony Catchpole - Guitar

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Monday, February 27, 2012

Warm Dust - And It Came to Pass (1970 uk, superb heavy progressive jazz rock)



Warm Dust was one of those obscure progressive rock bands that slipped through the cracks, but released three albums. This was an early band featuring Paul Carrack before he earned his fame with Ace ("How Long"), Sqeeze ("Tempted"), and of course Mike & the Mechanics, not to mention the solo albums he did in the '80s. Now I understand the name Paul Carrack might make many of you run like hell, but what he's done in Warm Dust is nothing like those groups I mentioned.

In 1970, they released their debut album And It Came to Pass, and like Chicago when they were still Chicago Transit Authority or the Mothers of Invention's Freak Out, is one of the rare examples of a double album debut. Aside from Paul Carrack, the group also featured vocalist/guitarist Dransfield "Les" Walker, John Surgey on wind instruments (flute, sax, oboe, clarinet), Alan Salomen on additional wind instruments, Terry "Tex" Comer on bass and guitars, and Dave Pepper on drums and percussion.

Frequently this band was described as Chicago meets Caravan, but they really weren't a brass rock band like Chicago, Blood, Sweat & Tears, and such British counterparts as The Greatest Show on Earth or IF, but musically they could also bring to mind such groups. For one thing, Warm Dust wasn't really a horn rock band, but sax and flute, on top of Paul Carrack's Hammond organ was what made up this band's sound. If anything, they remind me a bit of Web/Samurai (Dave Lawson's bands prior to Greenslade that had a sound dominated by wind instruments).

Cuts like "Turbulance", "Achromasia" and "Circus" are full of pleasant use of sax, flute, and organ, often in a jazzy and bluesy manner, with some psychedelic overtones. "Keep on Truckin'" really is out of place on this album, a more boogie-oriented number, but the album goes back to familiar territory with the epic title track, which is in the vein of the first three cuts. It's my opinion the second disc (the last five cuts) is even better.

"Blues For Pete" is the perfect example of the band exploring the blues in a rather interesting way, while "Washing My Eyes" for some reason reminds me a bit of what the German group Birth Control did on "This Song is Just For You" off their 1975 album Plastic People, especially the organ work, although it's a wonderful, extended piece. They also do a cover of the much covered Richie Havens song "Indian Rope Man" (that Julie Driscoll with Brian Auger & The Trinity and the German group Frumpy had also done) and did it in style with funky organ work and great use of wind instruments.

Given what Paul Carrack had later involved himself musically, he finds Warm Dust an embarrassment from his youth (he was just 18 when they recorded And It Came to Pass), and strongly encourages everyone to avoid Warm Dust like a plague. I'm sorry I can't agree with him on this opinion, this is perfectly good progressive rock, it's his only real foray into this kind of music (Mike & the Mechanics hardly counts despite the Genesis connection, they were simply a pop group, much like Genesis was at that point).

The great thing about listening to a Warm Dust album is you get completely no reminders of "How Long", "All I Need is a Miracle" or "The Living Years" whatsoever, which is a good thing. The reason Warm Dust didn't get much notice was it was released on a small label called Trend, meaning they probably didn't have the means to promote the band properly (even those little known British horn bands like IF and The Greatest Show on Earth had the benefit of being on major labels like Island and Harvest). Even if Paul Carrack gets you running, but you enjoy groups like Web/Samurai, IF, The Greatest Show On Earth, and the likes, you really can't go wrong here!
by Ben Miler


Tracks
1. Turbulance - 11:00
2. Achromasia - 7:13
3. Circus - 5:35
4. Keep On Trucking - 4:27
5. And It Came To Pass - 10:24
6. Loosing Touch - 7:44
7. Blues For Pete - 7:18
8. Man Without A Straw - 4:26
9. Wash My Eyes - 14:05
10.Indian Rope Man (Richie Havens) - 6:10
All songs written by Warm Dust except track #10.

