Sunday, 3 April 2011
Steve Miller Band. Seven albums 1968 - 1972
Steve Miller had been playing blues in Chicago before he moved to San Francisco in 1967. He formed the Steve Miller Band there, and recorded his first album in 1968 in his typical psychedelic blues-rock style. This album, "Children of the Future", was followed by "Sailor", "Brave New World", "Your Saving Grace" and "Number 5" (1970). These albums from his first period show his music becoming mature although there is not much stylistic experimentation.
Album 6, "Rock Love", shows a change in style, but it is a very uneven album. Number 7: "Recall the Beginning...A Journey from Eden" (1972) is brilliant, I think. It's really a statement that closes this period off and gives a glimps of what is to come in the following albums (1973 - 1977 "The Joker", "Fly like an Eagle" and "Book of Dreams"): smoother, lighter, more pop oriented and with a lot of hit potential.
Go to the page of the month March (etinet) for links to the first seven albums.
Thursday, 10 March 2011
The Albion Band -1978 - Rise Up Like The Sun
The Rotterdam folk festival in 1978 (3)
One of the best bands in that festival was The Albion Dance band. I bought a couple of their albums then, and there is one I consider to be among the best electronic folk albums of the 1970's.
I conclude the short series of folk albums with this one. Almost forgotten, and the CD is again out of print. It took me several weeks to get a second hand copy. But here it is.
Ashley Hutchings could be called the father of British electric folk, having founded both Fairport Convention and Steeleye Span. His next project, the Albion Band, explored new directions with a theater show of folk and dance, and was called the Albion Country Band, The Albion Dance Band, and finally simply the Albion Band.
This album was recorded while the band were still playing shows in the National Theatre in London. A nine persons band, with Ashley Hutchings, Dave Mattacks and Simon Nicol, the rhythm section of Fairport's 1969 Liege & Lief album laying a solid foundation. Add a second drummer, Michael Gregory, a second gitarist Graeme Taylor (formerly of Gryphon), early music expert (and classical conductor) Phil Pickett on bagpipes and wind instruments, (Soft Machine) violist Ric Sanders, synthesizer and sax by Pete Bullocks and finally actor-singer-composer John Tams with his melodeon, and that's a band with an impressive musical ability. Of course that is no guarantee, but it worked out very well. Among the many guests on the album are Martin Carthy, Kate McGarrigle and Richard and Linda Thompson.
PS I had some direct links to an mp3-music player here, but they caused IE to hang. So I had to remove them. Still looking for a better alternative. Until then: sorry.
One of the best bands in that festival was The Albion Dance band. I bought a couple of their albums then, and there is one I consider to be among the best electronic folk albums of the 1970's.
I conclude the short series of folk albums with this one. Almost forgotten, and the CD is again out of print. It took me several weeks to get a second hand copy. But here it is.
Ashley Hutchings could be called the father of British electric folk, having founded both Fairport Convention and Steeleye Span. His next project, the Albion Band, explored new directions with a theater show of folk and dance, and was called the Albion Country Band, The Albion Dance Band, and finally simply the Albion Band.
This album was recorded while the band were still playing shows in the National Theatre in London. A nine persons band, with Ashley Hutchings, Dave Mattacks and Simon Nicol, the rhythm section of Fairport's 1969 Liege & Lief album laying a solid foundation. Add a second drummer, Michael Gregory, a second gitarist Graeme Taylor (formerly of Gryphon), early music expert (and classical conductor) Phil Pickett on bagpipes and wind instruments, (Soft Machine) violist Ric Sanders, synthesizer and sax by Pete Bullocks and finally actor-singer-composer John Tams with his melodeon, and that's a band with an impressive musical ability. Of course that is no guarantee, but it worked out very well. Among the many guests on the album are Martin Carthy, Kate McGarrigle and Richard and Linda Thompson.
- Ragged Heroes - Poor Old Horse - Afro Blue / Danse Royale - Ampleforth / Lay Me Low - Time To Ring Some Changes - House In The Country - The Primrose - Gresford Disaster
- Bonus tracks:
- The Postman's Knock - Pain And Paradise - Lay Me Low - Rainbow Over The Hill
- With all scans, no cue-sheet, separate tracks as flac. My rips and scans.
PS I had some direct links to an mp3-music player here, but they caused IE to hang. So I had to remove them. Still looking for a better alternative. Until then: sorry.
