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Prog Britannia - Album Reviews

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dr wu23 View Drop Down
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (1) Thanks(1)   Quote dr wu23 Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 16 2020 at 11:35
There might be a few here you want to look at...not all British

another list


Edited by dr wu23 - February 16 2020 at 11:38
One does nothing yet nothing is left undone.
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Psychedelic Paul Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 16 2020 at 11:45
Originally posted by dr wu23 dr wu23 wrote:

There might be a few here you want to look at...not all British

another list
Thanks! Exploring those two lists of hidden album gems should keep me busy for awhile. Smile


Edited by Psychedelic Paul - February 16 2020 at 11:46
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Psychedelic Paul Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 17 2020 at 09:25
GILGAMESH - Gilgamesh (1975)
 
 
Album Review #106:- 3 stars GILGAMESH (named after a legendary Sumerian king of Mesopotamia) were a two-album Canterbury Scene band led by keyboard player Alan Gowen. Gilgamesh are closely associated with two other Canterbury Scene bands from the proggy 1970's era: Hatfield & the North and National Health, with various band members migrating from one band to another. Gilgamesh recorded two mostly instrumental albums of complex Jazz Fusion:- "Gilgamesh" (1975) and the comically-titled "Another Fine Tune You've Got Me Into" (1978), the album title no doubt inspired by the comic duo Laurel & Hardy. There was also a much later compilation album "Arriving Twice" which arrived once in the year 2000. It's time now to delve into the not-so-ancient musical legend of Gilgamesh and check out their first self-titled album.
 
The Gilgamesh album opens with the three-piece-suite: "One End More / Phil's Little Dance - For Phil Miller's Trousers / Worlds Of Zin". With a total running time of over ten minutes in this opening number, there's plenty of time for a wild excursion into typical experimental Canterbury Scene territory. It's mostly laid-back instrumental Jazzy music, focusing mainly on keyboards, electric guitar and delicate understated percussion, with occasional harmonising vocals courtesy of Amanda Parsons. This dynamic and ever-changing style of inventive Jazz Fusion will be instantly recognisable to fans of Hatfield & the North and National Health, so even if you've never heard this particular Gilgamesh album before, listening to this album on the record player will sound as comfortably familiar as wearing a comfy woolly sweater or donning a pair of fluffy carpet slippers that have been warmed-up by the fire. Having been introduced to the album, it's now time to meet "Lady and Friend", which opens as a tranquil keyboard piece to put one in a relaxed frame of mind, but be prepared for the occasional outburst of strident electric guitar when you least expect it. This is like the kind of cool Jazz you might hear played in a cocktail lounge, only this endlessly entertaining music comes shaken and stirred with a slice of lemon and a cherry on top. Notwithstanding the fact that the complex instrumental Jazz on this album has so far been as enigmatic as the mysterious legend of Gilgamesh, "Notwithstanding" takes us into even wilder exotic realms of musical experimentation, which will no doubt leave fans of the Canterbury Scene sound  awestruck in amazement at the musical proficiency on display here. For the uninitiated though, this may be one step beyond what is enjoyable or even listenable.
 
Arriving at Side Two now comes "Arriving Twice", a short and sweet, pleasant stroll along the mellow Canterbury Scene trail. We come to the second of the three extended three-piece-suites on the album now with "Island Of Rhodes / Paper Boat - For Doris / As If Your Eyes Were Open". It's a seven-minute pleasure cruise opening in calm waters, but with occasional large waves in the shape of dynamic keyboard and guitar runs. This is music that should come supplied with a windbreaker and a sou'wester hat, as it's a constantly changing fusion of Jazz and Rock, charting an unpredictable course through some choppy windswept waters. It's time now to spare a thought "For Absent Friends", a gentle acoustic guitar diversion running at just over one minute long, and we're all at sea again with the final three-piece suite "We Are All / Someone Else's Food / Jamo And Other Boating Disasters - From The Holiday Of The Same Name." There are no real surprises in store here. It's a very familiar 8-minute-long pleasure trip aboard the good ship Canterbury for another weird and wonderful excursion into the outer reaches of complex Jazz Fusion. To play us out now comes "Just C", a 45-second-long gentle tinkling of the keyboards to put one in a relaxed and mellow frame of mind.
 