Warm Dust
*Dransfield "Les" Walker - Lead Vocals, Guitar, Harmonica
*Paul Carrack - Organ, Piano, Guitar
*John Surgey – Tenor, Alto Saxophones, Flute, Oboe, Clarinet, Vibraphone
*Alan Saloman - Baritone, Tenor, Alto Saxophones, Flute, Oboe, Piano
*Terry "Tex" Comer - Bass, Guitar, Recorder
*Dave Pepper - Drums, Percussion


Sunday, February 26, 2012

The Holy Mackerel - Holy Mackerel (1968 us, exceptional psychedelic sunny folk, 2010 deluxe expanded edition)



If ever an album was lost in the shuffle, it was the 1968 debut LP by The Holy Mackerel. The LP, assigned as Reprise 6311, fell smack in between Jimi Hendrix’s Electric Ladyland (Reprise 6307) and Neil Young’s eponymous solo debut (Reprise 6317). But adventurous listeners would find themselves rewarded if they picked up the album by the oddly-named group, with its cover sleeve of five gents and a lady smiling for the camera under three-dimensional comic book-style lettering proclaiming them “The Holy Mackerel.” Produced by an emerging Richard Perry, The Holy Mackerel might as well have been called Something for Everyone.

Over the course of 12 tracks, the group traversed psychedelia, country rock and best of all, sunshine pop with the terrifically infectious “Bitter Honey,” co-written by Paul and Roger Nichols. Of course, the Nichols/Williams team would go on to become a Los Angeles-based hitmaking factory, turning out some of the most-loved songs of all time: “We’ve Only Just Begun,” “Rainy Days and Mondays,” “I Won’t Last a Day Without You.” They also wrote some tunes which are not-so-well-known but no less wonderful: “The Drifter,” “Someday Man,” “Trust.” Cherry Red and producer Steve Stanley on September 27 will give The Holy Mackerel the deluxe Now Sounds treatment with an expanded reissue, appending a whopping 10 bonus tracks to the original 12-track LP, including 9 songs new to CD and 5 previously unissued in any form. Click on the jump for more background on The Holy Mackerel, one of this author’s favorite lost LPs of the era, and the full track listing for the Now Sounds reissue with pre-order link!

The Holy Mackerel originally consisted of Paul Williams, brother Mentor Williams (who would go on to write Dobie Gray’s much-covered smash “Drift Away”), Bob Harvey (late of Jefferson Airplane), guitarist George Hiller, flautist/vocalist Cynthia Fitzpatrick and Don Murray, formerly of the Turtles. Perhaps not boding well for the album, the lineup changed before the LP was ever released. Harvey was replaced by a name soon to be familiar to Elvis Presley’s fans, bassist Jerry Scheff; Don Murray was replaced by Michael Cannon. In the liner notes to Collector’s Choice’s 2005 CD reissue (CCM-543-2), Steve Stanley indicates that Buffalo Springfield’s Dewey Martin also contributed drums to the Mackerel’s LP; the Springfield influence was clear on country-flecked tracks like “The Somewhere In Arizona at 4:30 A.M. Restaurant Song (And Now I Am Alone).” The album’s eclectic nature may have hurt its initial reception, but it’s filled with the sounds of young artists at their hungriest and most imaginative.

Despite the album’s commercial failure and the band’s dissolution, its reputation remained strong over the years. Lead singer and songwriter Paul Williams went on to create his underrated solo debut Someday Man, wholly written by the Nichols/Williams team and produced by Nichols, and then to even greater fame. Andrew Sandoval revisited two of the LP’s tracks, “Scorpio Red” and “Wildflowers,” for Come to the Sunshine: Soft Pop Nuggets from the WEA Vaults (Rhino Handmade RHM2 7818) and Hallucinations: Psychedelic Pop Nuggets from the WEA Vaults (Rhino Handmade RHM2 7821), respectively. Steve Stanley has more than done his part in keeping the Williams/Nichols partnership in the spotlight, spearheading Collector’s Choice’s reissues of The Holy Mackerel and Someday Man, and via Rev-Ola and Now Sounds, reissuing the complete output of Roger Nichols and the Small Circle of Friends as well. (If you’re still reading this far and don’t have both Roger Nichols albums, along with Someday Man, stop now and order immediately! You won’t regret it.)

