martes, 14 de julio de 2020

UMBRA - Umbra [USA hard psychedelic rock 1971-72] 2018 Lion Productions LION 692

What was available to unknown hard rocking dreamers like Umbra in Denver in 1971-72? Weekend gigs. Nothing but weekend gigs. But there was an upside to that: bands like Umbra could mix original material in with covers, and make enough money to survive. Or in the case of Umbra, to make enough money to build a home studio, where they recorded ads to promote their upcoming shows—and eventually, laid down the eight tracks on this disc. Everything was recorded by bouncing tracks back and forth between two-track and four-track reel-to-reel tape recorders. Spacey intros and weird effects were created by recording guitar licks, then re-recording them played backwards at double speed. What sounds like a flute was the result of blowing over the top of a 14” goose neck (believe it or not).

The resulting tracks are hard edged and heavy, verging on acid rock at times. Makes sense, as Umbra was a power trio most of their too-brief existence. Yet the songs (heavy though they are) have a deft touch. There are weird effects, space rock elements, plenty of melody, and a refreshing category-free approach to writing songs that makes Umbra’s music exciting to hear.

NAZZ - Evolution: From Woody's Truck Stop to Nazz 1966-1968 [USA garage psychedeli 1966-68] 2018 RockBeat Records ROC-3406


Woody's Truck Stop came together in Philadelphia, in late May 1966. As young teens, drummer Bob Radeloff and guitarist Alan Miller had been active in a folk group that played in the local area. Miller and Radeloff soon were adding drummer Artie Heller and bassist Carson Van Osten to form a group of their own, heavily inspired by electric blues acts like the Paul Butterfield Blues Band and the Blues Project, as well as Chess blues artists and British blues-rock groups like the Yardbirds. Inspired by a variety of British Invasion groups, from the omnipresent Beatles to cult favorites the Move, Todd Rundgren and his Woody's Truck Stop colleague Carson Van Osten formed The Nazz in 1967. Taking their name from an obscure Yardbirds song, The Nazz were arguably the first Anglophiles in rock history.  This is a compilation of late-60’s demos, alternate takes and unreleased compositions of Todd Rundgren and The Nazz.  Songs include “Hello It's Me”, “Open My Eyes”, “Some People”, “Forget All About It”, “Only One Winner”, “Magic Me”, “The Lemming Song”, “Crowded”, “Meridian Leeward”, and nine others.  With only three LPs recorded in their existence, this Nazz collection delivers the goods to satisfy the tastes and curiosities of their hardcore fanbase.  Essential for all Nazz/early Todd Rundgren fans!

NORTH COUNTRY ROCK ASSOCIATION - Sampler [USA psychedelic rock 1973] Nut House Records VC 5083


This is the one and only North County Rock Association (No. Country Rock Assn. ) Sampler, VC 5083 Original 1973 1st and limited edition pressing on Nut House records.   The North County Rock Association and Nut House records were a California musical community centered around Dick Callahan.

THE TAMBLES - Don't You Want To Know [Netherlands garage, power pop 2019] Bickerton Records BR026


Get ready for one of the rock'n'roll sensations of the year. They're young, they're handsome, they're extremely talented and soon they'll be one of your fave bands.

This young quartet hailing from Gouda, Holland, blew our minds as soon as the first song of this, their debut album started with their refreshing, energetic and insolent blend of powerpop, pub-rock, r'n'b and rock'n'roll with their roots in 60's and 70's music but with a very personal and contemporary sound.

Bikerton Records

TRACKS - The Very Best of Tracks 1969-1974 [USA rock, progressive, psychedelic 1969-1974] 1991 Boston Skyline BCD 111


Not to be confused with Bowie guitarist Earl Slick's 1972 group on Capitol Records or a late-'70s Boston punk band fronted by Lori Doll, this Tracks reigned between 1969 and 1974 and had the distinction of being produced by Wayne Wadhams, lead singer of the Fifth Estate (which hit with "Ding-Dong! The Witch Is Dead" in 1967). Along with a unique version of Dylan's "All Along the Watchtower," this ensemble comes up with a real sleeper in the tune "Pawnbroker" -- a strong, methodical ballad featuring great vocals and interplay from the guitar and keyboard that put it in a league with the legendary Modern Lovers. "Bottleneck" is another excellent track, recorded by producer Wadhams at the prestigious Orson Welles Film School outside of Harvard Square where Willie "Loco" Alexander and Walter Powers created their post-Velvet Underground tapes in 1974. Wadhams' March 1991 liner notes on this treasure help put things in perspective, though the four-page booklet and highly informative back cover are all the press record collectors are likely to find on a band that hardly got the attention of the aforementioned Modern Lovers or, for that matter, Aerosmith, the Sidewinders, Moulty & the Barbarians, Seatrain, or Barry & the Remains. "Expecting to Find You Gone" and "Whistling in the Dark Together" sound like the kind of music the Rowan Brothers were trying to make for Clive Davis in 1972, Peter Rowan emerging from Seatrain and Earth Opera during the time this Tracks was making noise. The band was perhaps a bit too progressive to grab the underground chic enjoyed by Andy Paley's Sidewinders or Jonathan Richman's musings -- and with "Mexican Bird" not being a hit single, there would be no resurgence like the Barbarians' track "Moulty" received on the Nuggets collection (come to think of it, Tracks' producer did have a hit, yet never got that all important Nuggets stamp of approval). A song like "Lethargy" would have most likely remained forever in obscurity without this Boston Skyline compilation bringing it and other selections back into circulation. The Very Best of Tracks is not your typical artifact from the days before New England's new wave movement, but it is quite a find.