This Canterbury Scene album of experimental Jazz Fusion will almost certainly appeal to fans of Hatfield & the North and National Health, so even if you've never heard this album before, you'll know exactly what to expect from Gilgamesh if you're at all familiar with those two legendary bands of the  Canterbury Scene. If you've already headed up the Great North Road to the sound of Hatfield & the North and picked up a prescription for National Health on the way, then Gilgamesh would make an ideal third stop-off point on the musical journey along the Canterbury Scene trail. 
 
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Psychedelic Paul Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 18 2020 at 08:40
STEEL MILL - Green-Eyed God (1972)
 
 
Album Review #107:-  5 starsSTEEL MILL were forged in the foundry in the industrial heart of London way back in 1969. The five-piece band recorded their one and only album "Green-Eyed God" with a sense of iron will and determination and the album first emerged from the steel works in 1972. Unfortunately, the album failed to set the music world alight in a blaze of fire and steel and the band quickly melted away into the suburbs of London just as suddenly as they'd appeared. And so, without further ado, let's have a listen to the eight heavy metal songs that Steel Mill hammered out on the anvil during their brief moment in the spotlight.
 
It's not quite heavy metal thunder and lightning with the opening number "Blood Runs Deep", but it's not far off. This is a storming Jazz-Rock song with a heart of iron, featuring a pounding and pulsating rhythm section and with a sassy saxophonist rampaging throughout in a blaze of  pulverizing high-decibel fire and steel. The band Steel Mill have forged a powerful opening to "Green-Eyed God" which is sure to leave the Prog Gods green-eyed with envy. Although this record might play on the turntable at the rather sedate speed of 33 and a third - just like any other L.P. - there's enough latent power contained within the groove to send it spinning right off the turntable at 99 R.P.M.! As the much-missed D.J. legend Alan 'Fluff' Freeman would say, "Alright? Not 'arff!!" If "Blood Runs Deep" was a heavy dose of solid steel, then the second song "Summer's Child" is more like a lightweight aluminium siding. It's a beautiful ballad floating wistfully along on a delicate gentle breeze of woodwind and soothing electric guitar, which also features some gorgeous heavenly harmonies from the ethereal choir. The heartfelt lyrics from the impassioned singer deserve a brief mention too:- "Summer's child, Smiles and feeds me, Autumn loves try to please me, Older now, in your silence, Better day of less violence, Winter's child, says she needs me." ..... This is melancholy prog at its absolute best! We're off to meet "Majo and the Laying of the Witch" for our third encounter. This song Rocks! It's an 8-minute-long monster mash featuring a pounding and percussive sonic blast of Psychedelic Rock with wild vocals and a simply sensational saxophone solo adding to the raw energy of this storming rocker. This spooky song resembles that other supernatural Halloween favourite "Season of the Witch", only "Majo and the Laying of the Witch" is injected with a huge boost of extra adrenalin and frenetic energy. We're on the "Treadmill" for our fourth song, which opens as a typical prison chain-gang chant in the style of "We're working on the chain gang, Huh!" You get the picture. We don't stay on the "Treadmill" for long though as we're off on another wild ride aboard the crazy train for a psychedelic Jazz-Rock excursion, which resembles early Van der Graaf Generator in places, only without the over-wrought vocals of Peter Hammill.
 
We're off to meet the jolly green giant now for the title track "Green-Eyed God", which opens as a pastoral woodwind piece, sounding a bit like an Indian peace pipe. This song definitely has an eastern mystical air to it, at least to begin with, although that first impression is soon shattered by a very western outburst of heavy electric guitar riffing in powerful combination with a storming saxophonic solo and a solid punching rhythm section, which is then followed by a brief return to the Indian pipes of peace for the tranquil conclusion. The storming middle section is a chunk of  solid iron ore and the song as a whole is a steel-eyed Rock Monster! "Green-Eyed God" represents an outstanding album highlight which is about as close to heavy metal as you can get without actually BEING Heavy Metal. It's time to "Turn the Page Over" now for our sixth song. It's a fairly laid-back number with a catchy melody, featuring some gorgeous guitar soloing and lovely harmonies to match. It's the most commercially appealing song on the album which is more of a good all-round Pop song than some of the earlier storming hard rockers on the album, and that's all for the better too, where variety is the spice that makes for a great album. After all, too much heavy metal thunder and lightning in one sitting can be like a sonic assault on the tender eardrums, but then again, the thought of unleashing a non-stop Sonic Attack never stopped Hawkwind in their tracks. In a solid steel album full of highlights, the seventh song "Black Jewel of the Forest" is a diamond gem. This primal and unearthly song is a real witches brew, featuring tribal drums, a pastoral flute and hauntingly atmospheric vocals throughout. The overall impression is of some sinister witches coven meeting somewhere deep in the dark woods, and so, in the immortal words of Sergeant Phil Esterhaus (Michael Conrad) of Hill Street Blues, "Let's be careful out there", because you just never know what might be lurking deep in the darkest recesses of the forest at midnight during a full moon on the night of Halloween. The album closes beautifully now with the charming  "Har Fleur", a lovely, short and sweet instrumental woodwind piece which sounds as pretty as a French flower!
 