Monday, 21 February 2011
Alan Stivell - live at the Olympia 1972
The Rotterdam folk festival in 1978 (2)
Alan Stivell played the final of this festival. Electric, electrifying, eclectic, superb harp playing by Stivell himself, great organ by Pascal Stive, and if Dan Ar Braz did not play the guitar (I do not remember) the guitarist was as good as he is.
I planned to upload both this album and the 1973 "from Celtic Roots", but that one happened to be posted a couple of days ago on phrockblog. Anyway "Live a l'Olympia catches the spirit of that night in Rotterdam perfectly.
Alan Stivell played the final of this festival. Electric, electrifying, eclectic, superb harp playing by Stivell himself, great organ by Pascal Stive, and if Dan Ar Braz did not play the guitar (I do not remember) the guitarist was as good as he is.
I planned to upload both this album and the 1973 "from Celtic Roots", but that one happened to be posted a couple of days ago on phrockblog. Anyway "Live a l'Olympia catches the spirit of that night in Rotterdam perfectly.
- Alan Stivell - 1972, Live a l'Olympia
- A: The wind of Keltia / An dro / The trees they grow high / An alarch's / An durzhunel / Telenn gwad / The foggy dew
- B: Pop plinn / Tha mi sgith / The king of the fairies / Tri martolod / Kost ar c'hoad / Suite sudarmoricaine
- with scans, cue
- Tri Martolod was used (sampled) in a French Top Ten hit a couple of years ago. I forgot the name. Maybe someone recognizes it.
Wednesday, 16 February 2011
Gypsy - s/t and In the Garden (1970/71)
Some albums just appear at the wrong moment. The music might be excellent, but when it does not get enough attention, it is all over. Some years are so crammed with excellent records, that some very good music might hardly be noticed. 1970 was such a year, and the album almost nobody now ever heard of is the eponymous debut album of Gypsy. They were the house band for eight months in the 1969-1970 season of The Whiskey A Go Go in West Hollywood. A five piece band with multi-instrumentalists and three singers. They sure must have been a very good live band.
The first album was a double album, and a single taken from it (Gypsy Queen part I and II) even entered the Billboard top 100. The new name of the band (they were the Underbeats), the titles of the album and the single, it all feels very planned as if marketing was certain they had found future superstars. They were wrong. The post-hippie psychedelic, proto-prog sound, with strings added later by the producer, two lead guitars, sometimes sounding like CSNY, then like Santana: it is sometimes beautiful and exciting but it lacks focus.
I really think they would have struck it big with a better producer. But the first album is still very, very good, and so is the second (except for a rather boring drum solo).
CD's are rather difficult to find. Here in Europe they were reprinted on the for me obscure (German) Walhalla label, and I have only found one shop in Munich that still sells them. They made two more albums, but I have not yet seen them for sale. Rips with cues and partial scans (from a torrent) - use the code of the month.
The first album was a double album, and a single taken from it (Gypsy Queen part I and II) even entered the Billboard top 100. The new name of the band (they were the Underbeats), the titles of the album and the single, it all feels very planned as if marketing was certain they had found future superstars. They were wrong. The post-hippie psychedelic, proto-prog sound, with strings added later by the producer, two lead guitars, sometimes sounding like CSNY, then like Santana: it is sometimes beautiful and exciting but it lacks focus.
I really think they would have struck it big with a better producer. But the first album is still very, very good, and so is the second (except for a rather boring drum solo).
CD's are rather difficult to find. Here in Europe they were reprinted on the for me obscure (German) Walhalla label, and I have only found one shop in Munich that still sells them. They made two more albums, but I have not yet seen them for sale. Rips with cues and partial scans (from a torrent) - use the code of the month.
- Gypsy - 1970
- Gypsy Queen - Part One / Gypsy Queen - Part Two / Man Of Reason / Dream If You Can / Late December / The Third Eye / Decisions / I Was So Young / Here In My Loneliness / More Time / The Vision / Dead And Gon / Tomorrow Is The Last To Be Heard
- In the Garden - 1971
- Around You / Reach Out Your Hand / As Far As You Can See (As Much As You Can Feel) / Here (In The Garden) Part One / Here (In The Garden) Part Two / Blind Man / Time Will Make It Better
Thursday, 10 February 2011
John Barleycorn / John Renbourn
John Barleycorn (must die), as a song, is very nice. Everybody will have heard it at least once, I guess. It was popularised by Traffic on the album "John Barleycorn must die". Steve Winwood has arranged it as a kind of lament about the death of John Barleycorn.
Traffic, John Barleycorn (must die). 1972.
