Joni, Neil and Tull, plus more; continuing to explore the golden era of the Warner catalog The exploration of Warner during the early 70’s continues- we are going to look at Joni Mitchell (briefly) during this era, with one under-rated “pick” from me. We are also going to pay some attention to a few of the early Neil Young recordings that are hardly obscure, but are great musically, along with a few notes on pressings. Finally, and as part of a more elaborate write-up, we will be doing a “shoot-out” among the various pressings of Tull’s Aqualung in my possession. (I... Read More
Tull, Aqualung: A Shoot-Out (Forthcoming)
I have mixed emotions about this album for several reasons- it has moments of greatness, but is not my all-time favorite Tull album (if I had to pick one, it would probably be Stand Up, released in the UK on the Island pink label, reviewed here). It is also not a great recording. Which is why I wound up with so many pressings of Aqualung over the years, including UK and U.S. (on Reprise here in the States), a fairly rare set of Classic Records copies cut at 45 rpm on both “Clarity” and Quiex “black vinyl” (I believe these were originally sent out to reviewers as partial sets with a... Read More
Early Neil on Reprise
Neil Young is another polarizing figure, musically. It took me time to cozy up to him, and the albums I come back to now are his early solo records on Reprise: Everybody Knows This is Nowhere, After the Gold Rush and Harvest. These are, in my estimation, essential early Neil on Reprise. Everybody Knows This is Nowhere has some hits that remained in Young’s repertoire for decades, including “Down by the River,” “Cowgirl in the Sand” and “Cinnamon Girl.” My copy is an early 1A pressing. After the Gold Rush has more, including “Southern Man.” There is a fair amount... Read More
Joni Mitchell- Reprise, Asylum
Yes, she is legendary. And somewhat polarizing- some find nothing that draws them in, and even among fans, there is no consensus on her best work- Blue is recognized as her major folk work, Court and Spark for breaking barriers into pop and Hejira as a high point in her art. (Like I said, you’ll find little consensus among listeners- and part of this may be due to the range and diversity of her work as well as the large body of studio albums). Ms. Mitchell recorded for Reprise, Asylum and, for a period, on Geffen’s eponymous label. Her peak years, commercially (if not artistically)... Read More
Early Eagles- First Album and Desperado
Somewhere between “Dylan” and “Elvis” on my shelves rest quite a few albums by a band called “Eagles.” Though the song “Hotel California” from the album of the same name, an anthem of the excesses of modern West Coast life, is probably what comes to mind when you mention the band, the first two albums– Eagles, and Desperado, are something quite different. (I play Hotel California about as often as I play Stairway to Heaven. Neither represents the breadth of these bands or their roots, but those are the songs to which their legacy attaches). The... Read More
Jackson Browne- the first three albums
As a singer-songwriter, Jackson Browne had an impressive run in the early 70’s. Though his career extended long after that and included albums later in the decade that sold even better than these, the first three albums—Jackson Browne (a/k/a “Saturate Before Using”), For Everyman, and Late for the Sky captured something very essential. I’m going to focus on these early records, for now. The first album is a goldmine of great songs that can be listened to, from front to back, as an “album” should. It has the hit “Doctor My Eyes,” as well as the Browne-penned... Read More
LISTENING TO RECORDED MUSIC: A RUMINATION
The Internet has democratized many things, including the ready availability of music and information about it. It has also changed how we listen to music: from hardware to software to new formats and delivery platforms. Despite my preference for things analog, I support these changes if only because they give artists (performers and songwriters) the ability to reach more audiences and hopefully, in the process, to make some return on their work. One of the chief complaints about mass-market music delivery is that as technology has improved, sound quality (and consumer’s... Read More
Little Feat-The Lowell George Era
Man, these guys really did it for me back in day. Hard driving boogie, with a Zappa-esque twist. Lowell George, Roy Estrada (on the first two albums) Richie Hayward and the incredibly funky keyboard chops of Bill Payne. There were few bands that could pull this off- a sort of unpolished, but “right in the groove” sound, any looser and it would fall apart but these guys were tight. The first album, with the Lowell George-penned “Willin’” may be the rawest of the bunch- not a fabulous recording, but lot’s of good songs: “Truck Stop Girl” takes the standard big rig lament to... Read More
Van Morrison- The Early Albums
Van Morrison is a quixotic character, even by the standards usually applied to artists- a mercurial personality who has had some huge radio hit songs, but performs publicly with great reluctance; a man who created new paths for “soul” music and R & B who hails from Belfast and revels in his Celtic roots; an artist whose most critically acclaimed work was, for decades, far less commercially successful than the “pop” tunes for which he is most often recognized. My introduction to Van Morrison’s work began with four albums released between 1970-72: Moondance, His Band and the... Read More
Bonnie Raitt- The Early Albums
I was first introduced to Bonnie Raitt’s music through her second album, Give It Up at the time of its release in 1972. I still consider this to be one of her great ones: It has a diverse range of songs, from soul searching laments over lost love (“Nothing Seems to Matter”; If You Gotta Make a Fool of Somebody”; “Love Has No Pride”) to 1920’s style blues (“You Gotta Know How”), to bouncing rockers, (“Give It Up or Let Me Go”; “You Told Me Baby”) as well as a cover of Jackson Browne’s “Under the Falling Sky.” Bonnie’s voice was clear and sweet, and this... Read More
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