Now Sounds’ edition boasts non-LP single tracks “Love for Everyone” and “To Put Up With You,” one of the most delicious put-down songs ever, with Williams’ pointed lyrics directed at a heartbreaking if attractive lady: “Yes, I’d like to hang around/But I’ll have to let you down/I just haven’t got what it takes/To put up with you…” set to a breezy Nichols melody. “Scorpio Red” and “The Lady is Waiting” are heard in their mono 45 versions, joined by session outtakes and demos, including a demo of “Bitter Honey,” memorably covered by Jackie DeShannon on her Laurel Canyon LP.
by Joe Marchese


Tracks
1. The Secret of Pleasure (Michaels, Williams) - 3:35
2. Scorpio Red - 3:15
3. The Lady is Waiting - 2:09
4. Wildflowers (Harvey) - 4:00
5. The Somewhere In Arizona At 4:30a.M. Restaurant Song (and Now I Am Alone) - 2:23
6. Prinderella (Perry, Rubini) - 2:44
7. Bitter Honey (Nichols, Williams) - 2:24
8. Nothin' Short of Misery - 2:32
9. The Golden Ghost of Love - 2:41
10.The Wild Side of Life (Carter, Warren) - 2:53
11.10,000 Men - 3:42
12.1984 - 4:28
13.Love For Everyone - 3:12
14.To Put Up With You (Nichols, Williams) - 3:27
15.Bitter Honey (Nichols, Williams) - 2:20
16.Scorpio Red - 3:10
17.The Lady is Waiting - 2:09
18.And Now I Am Alone - 6:01
19.Love For Everyone - 8:48
20.Bitter Honey (Nichols, Williams) - 2:25
21.On the Way - 2:35
22.Listen To the Voice - 2:14
All songs by Paul Williams unless otherwise stated.
Tracks 1-12 from Reprise LP 6311, 1968
Tracks 13-14 from Reprise single 0681, 1968
Track 15 from Reprise single 0768, 1968
Tracks 16-17 from Reprise single 0797, 1968
Tracks 18-22 previously unreleased



Musicians
*Paul Williams - Vocals
*Cynthia Fitzpatrick - Flute, Vocals
*Alvin Dinkin - Viola
*Jesse Ehrlich - Cello
*David Frisina - Violin
*Jim Gordon - Drums
*Allan Harshman - Viola
*Bob Harvey - Bass
*George Hiller - Banjo, Dobro, Guitar, Harmonica, Organ, Vocals
*Nathan Kaproff - Violin
*Raymond Kelley - Cello
*Raphael Kramer - Cello
*Steve Lefever - Bass
*Marvin Limonick - Violin
*Charles Loper - Trombone
*John Lowe - Flute
*Lewis McCreary - Trombone
*Oliver Mitchell - Trumpet
*Alexander Murray - Violin
*Don Murray - Drums
*Richard Nash - Trombone
*Erno Neufeld - Violin
*Roger Nichols - Piano
*Michael Rubini - Harpsichord
*Jerry Scheff - Bass
*Thomas Scott - Flute
*Frederick Seykora - Cello
*Clifford Shank - Flute
*Kenny Shroyer - Trombone
*Anthony Terran - Trumpet
*Dave Timberley - Project Assistant
*Ray Triscari - Trumpet
*Mentor Williams - Rhythm Guitar , Vocals
*John Audino - Trumpet
*Michael Barone - Trombone
*Larry Bunker - Tympani
*Michael Cannon - Drums, Percussion, Vocals
*Jules Chaikin - Trumpet
*William Collette - Flute
*Vincent DeRosa - French Horn

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Paul Butterfield's Better Days - Paul Butterfield's Better Days (1973 us, elegant blues rock)





Following the disbanding of the final Butterfield Blues Band lineup, Paul Butterfield relocated to the artist colony that had developed in the Catskill Mountains around Bearsville and Woodstock, NY. He began hanging out with members of the Band, Van Morrison, Jesse Winchester, and an ever-growing roster of high profile musicians who had also relocated there in recent years.

Butterfield assembled a new band, which featured some of the cream of that crop of veteran musicians. The new group, christened Better Days, had an extraordinary frontline consisting of Butterfield on harp and vocals, former Jim Kweskin Jug Band founding member Geoff Muldaur on keyboards, guitar, and vocals, Ronnie Barron on piano and vocals, as well as legendary studio vet, Amos Garrett, on lead guitar. The rhythm section boasted former Buddy Miles Express and Taj Mahal bassist Billy Rich and former Holy Moses drummer, Christopher Parker, who would eventually work with a long list of legends including Aretha Franklin, Bob Dylan and Steely Dan.

Better Days released two excellent studio albums on the Bearsville label and this concert features much of the material from their debut album, when the band was still relatively new and full of enthusiasm for playing together. Butterfield, Muldaur, and Barron were all strong lead vocalists and Garrett was probably the best guitarist to work with Butterfield since Michael Bloomfield. Sadly overlooked at the time, this group was just as intriguing as Butterfield's former band and the music they created was as good, if not better, than much of what directly proceeded it within Butterfield's catalogue.