It is also a very strange and macabre song. Dating back to at least the 16th century it tells the story of the growth and harvesting of barley (the grain used to make beer and whiskey) in an allegorical way. The barley has become a person, John Barleycorn, who is ritually murdered by three kings, dismembered and buried in a field, only to grow up again in the spring.
This allegory must have survived hundreds of years before it was first written down in the 16th century. It is a survival of Indo-European pre-christian beliefs and practices: the ritual sacrifice of people. Victims have been found preserved in peat deposits and bogs throughout northern Europe. They suffered the so called threefold killing: the victims have been stabbed, strangled and drowned. The practice was widespread through Europe: Julius Caesar wrote in De Bello Gallico about sacrificial victims that were burned inside a large haystack. Similar practices by Slavs or Russians have been found by archeologists and have even been described by an eyewitness, a 10th century Muslim traveller to Kiev.
But the song is not a lament, it is story telling that might even be called cheerful. Maybe that is why, of the many versions I have heard, that I really like the version by the John Renbourn Group. It is bright, you can almost dance to it, and the arrangement is very clever, almost like a canon.
John Renbourn, a classically trained guitarist with interest in Early Music, started playing jazz/blues/folk music in the 60's, shared an appartment and already recorded with Bert Jansch, before they started The Pentangle. After the break up of Pentangle, John toured with Jacqui McShee and three other musicians, calling themselves the John Renbourn Group. They recorded two studio and one live album, very fine and refined music.
For d/l, again use code zcxkas.
Traffic, John Barleycorn (must die). 1972.
It is also a very strange and macabre song. Dating back to at least the 16th century it tells the story of the growth and harvesting of barley (the grain used to make beer and whiskey) in an allegorical way. The barley has become a person, John Barleycorn, who is ritually murdered by three kings, dismembered and buried in a field, only to grow up again in the spring.
This allegory must have survived hundreds of years before it was first written down in the 16th century. It is a survival of Indo-European pre-christian beliefs and practices: the ritual sacrifice of people. Victims have been found preserved in peat deposits and bogs throughout northern Europe. They suffered the so called threefold killing: the victims have been stabbed, strangled and drowned. The practice was widespread through Europe: Julius Caesar wrote in De Bello Gallico about sacrificial victims that were burned inside a large haystack. Similar practices by Slavs or Russians have been found by archeologists and have even been described by an eyewitness, a 10th century Muslim traveller to Kiev.
But the song is not a lament, it is story telling that might even be called cheerful. Maybe that is why, of the many versions I have heard, that I really like the version by the John Renbourn Group. It is bright, you can almost dance to it, and the arrangement is very clever, almost like a canon.
John Renbourn, a classically trained guitarist with interest in Early Music, started playing jazz/blues/folk music in the 60's, shared an appartment and already recorded with Bert Jansch, before they started The Pentangle. After the break up of Pentangle, John toured with Jacqui McShee and three other musicians, calling themselves the John Renbourn Group. They recorded two studio and one live album, very fine and refined music.
- A Maid in Bedlam (1977)
- Black Waterside / Nacht Tanz - Shaeffertanz / A Maid in Bedlam / Gypsy Dance - Jews Dance / John Barleycorn / Reynardine / My Johnny Was a Shoemaker / Death and the Lady / The Battle of Augrham - Five in a Line / Talk About Suffering
- Remastered as Castle CMRCD1247 in 2004
- flac, cue, scan
- The Enchanted Garden (1980)
- Belle Qui Tient Ma Vie-Tourdion / The Truth From Above / Le Tambourin / The Plains Of Waterloo / The Maid On The Shore / Douce Dame Jolie / A Bold Young Farmer / Sidi Brahim
- Reissued on CD as Shanachie SH 79074 in 1990
- Beautiful collection of medieval, renaissance and folk music, with some interesting Indian flavours.
- flac, scans, cue
- Live in America (1981)
- Castle CMRCD1247 - 2005 Remaster
For d/l, again use code zcxkas.
Saturday, 5 February 2011
Fungus - Fungus (1974)
The Rotterdam folk festival in 1978 (1)
It is hard to imagine now, but in the 70's Folk (Rock) was so popular in the Netherlands, that each year the Rotterdam Folk Festival was held in a weekend in June in the prestigious classical concert hall "De Doelen" in Rotterdam. It had three podia: one in the lobby, one in the small hall that was usually reserved for chamber music, and one in the big hall where the podium is big enough for a 120 person symphony orchestra.