Steel Mill have produced a stainless steel rust-proof album of gleaming chrome with "Green-Eyed God". This rare solid state album of bright shining steel will be like a nugget of gold to prog collectors as it truly is a one-off album. It's really stood the test of time too at nearly half a century old and there's not a speck of rust to be seen anywhere!

 


Edited by Psychedelic Paul - February 18 2020 at 08:53
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BUDGIE - Never Turn Your Back on a Friend (1973)

The 11-minute-long album highlight below, "Parents", is just a temporary measure until the full  album flutters into view on YouTube. Smile
 

Album Review #108:-  5 stars  BUDGIE were a Welsh power trio from Cardiff who apparently chose the ironic name Budgie for their band name, simply because the delicately sweet sound of a twittering budgie represented the complete antithesis to their particular brand of storming Hard Rock and Heavy Metal thunder. Budgie first took flight with the eponymously-titled "Budgie" album in 1971, followed swiftly by "Squawk" in 1972. It was with their third album though "Never Turn Your Back on a Friend" (1973), where Budgie really spread their wings and displayed their magnificently colourful plumage, in what is generally regarded as their finest album. The line-up for this album was:- Burke Shelley - bass & lead vocals; Tony Bourge - guitars & backing vocals; and Ray Phillips on drums. The colourful fantasy art work for the cover of Budgie's third album - reviewed here - was designed by album art supremo Roger Dean. The 2004 re-mastered CD edition added three bonus tracks to the original seven songs on the album. Following this album, Budgie produced four more albums from their perch during the 1970's:- "In for the Kill" (1974); "Bandolier" (1975); the deliberately misspelled "If I Were Brittania I'd Waive the Rules" (1976); and the amusingly-titled "Impeckable" (1978). This Welsh band obviously weren't short on ironic humour when it came to naming their albums. It's also worth mentioning that the three classic MCA albums from the years 1973-1975 are available in a budget Budgie box set. Most of Budgie's albums also featured a picture of a budgerigar on the cover in some comically abstract form or another. Budgie weren't quite ready to retire and go home to roost at the end of the 1970's, because with a change of line-up they recorded three further albums in the early 1980's:- "Power Supply" (1980); "Night Flight" (1981); and "Deliver Us from Evil" (1982). Budgie went their separate ways and flew off in different directions after that 1982 album, but they were set to make an amazing comeback 24 years later when they undertook a gruelling 35-date tour of the United Kingdom alongside the release of  their final album to date: "You're All Living in Cuckooland" (2006). The band obviously hadn't lost their ironic sense of humour in the intervening 24 years.

We're taking flight with "Breadfan", although this song is nothing to do with being a fan of the soft rockers, David Gates & Co. No, this song is all about our obsession with money ("Bread" being British slang for money). If you've never heard the sound of Budgie before, then all the Signals are that you'll sure be in for a big surprise when you hear the high-pitched vocals of Burke Shelley for the first time. He could certainly give Geddy Lee of Rush a good run for his money (or for his "bread") when it comes to hitting those helium-induced high notes. A budgerigar might be a sweet little songbird, but the band Budgie are like a Fly By Night stealth bomber swooping down with Permanent Waves of raw power and supersonic energy, leaving behind  long streaming Vapor Trails in its wake. There's no need to Test for Echo with "Breadfan", because this is reverberant, full-Power Windows-rattling Hard Rock! There's a surprisingly gentle Caress of Steel in the Grace Under Pressure middle section of the song, but Hold Your Fire though, because Hey Presto, this only serves as a stopgap before another thunderous blast of Roll the Bones Rock & Roll for the storming conclusion. Budgie and their Canadian Counterparts Rush might be Hemispheres apart geographically, but their hard rockin' music is remarkably similar in style. This timeless Hard Rock has the kind of longevity and long-lasting appeal where new fans in a new century might be listening to Rush and Budgie on their Internet space pods - complete with Moving Pictures - as faraway as the year 2112, when we've possibly said A Farewell to Kings and we have a new world order. Who knows what the future will bring!? Such are the Snakes & Arrows of outrageous fortune where Clockwork Angels fear to tread!