"We're the only band around that's playing rooted American music," Better Days vocalist and former folkie Geoff Muldaur told an interviewer when this album was first released in 1973, and with perhaps just a handful of exceptions he was right. The band's mix of various styles of blues, from rural (Robert Johnson), to cosmopolitan (Percy Mayfield), along with hints of New Orleans R&B, boogie woogie, and early rock and country, was tremendously out of step with the pop trends of its time.

These days, of course, there are many bands doing more or less the same thing (although rarely as well), but the fact that these guys couldn't have cared less about appearing trendy is one of the reasons why Better Days sounds timeless. Another reason, of course, is world class musicianship; Muldaur, Paul Butterfield, and stupendously stylish guitarist Amos Garrett in particular come across as both relaxed and passionate. Despite their essentially formalistic approach to music making, they never sound academic or sterile. Better Days is one of the great lost albums of the '70s.


Tracks
1. New Walkin' Blues (Johnson) - 4:54
2. Please Send Me Someone to Love (Mayfield) - 5:09
3. Broke My Baby's Heart (Barron) - 5:09
4. Done a Lot of Wrong Things (Charles) - 3:52
5. Baby Please Don't Go (Williams) - 3:28
6. Buried Alive in the Blues (Gravenites) - 3:44
7. Rule the Road (Von Schmidt) - 4:13
8. Nobody's Fault But Mine (Simone) - 3:37
9. Highway 28 (Hicks) - 3:10

Musicians
*Ronnie Barron - Keyboards, Organ, Electric Piano, Vocals
*Gary Brocks - Trombone
*Sam Burtis - Trombone
*Paul Butterfield - Harmonica, Harp, Electric Piano, Producer, Vocals,
*Bobby Charles - Vocals
*Brother Gene Dinwiddie - Tenor Saxophone
*Peter Ecklund - Trumpet
*Amos Garrett - Bass, Acoustic Guitar, Vocals
*Howard Johnson - Horn, Baritone Sax
*Geoff Muldaur - Guitar, Piano, Slide, Acoustic Guitar, Vocals
*Maria Muldaur - Fiddle, Vocals
*Chris Parker - Drums
*J.D. Parran - Tenor Saxophone
*Billy Rich - Bass
*David Sanborn - Alto Saxophone
*Stan Shafran - Trumpet
*Dennis Whitted - Drums, Vocals

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Saturday, February 25, 2012

Paul Butterfield's Better Days - It All Comes Back (1973 us, fabulous blues rock, japan extra track edition)



After 1970's Live and the following year's studio effort Sometimes I Just Feel Like Smilin', Butterfield broke up his band and parted ways with Elektra. Tired of all the touring and personnel turnover, he retreated to the communal atmosphere of Woodstock, still a musicians' haven in the early '70s, and in 1971 formed a new group eventually dubbed Better Days. Guitarist Amos Garrett and drummer Chris Parker were the first to join, and with folk duo Geoff and Maria Muldaur in tow, the band was initially fleshed out by organist Merl Saunders and bassist John Kahn, both from San Francisco.

Sans Geoff Muldaur, this aggregation worked on the soundtrack of the film Steelyard Blues, but Saunders and Kahn soon returned to the Bay Area, and were replaced by New Orleans pianist Ronnie Barron and Taj Mahal bassist Billy Rich. This lineup -- with Geoff Muldaur back, plus contributions from singer/songwriter Bobby Charles -- released the group's first album, Better Days, in 1972 on Butterfield manager Albert Grossman's new Bearsville label. While it didn't quite match up to Butterfield's earliest efforts, it did return him to critical favor.

A follow-up, It All Comes Back, was released in 1973 to positive response Paul Butterfield's post-Blues Band outfit's second album is a bit more laid back than its predecessor, but it definitely has its moments, and as before the musicianship is stellar. The opening "Too Many Drivers," for example, is a churning Chicago blues, with Butterfield's horn impressions figuring as intensely as ever, that would have fit in perfectly with anything on his old band's debut.