viernes, 10 de julio de 2020

LES LORDS - Les Lords 1979-1980 [France mod revival 1979-80] 2013 Sam Play, Vinyl Vidi Vici Records SAM002, VVV006



French Mod Band from Caen / tracks never issued 1979-1980 / First publising on VinylVidiVici Rds & Sam Play Rds 2013 France.

BARRY MELTON - Bright Sun Is Shining [USA west coast rock 1970] 1992 Vanguard, fnac music 662128


Guitarist Barry Melton entered music in his teens, in San Francisco, as a member of the Instant Action Jug Band, which was where he met Country Joe McDonald, a singer and guitar player who was also putting out an underground newspaper called Rag Baby. The two worked together on some of McDonald's recordings in support of his political journal, and out of that linkup they decided to form a band -- the resulting group was christened Country Joe & the Fish. Melton's lead guitar -- a searing psychedelic assault on the strings -- was as essential a part of the group's three classic albums as McDonald's voice. Amid numerous personnel changes, especially after the third album, Together, Melton and McDonald formed the stable core of the band, which lasted into the late '60s. Melton held the group together after McDonald withdrew from full-time work with the group to get married, and he brought ex-Big Brother & the Holding Company members Peter Albin and David Getz aboard when they were left high and dry after Janis Joplin's split with the band. Working as Barry "The Fish" Melton, he continued as a solo act through the 1970s and into the 1980s, also fronting the Barry "The Fish" Melton Band.

JESSE COLIN YOUNG - On The Road [USA rock 1976] 2008 Forever Young WPCR-75432 - Japan


On a series of solo albums, Jesse Colin Young had developed a strong musical rapport with a group of players including drummer Jeff Myer, keyboard player Scott Lawrence, and especially horn man Jim Rothermel, whose flute and soprano sax lines duetted with Young's tenor vocals. Adding David Hayes (one of several bassists who had appeared on his studio releases) and his wife Suzi on harmonies, Young produced this excellent live album, on which he mixed Youngbloods favorites ("Sunlight") with some of his better solo material ("Peace Song," a 12½-minute version of "Ridgetop") and some well-chosen covers (a medley of Marvin Gaye's "What's Going On" and "Mercy Mercy Me (The Ecology)," Randy Newman's "Have You Seen My Baby") for a varied program that emphasized his eclectic talents.

domingo, 5 de julio de 2020

LEA RIDERS GROUP - The Forgotten Generation [Sweden garage, rock 1966-68] 1998 Garageland Records GRCD032


The Lea Riders Group weren't the best Swedish band of the '60s, but in a field crowded by imitators of British Invasion acts, they were one of the most original. Their shining moment was their 1968 single "Dom Kallar Oss Mods," one of the standouts on the psychedelic volume of the original Pebbles series, with a grinding guitar riff and birdcall blasts of guitar distortion backing the garbled English-Swedish lyrics of failure and alienation. Nothing else they did was nearly up to that level of inspired psychedelic madness, although they did release five singles between 1966 and 1968 (all of their other songs were entirely in English). Guitarist and singer Hawkey Franzen wrote virtually all of their material, which pursued a jagged rock-blues line and some petulantly rebellious lyrics ("But I Am and Who Cares?" and "The Forgotten Generation" were a couple of his more memorable titles). A pretty strange group in the context of mid-'60s Sweden, they nonetheless didn't have the vocal or compositional talents of the best (if more conventional) Swedish rock bands. Their records weren't bad, but are now mostly notable for their curiosity value.