The second song on the album "Baby Please Don't Go" will be very familiar to Rock fans everywhere because it was most famously recorded by Van Morrison's  "Them" way back in 1964. It's a powerhouse Blues-Rock number thundering along at 100 miles per hour and with the singer sounding like he's flying high as a kite (or a budgie) again, having seemingly taken a good deep breath of helium beforehand to help him really reach those high notes. In complete contrast, the third song "You Know I'll Always Love You" is a beautifully romantic, acoustic guitar ballad, just as the song title implies. The normally high-pitched vocals of Burke Shelley are toned down by at least an octave here as he plaintively wears his heart on his sleeve with these touching heartfelt lyrics:- "Sun and moon and sky above me, These are things I treasure most, Sun that lights my way goes on and on and on, Simple things will not be lost, You know I'll always love you, No matter where you are, Feel it all around you, My love will travel far, Sea of grass and earth below me, These are things I treasure most." ..... Beautiful! "You Know I'll Always Love You" is just as emotionally appealing and heart-wrenching as Whitney Houston's similarly titled "I Will Always Love You", although Budgie's romantic twittering offering is more likely to appeal to prog fans than Whitney's warbling. Cue drum roll for "You're the Biggest Thing Since Powdered Milk" in which drummer Ray Phillips is the biggest thing since John Bonham and Keith Moon, if this stunning opening drum solo is anything to go by. This pounding percussive intro serves as a prelude for another fast and furious artillery ballage of heavy metal fire and thunder. This 1973 album was recorded back in the days when Budgie might well have been the biggest thing since powdered milk, if they hadn't been up against such high and mighty screaming eagles of Hard Rock such as Black Sabbath, Deep Purple, Led Zeppelin and Uriah Heep, to name just four major bands of the era. Sadly, Budgie never quite managed to soar up into the stratospheric heights of the major big league players during the 1970's, despite releasing a whole string of good solid Rock albums.

From the sublime to the ridiculous comes "In the Grip of Tyre-Fitters Hand", although the silly title is no reflection on the music. Budgie are all tooled-up and ready for another powerhouse performance, although the lyrics are nothing to do with a Kwik-Fit Fitter changing tyres. Who knows what the cryptic lyrics are about, but one thing's for sure, it's another sonic explosion of hard and heavy pile-driving Rock that barrels on ahead like a runaway steamroller. After that storming opening to Side Two, it's time for some light relief with the gentle and melodious ballad "Riding My Nightmare", proving that Budgie have many more musical feathers to their cap than relentlessly hammering out blocks of solid Hard Rock. The laid-back relaxed mood continues - at least to begin with - as we arrive at the outstanding closing number "Parents", a luminescent high-beam highlight of the album that even your parents might like. This 11-minute-long masterpiece is one of those outstanding epic songs that grips you right from the outset as it gradually gathers in intensity towards a tremendous crescendo of glorious sound for the magnificent finale. A truly awesome song that'll stay in the memory forever and ever and have you returning to this album again and again, hopefully!

It's easy to see why Budgie's "Never Turn Your Back on a Friend" is generally regarded as their magnificent magnum opus. In common with many other bands, Budgie have reached their artistic peak (or artistic beak) and achieved their maximum potential with their stunning third album. If you like the sound of Rush, then you might want to rush out and buy this Budgie album too - if you can still get hold of it -  because both bands sound remarkably similar, particularly in regard to the high-flying vocals. You may have noticed there's a none-too-subtle album titles tribute to Rush contained within the second paragraph of this review. Not much has been heard of Budgie since the early 1980's - apart from their one-off 2006 album which barely caused a flutter in the music world - but you can probably still find them on Twitter.