Geoff Muldaur turns in a haunting rendition of a delicate Rick Danko-penned R&B ballad "Small Town Talk," while "Take Your Pleasure Where You Find It," co-written and co-sung by Butterfield and R&B legend Bobby Charles, is a clavinet-driven funk workout whose instrumental sections work up a real Little Feat-style froth.
by Steve Huey


Tracks
1. Too Many Drivers (Andrew Hogg) - 3:18
2. It's Getting Harder To Survive (Ronnie Barron) - 3:51
3. If You Live (Mose Allison) - 3:27
4. Win Or Lose (Bobby Charles, Paul Butterfield) - 4:34
5. Small Town Talk (Bobby Charles, Rick Danko) - 5:33
6. Take Your Pleasure Where You Find It (Bobby Charles, Paul Butterfield) - 3:42
7. Poor Boy (Traditional Arranged by Geoff Muldaur) - 4:17
8. Louisiana Flood (Ronnie Barron, Mac Rebennack) - 3:35
9. It All Comes Back (Bobby Charles) - 6:10
10.Small Town Talk (Live) (Bobby Charles, Rick Danko) - 5:21

Paul Butterfield's Better Days
*Paul Butterfield - Vocals, Harmonica, Electric Piano
*Geoff Muldaur - Vocals, Slide Guitar
*Ronnie Barron - Vocals, Piano, Organ, Clavinet
*Christopher Parker - Drums
*Billy Rich - Bass
*Amos Garrett - Electric Guitar
Additional Musicians
*Bobby Charles - Vocals
*Maria Muldaur - Vocals
*Bobby Hall - Congas
*Howard Johnson - Horns

More from Paul Butterfield:
1970 The Butterfield Blues Band - Live

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Madura - Madura II (1973 us, splendid progressive jazz rock, 2007 remaster)



Madura was a 1970s rock/fusion band from Chicago, United States. After the break up of Bangor Flying Circus (1969), Alan DeCarlo and Hawk Wolinski formed Madura. Only one personal change was made: drummer Michael Tegza was replaced with one of the best renowned drummers in the world: Ross Salomone.

David "Hawk" Wolinski, previous Shadows of Knight member, Alan DeCarlo and Ross Salomone recorded two albums produced by the Chicago producer James William Guercio. Hawk Wolinski later became a member of Rufus and Chaka Khan, and a successful producer and songwriter. Alan DeCarlo and Ross Salomone both appeared on Chicago keyboard player Robert Lamm's 1975 solo album "Skinny Boy,".

Madura can be seen and heard live on a short concert scene in J.W. Guercio's movie Electra Glide in Blue (1973) playing a part of "Free From the Devil". This is also included on the soundtrack from the movie. David Wolinski also appears as an actor in the movie, playing the part of "David, the VW bus driver."

The band's name "Madura" was inspired by the Meenakshi temple in Madurai. Their second album (simply named II), recorded in 1972 and released early 1973 before the band split and each one of the members took their own road.


Tracks
1. Livin' in America (Madura, J.W. Guercio, T. Kath) - 5:04
2. Doctor Honornis Causa (Joseph Zauinul) - 8:25
3. I'm in the Mood for Love (Jimmy Mc Hugh, Dorothy Fields) - 1:39
4. If You Got the Dime (David Wolinski) - 4:10
5. First Time (David Wolinski) - 2:46
6. My Favorite Things (Richard Rogers, Oscar Hammerstein) - 2:26
7. Windy One (David Wolinski) - 3:45
8. Stagger Lee (H. Logan, L. Price) - 3:43
9. Save the Miracle (David Wolinski) - 4:24

Madura
*David "Hawk" Wolinski - Keyboards, Vocals
*Alan DeCarlo - Guitar, Vocals
*Ross Salomone - Drums, Vocals
Guest Musicians
*Terry Kath - Bass
*Robert Lamm - Piano
*Lee Loughane - Trumpet
*James Pankow - Trombone
*Walter Parazaider - Saxophone
*Wayne Shorter - Sax (Tenor)
*Joe Zawinul - Keyboards

1971  Madura
Related Act
1966  The Shadows Of Knight - Gloria
1965-70  Shadows Of Knight - Dark Sides
1968-69  The Shadows Of Knight - Shake! (2009 remaster)

Friday, February 24, 2012

Pesky Gee - Exclamation Mark (1969 uk, elegant psych jazzy brass rock, japan issue)



Now a mere footnote in '60s rock history, Leicester, England's Pesky Gee! are perhaps remembered more for the band that they became -- notorious Satan-worshipers Black Widow -- than for their actual music. Taking their name from a song in another local group's repertoire, Pesky Gee! were originally formed as a soul band before constant gigging slowly pushed them toward a more experimental and progressive style of rock & roll.

