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Monday, June 22, 2026

rep>>> Tim Hardin - Painted Head (1972 us, elegant passionate psych folk, japan remaster)



A gentle, soulful singer who owed as much to blues and jazz as folk, Tim Hardin produced an impressive body of work in the late '60s without ever approaching either mass success or the artistic heights of the best singer/songwriters. 

When future Lovin' Spoonful producer Erik Jacobsen arranged for Hardin's first recordings in the mid-'60s, Hardin was no more than an above-average white blues singer, in the mold of many fellow folkys working the East Coast circuit. By the time of his 1966 debut, however, he was writing confessional folk-rock songs of considerable grace and emotion. The first album's impact was slightly diluted by incompatible string overdubs (against Hardin's wishes), but by the time of his second and best LP, he'd achieved a satisfactory balance between acoustic guitar-based arrangements and subtle string accompaniment. 

It was the lot of Hardin's work to achieve greater recognition through covers from other singers, such as Rod Stewart (who did "Reason to Believe"), Nico (who covered "Eulogy to Lenny Bruce" on her first album), Scott Walker (who sang "Lady Came From Baltimore"), Fred Neil ("Green Rocky Road" has been credited to both him and Hardin), and especially Bobby Darin, who took "If I Were a Carpenter" into the Top Ten in 1966. 

Beleaguered by a heroin habit since early in his career, Hardin's drug problems became grave in the late '60s; his commercial prospects grew dimmer, and his albums more erratic, although he did manage to appear at Woodstock. 

In 1973 he released a totaly different album, one of his rarest and most interesting recordings.  For such an accomplished songwriter to record an album of all covers always makes for a compelling project.  Hardin doesn’t disappoint on this 1973 album.  The covers are esoteric and show his various influences from Randy Newman to Jesse Winchester with nods along the way to Willie Dixon and Badfinger.  It looks strange on paper, but he makes it work. 

His end was not a pretty one: due to accumulated drug and health problems, as well as a scarcity of new material, he didn't complete any albums after 1973, dying of a drug overdose in 1980. 
by Richie Unterberger


Tracks
1. You Can't Judge a Book by the Cover (Willie Dixon) - 4:12
2. Midnight Caller (Pete Ham) -3:09
3. Yankee Lady  (Jesse Winchester) - 4:27
4. Lonesome Valley (Traditional) - 4:29
5. Sweet Lady (Ralph Dino, John Sembello) - 3:47
6. Do the Do (Willie Dixon) - 4:20
7. Perfection (Pete Ham) - 3:03
8. Till We Meet Again (Neil Sheppard) - 3:13
9. I'll Be Home (Randy Newman) - 5:43
10.Nobody Knows You When You're Down and Out (Jimmy Cox) - 6:38

Musicians
*Tim Hardin – Vocals, Guitar, Keyboards
*Peter Frampton – Guitar
*Don Brooks – Harmonica
*Rebop Kwaku Baah – Percussion, Conga
*Tony Carr – Percussion
*Alun Davies – Guitar
*Tristan Fry – Vibraphone, Background Vocals
*Cissy Houston – Background Vocals
*Liza Strike – Background Vocals
*Bobbie Whitaker – Background Vocals
*Dennis Lopez – Percussion
*Tony Meehan – Organ, Piano, Percussion, Chimes, Drums, Vibraphone, String, Horn, Choir, Woodwind*Rod Murfield – Percussion
*Larry Packer – Fiddle
*Alan Ross – Guitar, Mandolin
*Jean Roussel – Organ, Piano, Keyboards
*Bruce Rowland – Drums
*Jeff Schwartz – Pedal Steel Guitar
*Neil Shepherd – Piano, Harmonium
*Chris Stewart – Bass
*Twenty-First Century Singers – Choir

1969-70  Suite For Susan Moore / Bird On The Wire

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rep>>> Velvet Opera - Ride A Hustler's Dream (1969 uk, fascinating psych blended with exotic folk bluesy rock, 2004 akarma reissue)



Are you a sleeve-thumbing album snob? Are you at this very instant, hurtling through all the LPs in the rack marked "Groups'7 pausing only to gloat over American imports,  and rejecting lesser-known British efforts with an oath? Velvet Opera are a lesser-known British group.

Nobody would hail them as a "super group" yet, and they aren't releasing a double album in a platinum sleeve designed to reap them a billion dollars and are the praise of the Underground scene-whoever they are. Velvet Opera are the kind of group that make up the backbone of the British band scene. They maintain the high standards of a singularly competitive field, which, in recent years has produced some of the most exciting and rewarding music this side of 1900.

They are concerned with music and with getting ahead of the competition. They have worked extremelyhard on producing an album that entertains and allows them full rein to play the kind of things THEY enjoy. It is my opinion they achieve both aims. Originally the band were featured as Elmer Gantry and the Velvet Opera, and released a successful album under this name last year.

Now Elmer has left them over a disagreement on musical policy and this is the group's first recorded indication of the direction they wish to take on their own. Between Johnny Joyce (lead vocals, acoustic and electric guitars), Paul Brett (lead vocals, acoustic and electric guitars), John Ford (bass) and Richard Hudson (drums, sitar and tabla), they have a tremendous store of musical ammunition.They manage to cover an enormous amoun of territory, from country style/to blues rock and ragas.

Yet strangely, each trad flows into the other without too mucf adjustment of ear drums being necessaryIt shows how much our appreciation o different styles has been widened over the years by the efforts of band like the OperaListening to the high humour and energy o "Raga (And Lime)" it is obvious they mear everything they play. "Eleanor Rigby" is thei major tour de force.

I thought it was c number relatively played out over the years but the Opera work up a new excitemen over those dramatic, mood chordsParticularly impressive here is the speed drumming of Richard Hudson and the powerful guitars of John and Paul. Much of the material is self-written however and thi is always vital to establishing a truly origina sound and making a real contribution to modern group music.

"Supergroup... underground"? Perhaps not, but how man of those people are REALLY together when you analyse a lot of the product under this banner? Velvet Opera are more together than most. This album contains lots of good things. So don't be an album snob and point this one at the deck.
by Chris Welch


Tracks
1. Ride A Hustler's Dream (Paul Brett) - 0:57
2. Statesboro Blues (Blind Willie McTell) - 3:39
3. Money By (Paul Brett, Richard Hudson, John Joyce, John Ford) - 3:56
4. Black Jack Davy (John Ford) - 3:35
5. Raise The Light (Hudson, Paul Brett) - 4:09
6. Raga (Richard ) - 5:29
7. Anna Dance Square (Paul Brett, John Ford) - 3:01
8. Depression (John Ford) - 4:01
9. Don't You Realize (Paul Brett, Richard Hudson, John Joyce, John Ford) - 3:37
10. Warm Day In July (Paul Brett) - 5:06
11. Eleanor Rig by (John Lennon, Paul McCartney) - 5:54
12. She Keeps Giving Me These Feelings (Dave McTavish) - 2:39
13. There's A Hole In My Pocket (Dave McTavish) - 3:45

Velvet Opera
* Paul Brett - Lead Guitar, Vocals
* Richard Hudson - Drums
* John Joyce - Acoustic Guitar, Vocals
* John Ford - Bass

Related Acts
Paul Brett's Sage 1970 (2007 Japan Remaster)

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