RASPBERRIES - Pop Art Live [Recorded live at House of Blues,Cleveland, Ohio - November 26, 2004] 2017 Omnivore Recordings OVCD-229


The Raspberries may not have been the best American power pop band of the '70s -- that honor would go to Big Star -- but they were likely the most influential, by virtue of the fact they had actual hit singles. "Go All the Way," "I Wanna Be with You," "Tonight," and "Let's Pretend" were brilliant ear candy in a time when crunchy guitars, close harmonies, and British Invasion-style pop hooks were in short supply on the charts, and their body of work has held up remarkably well since they broke up in 1975. While plenty of bands with lesser credentials have made a career out of playing the sheds and fairs each summer, the Raspberries have opted not to cash in on their past glories, thanks in part to Eric Carmen's solo career. But in 2004, the original Raspberries lineup -- Carmen on vocals, guitar, and piano, Wally Bryson on guitar and vocals, David Smalley on bass and vocals, and Jim Bonfanti on drums and vocals -- reunited for a short string of dates, including a sold-out show in their hometown of Cleveland. Pop Art Live documents that Cleveland show, and anyone who figured these guys might be phoning it in after close to 30 years gets shut down right out of the gate. Here, the Raspberries merge the superb craftsmanship of their classic recordings with the sweat and muscle of a crack band having a great time. While a few ringers were on-stage to help re-create some of the studio arrangements, the core of the band still sounds vital and eager to rock the house, and they fill the set list with classic hits, deep album cuts, and relevant covers, even throwing in a couple of tunes by Bryson, Smalley, and Bonfanti's early band the Choir. On Pop Art Live, the Raspberries manage to sound enough like their old records to satisfy casual fans as they add enough energy and grit to set this apart for the truly obsessed, and the recording and mix capture it all beautifully. This won't (and shouldn't) replace the Raspberries' classic albums in your collection, but if you want to know how this great band sounded in front of an audience, this is just what you've been waiting for.

THE DEGRADS - The Degrads [USA punk rock, power pop 1983] 2015 Cameleon Records, Double legs Records CAME 23, DL-007


The Degrads LP Rochester, NY circa 1983. A bunch of youngsters get together to make some joyful noises. Bits of punk, bits of power pop, bits of cheap art, a touch of Chuck Berry, and many tongues stuck deep into cheeks, all stapled together in pure DIY mode. They sing about science ("Transposable DNA"), politics ("Car Conspiracy"), society decadence ("Don't Play Rock'n'Roll Music") and love ("I Don't Care if She Smells"). "I Saw Bobby Sobbing in the Lobby" would have been at home on Bomp. "What's My Problem?" belongs to the same world as Swell Maps' "Read about Seymour". "Fun with a Porpoise" shows a strong Doors influence. "Do I Sound like This?" even deserves a garage tag. The Degrads' sound was a patchwork, but remains coherent. They wrote forty originals in the two years they were together: now ten of them are graved in wax to be enjoyed on your home hi-fi. The band later evolved into The Silly Pillows, before guitarist Sam Elwitt turn up in the Sea Monkeys (among others). His latest work is producing and backing up Miriam Linna on her excellent solo material.

viernes, 3 de julio de 2020

GOLDEN EARRING - Seven Tears [Netherlands rock, hard rock 1971] 2001 Red Bullet RB 66.204


Seven Tears finds Golden Earring continuing to develop its distinctive blend of hard rock and prog elements, but the end result is not as consistent as 1970's Golden Earring. The big problem this time out is that the group's adventurous genre-hopping tendencies don't always result in strong songs: "Silver Ships" is a soft, science fiction-influenced song that generates a potent atmosphere but lacks the strong arrangement and sense of dynamics that would allow it to take flight, and "You're Better Off Free" loses sight of its catchy tune with a lengthy midsection guitar jam that derails an otherwise interesting song. Despite these problems, Seven Tears shows a band willing to take big risks to transform its combination of elements into a totally unique style. When this alchemy works, the results are quite good: "The Road Swallowed Her Name" effectively blends a heavy guitar riff worthy of Black Sabbath with psychedelic lyrics and percussion, and "Hope" generates the down-and-out feeling of its lyrics with a descending saxophone riff guaranteed to stick in the listener's head. The album's highlight is "She Flies on Strange Wings," an art rock epic that combines verses done in a stomping, heavy metal style with spacy choruses and a slow, dreamy midsection that is strongly reminiscent of Pink Floyd. Overall, Seven Tears is more like a collection of songs than a fully realized album, but there are enough strong moments to make it worthwhile for hardcore Golden Earring fans.


NICODEMUS & MATCHEZ - Toxic Crunch [USA psychedelic 1999] 2013 Orion Read OR 11


Nicodemus and Matchez are Detroit's undisputed masters of biker-synth-folk-psych and Toxic Crunch is perhaps their definitive recording. Released in 1999 on cassette on their own Zedikiah label, the legendary duo is in fine form - Matchez' classic Rat Bros studio production sounds like no other and St. Nic's gravelly pipes rival Dr. John and Beefheart on funky fucked odes to livin' free, escaping the electric chair and the joys of morning wood. Tip-on sleeve by Stoughton. Original sleeve art by Chongo.

SELMI'S - Beginning [France psychedelic rock 1974] 2017 Cameleon Records CAME51


Beginning is a mega rare French DIY psychedelic rock LP from 1974, featuring Michel "John" Selmi with his wife (Nanou Soumagnas) and a friend (Thierry Audebert). 

This totally original and innovative album showcases many influences.