By 1968, the band consisted of Kay Garrett - lead vocals, Kip Trevor - vocals, guitar, harmonica, Chris Dredge - guitar, Clive Jones - saxophone, flute, Alan Hornsby - brass, Bob Bond - bass, and Clive Box drums, and had signed a deal with Pye Records. A cover of Vanilla Fudge's "Where Is My Mind" was chosen as their first single in March 1969, but when it failed to chart, both Dredge and Hornsby flew the coop, being replaced by guitarist Jim Gannon keyboardist Jess "Zoot" Taylor.

Wasting little time, this "new and improved" lineup managed to record Pesky Gee!'s cleverly titled first album, Exclamation Mark, in a single, one-night, four-hour session. Issued in June of the same year, the record sadly fared no better than their single, and the impatient Pye soon showed them the door.

Feeling that this particular incarnation had run its course, and simultaneously observing the general populace's growing fascination with forbidden topics like black magic and the occult, Pesky Gee! decided to re-invent themselves as a theatrically Satanic outfit by assuming the fittingly conspicuous name of Black Widow.
by Eduardo Rivadavia


Tracks
1. Another Country (R. Polte) - 7:37
2. Pigs Foots (Ben Dixon) - 4:39
3. Season of the Witch (D. Leitch) - 8:22
4. A Place of Heartbreak (M. Rabbitt) - 3:00
5. Where is My Mind (M. Stein) - 3:00
6. Piece of My Heart (J. Ragavoy, B. Burns) - 2:50
7. Dharma For One (Anderson Bunker) - 4:02
8. Peace of Mind (John Whitney, Roger Chapman) - 2:19
9. Born To Be Wild (M. Bonfire) - 4:20

Pesky Gee
*Jim Gannon - Guitar
*Jess Taylor - Organ
*Kay Garret - Lead Vocals
*Clive Jones - Saxophone
*Bob Bond - Bass
*Clive Box - Drums
*Kip Trevor - Vocals

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Thursday, February 23, 2012

Snakegrinder - And The Shredded Filedmice (1976 us, stunning guitar driving rural rock with progressive shades)



For two weeks before their first gig as The Larry Adams Band at the Rockford Park music festival on August 15th, 1970, the hastily assembled group of Larry, Steve Roberts, George Christie, John DiGiovanni, and Dave Bennett, labored to electrify 5 or 6 folky-type tunes in order to present them to an audience that was pretty much beyond the folk movement of the 60’s. After all, it was now the 70’s, exactly one year beyond Woodstock!

Larry, Steve, George, and John had recently emigrated from a failed musical adventure known as “George’s Lunch” (“Take us out or eat us here!”). Dave was found at Eat At Joes, a high school coffee house in a Newark church basement, where Larry and Steve had attempted a Hot Tuna-type set. The band he was in, “Pump Productions", had recently dissolved, as well.

The debut at Rockford Park was unspectacularly OK. However, after the band dragged their gear from the stage, stowed it in their vehicles and went back to being members of the audience, one of the cars was broken into and all of George Christie’s stuff was stolen. As everyone was too poor to own spare equipment, George was now, by default, out of the band. The performance that really got the audience truckin’ down the aisles that day, “Singin’ doo-dah, doo-dah, doo-dah”, came from Primeval Slime.

Over the next 5 years, the nucleus of four, Larry, Steve, John, and Dave, saw various others come and go. Among them were Eddie Day and Tommy Eppes, from Primeval Slime. Tommy learned to play the pedal-steel, left, and came back. Poor Eddie was run over by a train

One of the band’s biggest fans, George Wolkind, whom had never sung in performance, anywhere, was visited by the ghost of Eddie Day a few days after the tragedy and told George that he would take his place as lead singer of the band, in a year. As prophesied, a year after Eddie’s untimely end, with no knowledge of the disembodied communication, Steve and Dave asked Mr. Wolkind to join the band as lead singer. (Now, THAT was weird!)

So by 1973, the 6 members who comprised the band most folks knew just as “Snakegrinder”, finally got together. They were joined by Jon McDowell, Keeper of the Sound, and Nick Norris, business agent. Musically, the band played a mix of covers – mainly influenced by the west coast psychedelic movement, with a little South-southwest flavor - and some very idiosyncratic originals. (Many of which can be heard on the two CD set: “…and the Shredded Fieldmice”, available practically nowhere!) The band’s strength was their ability to improvise and jam. Coupled with their total lack of professional appearance, and their socio-political musical anarchism, they seemed to catch on with the burgeoning “alternative” community growing wild in the 70’s. The band became a staple at area coffee houses, festivals, and underground shows.