I think it was 1978 that I went there. Very little can be found about it on the Internet, so this is mainly from my memory. The last evening the programme in the main hall had Fungus, the Albion (Dance) Band, and Alan Stivell. There were other bands, but I do not remember the names.
Fungus
Let's first focus on Fungus. It was the first Dutch folkrock band, a five man band founded by singer Fred Piek. The first album with mostly traditional songs: Fungus - s/t (1974, Negram) was their biggest success. The A side contained Dutch songs and instrumentals, the B-side English material. Fred Piek sounds a little like Dave Swarbrick IMO, so it is interesting to compare the Fungus version of Poor Ditching Boy with the Fairport Convention version.
"Kaap'ren Varen" from this album was a minor hit in the Netherlands. It's a well known children's song about the Flemish pirates from Dunkirk. And although it is called a traditional, the music is probably early 20th century.
Three more albums followed but they never had the success of the first. By 1978 they struggeled on as a trio, and in 1979 the band made a farewell album and called it a day. Fred Piek continued with a duo, the "Amazing stroopwafels", that scored another hit with Oude Maasweg (Manhatten Island Serenade).
Albums
I have not been able to find much image material, here is a newsclip from Dutch television (Fungus and Bots - Popfestival Nederlandse lied - 1976):
and another, Oude Maasweg (Manhatten Island Serenade) by Amazing Stroopwafels (1982):
For d/l, again use code zcxkas.
It is hard to imagine now, but in the 70's Folk (Rock) was so popular in the Netherlands, that each year the Rotterdam Folk Festival was held in a weekend in June in the prestigious classical concert hall "De Doelen" in Rotterdam. It had three podia: one in the lobby, one in the small hall that was usually reserved for chamber music, and one in the big hall where the podium is big enough for a 120 person symphony orchestra.
I think it was 1978 that I went there. Very little can be found about it on the Internet, so this is mainly from my memory. The last evening the programme in the main hall had Fungus, the Albion (Dance) Band, and Alan Stivell. There were other bands, but I do not remember the names.
Fungus
Let's first focus on Fungus. It was the first Dutch folkrock band, a five man band founded by singer Fred Piek. The first album with mostly traditional songs: Fungus - s/t (1974, Negram) was their biggest success. The A side contained Dutch songs and instrumentals, the B-side English material. Fred Piek sounds a little like Dave Swarbrick IMO, so it is interesting to compare the Fungus version of Poor Ditching Boy with the Fairport Convention version.
"Kaap'ren Varen" from this album was a minor hit in the Netherlands. It's a well known children's song about the Flemish pirates from Dunkirk. And although it is called a traditional, the music is probably early 20th century.
Three more albums followed but they never had the success of the first. By 1978 they struggeled on as a trio, and in 1979 the band made a farewell album and called it a day. Fred Piek continued with a duo, the "Amazing stroopwafels", that scored another hit with Oude Maasweg (Manhatten Island Serenade).
Albums
- 1974 - Fungus
- A-side: Kaap'ren Varen / Madlot-Schoenmaker / De Ruiter / Rijke Boer / Langbonken-Mieghimmels* / Garrenkwak
- B-side: Farewell To Tarwathie / Irish Girl / Two Brethren / Farewell to Whiskey / The Poor Ditching Boy** / Ye Mariners All
- All songs traditional, except * Sido Martens and ** Richard Thompson
- d/l Fonus Lp-5248, with scans and cue.
- 1975 - Lief ende Leid
- 1976 - Van de Kiel naar Vlaring
- 1977 - Mush-rooms
- 1979 - De Kaarten zijn Geschud (farewell album)
- 2000 - The Fungus Collection (the first 4 albums on 2 CD's: still available from Fred Piek's website).
I have not been able to find much image material, here is a newsclip from Dutch television (Fungus and Bots - Popfestival Nederlandse lied - 1976):
and another, Oude Maasweg (Manhatten Island Serenade) by Amazing Stroopwafels (1982):
For d/l, again use code zcxkas.
Monday, 31 January 2011
Bert Jansch in the 60's
Some of my Bert Jansch Albums |
His albums 1965-1970.
- 1965 – Bert Jansch
- First released on Transatlantic as TRA 125 in April 1965.
- Strolling Down the Highway / Smokey River / Oh How Your Love is Strong / I Have No Time / Finches / Veronica / Needle of Death / Do You Hear Me Now? / Rambling’s Gonna be the Death of Me / Alice’s Wonderland / Running From Home / Courting Blues / Casbah / Dreams of Love / Angie.