They were immensely popular with local Grateful Deadheads, usually drawing large crowds to the small venues they played. Bar owners weren’t all that enamored of the band, however, as the crowds never seemed to drink much in spite of their jubilant dancing and frequent trips to the parking lot. Snakegrinder was also a “musician’s band”. Many local area artists have testified to being influenced by the band, early on in their careers. (“Yes, your honor, it was all their fault.”) To their credit, there was never a paternity suit brought against any band member!

Unfortunately, the alternative community couldn’t support the band monetarily, and by August of 1975, Larry was ready for a new life. He left the area and started a real career. With one of the parts missing, the band, depending entirely on the inter-personal group dynamic of the members as the engine driving the music, could not go on.

In epilogue, the band announced the release of an album, recorded at Dana Smith's Quaudio Studio in Wilmington, Delaware in 1975 and 1976, of all original tunes, at the second of their annual Christmas reunions in 1976, at the Stone Balloon. They got back together twice after that, for public performances – the last was in 1988. Let it be noted, that the original vinyl LP has become a collector’s item. Mr. Alligator (their media producer) having sold an unopened copy and a used copy, several years ago to a dealer in Connecticut for $150 and $50, respectively. A few months ago, another copy of the LP sold on eBay for $250 to a gentleman in Japan.

Larry became Dr. Adams and is living in Bristol, England, supervising research data for the city’s schools. Musically, he's playing fiddle and involved in choral singing. Tommy Wayne (Eppes) has maintained a thriving career as a pedal-steel guitarist, centered in Las Vegas. John DiGiovanni is one the best known and sought-after local drummers and drum teachers, as well as a master electrician, gigging regularly with several bands, including The John DiGiovanni Quartet and Garry Cogdell and the Complainers.

George Wolkind is in Colorado communing with the spirit world. Dave Bennett went off to join a Mexican circus, playing tuba, after which he founded The Voltags in 1979. Currently, he is on a world tour of self-discovery and is residing in the Phillipines.

Steve Roberts plays with a 4 piece improv group, Accidents Will Happen, as well as collaborating with the legendary Hangnail Phillips, (we won't mention his association with the infamous ninja beatnik poet and musipeutician, Dick Uranus.) He is also vice-president of Inconsequential Films.

Jon McDowell, George Christie, and Steve all work together in the I.T. department of a large, local health care organization, disciplining computers.  Nick Norris successfully carried on in his management career and is the Operations Manager for CenterStaging Musical Productions' Pennsylvania facility. - "where artists go to work... before you see them play".

To quote the liner notes from their “posthumous” album – “We really weren’t sure where we were coming from and we were damn sure we didn’t know where we were going... but we needed the exercise so we bought a lot of heavy equipment and hauled it around. We got high, we got down, we played some music, we loved it, we hated it, we lost money, we gained friends, and we got older.”
Snakegrinder


Tracks
1. Love Junkie (Dave Bennett) - 6:44
2. Freedonian Hat Dance (Jesus Was a Plumber) (Adams, Snakegrinder) - 7:18
3. On the Road (And off Again) (Adams, Roberts, Bennett) - 5:15
4. Dogland (Fido Dustyaoffsky) - 1:07
5. Better Late Than Frozen (Steve L. Roberts) - 4:36
6. Nothing's Very Easy When Your Baby's in the Lake (Adams, Snakegrinder) - 13:59
7. Moon Over the Delaware (Gregor Alligator, Snakegrinder) - 1:41

Snakegrinder
*Dave Bennett - Keyboards, Mouth
*Larry Adams - Lead Guitar, Vocals
*Tommy Eppes - Rhythm Guitar, Pedal Steel, Percussion
*Jonathan McDowell - Sound System, Location Recording
*Steve L. Roberts - Bass, Acoustic Guitar, Vocals
*John DiGiovanni - Drums, Percussion
*George Wolkind - Vocals

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Wednesday, February 22, 2012

Liverpool Five - Arrive / Out of Sight (1964-67 uk, superb beat garage psych)



The Liverpool Five is one 1960s band that is ripe for rediscovery. The fact that they've slipped through a few cracks may have to do with their odd history -- after starting out in England, the quintet spent most of a year in Germany and touring the Far East and effectively became an American group just as their recording history began in a serious way.

Formed in Liverpool, England, in 1963, the original Liverpool Five lineup was Steve Laine on vocals, Ken Cox on guitar, Ron Henley on keyboards, Dave Burgess on bass, and Jimmy May on drums and vocals. They cut one single of "Lum D' Lum D' High" b/w "Good Golly Miss Molly" for the Pye Records budget Piccadilly label that was released in England, but their main base of activity in 1964 and 1965 appears to have been Germany and Asia, where their German-based manager kept them touring.

They managed to release a single of their own on German CBS in 1964 under the name of the 5 Liverpools, but otherwise were largely invisible as a recording act. After an extended tour of Asia, the group made their way to Los Angeles in 1965 and eventually ended up in Spokane, WA. Ironically, it was on the far coast of the United States, far from their home, that they were finally signed to a major label in 1965 and got a contract with RCA-Victor Records.

The Liverpool Five released a half dozen singles over the next two years and a pair of LPs, all of which displayed an extraordinary degree of musical dexterity -- they could sound as American as the Remains or the Standells in their approach to playing, a solid garage punk sound with some unusual melodic touches and then turn around and cut cockney novelties like "What a Crazy World (We're Living In)" or romantic rock ballads like their version of Curtis Mayfield's "That's What Love Will Do," where they sound like the Roulettes, and follow that with a shouter like "Just a Little Bit." Dave Burgess exited the group to get married in 1967 and was replaced by future Kingsmen member Freddie Dennis; Ron Henley left and was replaced first by Mark Gage and then by Gary Milkie, but the group soldiered on, scarcely skipping a beat.

The band never charted nationally, but left behind some superb white soul sides that managed to embrace both American punk and British beat elements, before they finally called it a day in 1970. The Liverpool Five Arrive is one of the best garage-punk albums of 1966, with a startlingly honest and vivid soulful edge (highlighted by a beautiful handful of Curtis Mayfield covers) amid the fuzz-tone guitars and pounding, roaring rhythm section. Its follow-up, Out of Sight, is even better, with harder playing and better singing, laced with some unexpected lyricism.
by Bruce Eder


Tracks
1.She is Mine (Burgess, Cox, Henley, Laine, May) - 2:21
2. Sister Love (C. Mayfield) - 2:39
3. I am Not Your Stepping Stone (T. Boyce, B. Heart) - 2:33
4. A Shot of Rhythm and Blues (T. Thompson) - 2:03
5. Let the Sunshine In (Barberis, Randazzo, Weinstein) - 3:26
6.What a Crazy World (We are Living In) (A. Klein) - 2:14
7. That is What Love Will do (To You) (C. Mayfield) - 2:06
8. Just a Little bit (D. Gordon) - 2:11
9. Hey Little Girl (C. Mayfield) - 2:14
10. I Just Cant Believe It (Barry, DeVorzon, B. Chandler) - 2:09
11. Sticks and Stones (T. Tuner) - 2:10
12. Heart (Clark, Aber, Hatch) - 3:27
13. Any Way That You Want Me (Chip Taylor) - 2:35
14. My Generation (P. Townshend) - 2:55
15. Piccadilly Line (Laine Henley, Cox, McCumiskey, May) - 2:47
16. I Can Only Give You Everything (T. Scott., V. Morrison, P. Coulter) - 2:36
17. Baby, Out of Sight (Laine Henley, Cox, McCumiskey, May) - 2:10
18. Gotta Get a Move On (J.S. Jones) - 2:30
19. She is (Got Plenty of Love) (Stephen Jones) - 2:34
20. Do You Believe (Laine Henley, Cox, McCuxniskey, May) - 3:17
21. The Snake (Oscar Brown Jr) - 2:38
22. I Am Your Hoochie Coochie Man (W. Dixon) - 5:05
23. Get Away (M. Porig, C. Porig) - 2:05
24. Everything is Allright (Stavley, Konrad) - 2:06
25. That is What I Want (Carter, Lewis) - 2:11
26. New Directions (Mann, Muggs) - 2:41

Liverpool Five
*Steve Laine - Vocals
*Ken Cox - Guitar
*Jimmy May - Drums
*Ron Henley - Keyboards
*Dave Burgess - Bass
*Freddy Dennis - Bass

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