- Castle Music CMRCD204 2001 remaster also includes two previously unreleased bonus tracks: Instrumental Medley 1964 / Angie (Live) 1964.
- The Castle Release in the download area: flac, partial scans, cue.
- 1965 – It Don't Bother Me
- First relased on Transatlantic as TRA 132 in December 1965.
- Oh My Babe / Ring-A-Ding Bird / Tinker’s Blues / Anti Apartheid / The Wheel / A Man I’d Rather Be / My Lover / It Don’t Bother Me / Harvest Your Thoughts of Love / Lucky Thirteen / As The Day Grows Longer Now / So Long (Been On The Road So Long) / Want My Daddy Now / 900 Miles
- Castle Music CMRCD205 2001 remaster in the download area: flac, no scans, no cue.
- Beverley Martyn is the girl on the front cover.
- 1966 – Jack Orion
- First released on Transatlantic as TRA 143 in September 1966.
- The Waggoner’s Lad / The First Time Ever I Saw Your Face / Jack Orion / The Gardener / Nottamun Town / Henry Martin / Blackwaterside / Pretty Polly.
- Castle Music CMRCD304 2001 remastered. In the download area: flac, no scans, no cue.
- 1966 – Bert And John (with John Renbourn)
- First released on Transatlantic as TRA 144 in September 1966.
- A short album with mostly instrumentals: East Wind / Piano Tune / Goodbye Pork Pie Hat / Soho / Tic-Tocative / Orlando / Red’s Favourite / No Exit / Along The Way / The Time Has Come / Stepping Stones / After The Dance.
- The Wooden Hill CD of 1996 has 6 bonus tracks: The Waggoner's Lad / Lucky Thirteen / In This Game / Dissatisfied Blues / Hole in the Cole / Bells. See download area for those bonus tracks.
- The Castle Music CMRCD304 2001 remaster has no bonus tracks. In the download area as flac, with scans and cue.
- Has always been one of my favourite albums. The cover shows Bert and John playing go, one of my favourite games.
- 1967 – Nicola
- First Released on Transatlantic as TRA 157 in July 1967.
- Go Your Way My Love / Woe is Love My Dear / Nicola / Come Back Baby / A Little Sweet Sunshine / Love is Teasing / Rabbit Run / Life Depends on Love / Weeping Willow Blues / Box of Love / Wish My Baby Was Here / If The World Isn't There
- Castle Music CMRCD333 2002 remastered includes 2 bonus tracks: In This Game / Dissatisfied Blues. In the download area as flac, with scans, cue.
- Nicola was his girlfriend in those days.
- 1969 – Birthday Blues
- First Released on Transatlantic as TRA 179 in January 1969.
- Come Sing Me A Happy Song To Prove We All Can Get Along The Lumpy, Bumpy, Long And Dusty Road / The Bright New Year / Tree Song / Poison / Miss Heather Rosemary Sewell / I've Got A Woman / A Woman Like You / I Am Lonely / Promised Land / Birthday Blues / Wishing Well / Blues
- Castle Music CMRCD334 2001 remastered. In the download area as flac, with scans, cue.
- A solo record in the Pentangle period. Heather was his girlfriend / wife whom he married in October 1968 .
John and Bert's cooperation evolved into Pentangle. John brought in Jacqui McShee, and later Terry Cox and Danny Thompson to their concerts, but it was Bert's idea to start as a group. Pentangle's first concert was in May 1967. Soon they were too big for the folk clubs, and started playing in concert halls.
I bought the first three albums, but after a couple of years I sold them again - had listened to them too often and I was short of money. Incredible, with hindsight, because they are really of the "must have" category.
Originally Pentangle was contracted by Transatlantic. The band earned very little or no money from the TRA albums, because their manager was rather careless about the rights.
With Pentangle 1968-1970:
- May 1968 - The Pentangle (TRA 162)
- A rather short album in the original version
- Remastered in 2001. Castle CMRCD131, includes some additional tracks: "Koan", "The Wheel", "Casbah" and four alternate takes of other album tracks.
- November 1968 - Sweet Child (TRA 178), a double album
- The first LP is live, the second a studio album
- The 2001 Castle CMDDD132 remaster contains 6 extra live tracks and 4 studio bonus tracks.
- October 1969 - Basket of Light (TRA 205)
- Remastered as Castle CMRCD207 in 2001. Contains 4 bonus tracks.
- November 1970 - Cruel Sister (TRA 228)
- Various CD versions exist, the remastered version is Castle CMRCD206. No bonus tracks.
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