 



Edited by Psychedelic Paul - February 22 2020 at 06:56
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Psychedelic Paul Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 20 2020 at 15:25
I'm just dropping by to say I'll be taking a break from album reviewing for a short time while I listen to and give "ratings only" to all of Camel's albums, some of which I've never listened to before. The next album review will be for the one and only self-titled 1974 album by Refugee with Patrick Moraz.
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Psychedelic Paul Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 23 2020 at 16:12
CAMEL - Album Ratings Only:-
 
4 stars Camel (1973)
5 starsMirage (1974)
4 stars The Snow Goose (1975)
5 starsMoonmadness (1976) -
5 starsRain Dances (1977)
5 starsA Live Record (1978) 
4 stars Breathless (1978)
4 stars I Can See Your House from Here (1979) 
5 starsNude (1981)
3 starsThe Single Factor (1982)
4 stars Stationary Traveller (1984)
5 starsPressure Points - Live in Concert (1984)
4 stars Dust and Dreams (1991)
4 stars Harbour of Tears (1996)
5 starsRajaz (1999)
4 starsA Nod and a Wink (2002)
4 starsThe Snow Goose Re-Recorded (2013)
 
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Psychedelic Paul Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 24 2020 at 06:18
REFUGEE - Refugee (1974)
 
The full Refugee album isn't currently available, so here's their epic 18-minute-long magnum opus "Credo" as a temporary substitute.
 
 
Album Review #109:- 5 stars REFUGEE were a short-lived Symphonic Prog threesome from London. You could be forgiven for thinking Phil Collins was a member of Refugee, because the man in the middle on their one and only self-titled album cover from 1974 bears a striking resemblance to the Genesis drummer. There's no mistaking Swiss keyboard player Patrick Moraz on the right of the album cover though. He was brought in as a last-minute  replacement for Keith Emerson, who was otherwise engaged with the Prog-Rock supergroup Emerson, Lake & Palmer at the time. The other two members of Refugee besides Patrick Moraz were both ex-members of The Nice:- Lee Jackson on bass, electric cello, electric guitar, 12-string acoustic guitar and lead vocals, and Brian Davison on drums and percussion, where "percussion" meant virtually anything the versatile drummer could lay his hands on, including tympani, various gongs, Tibetan temple bells, African drums, kabassa (whatever that is!?) and broken glass! Patrick Moraz wasn't exactly slacking in the keyboards department either with this very impressive array of keyboard instruments at his disposal:-  Mini-moog, AKS synthesiser, piano, electric piano, clavinet, organ, pipe organ, marimbaphone, alpine horn, electronic slinky, mellotron, and occasional vocals too! Patrick Moraz would of course go on to be a member of YES and a "days of future passed" member of The Moody Blues. Who could forget the famous music trial of the century!? The sole Refugee album was recorded in 1974 at ART Studios in Geneva in Patrick Moraz' native Switzerland, so he would have felt right at home there, whereas the two English members of the band, Lee Jackson and Brian Davison were temporary "refugees".
 
The title of the imperious 5-minute-long opening number "Papillon" can have several meanings:- Either a black butterfly; a symbolic breaking free of societal restraints and restrictions; or even a toy breed of dog with large butterfly-like ears! One thing's for sure though, the "Papillon" on this album is no delicate butterfly. No, this is an aggressive and impressive Pictures at an Exhibition-style display of powerful keyboard prog in the best tradition of Emerson, Lake & Palmer. There's no shortage of classically-inspired, lightning-speed keyboard runs to be heard from Patrick Moraz in this tremendous instrumental album opener, which also features a storming salvo of machine-gun-like drumming from Brian Davison. Yes,  it looks like we could be in for quite a treat here with this gloriously pompous one-off album of unashamedly exhibitionistic Symphonic Prog. On the second song "Someday", We get to hear the emotionally-wrought (and some might say "over-blown") vocals of Lee Jackson for the first time, which also features another incredible keyboard performance from Patrick Moraz before he went on to join YES for their "Relayer" album in late 1974. "Someday" is one of those grand magisterial prog epics that gathers in pace and intensity as it progresses, so it could be described as the true definition of Progressive Rock. If "Papillon" represented a symbolic breaking-free, then "Someday" continues the theme of liberation with the powerful message contained within these lyrics:- "Someday, I'll go away, Pack my bag, Get on a plane, I'll fly up through my cloud, I'll smash right through, Right into the sun." ..... This is the kind of powerfully uplifting feel-good prog that'll leave you flying high on a wave of joyous and exhilarating emotion. If you haven't quite reached seventh prog heaven yet, then the third piece of music might help get you there, because next up is the awesome 17-minute-long, "Grand Canyon" suite, the first of two epic suites on the album. This magnificent five-part magnum opus is every bit as grandiose and spectacular as the song title implies. Be prepared to be stunned by this brilliant landscape of dazzling musical colours. The outstanding "Grand Canyon" suite represents the musical equivalent of the real Grand Canyon bathed in rich golden colours at sunset.
 
The title of the Side Two opener "Ritt Mickley" is a humorous reference to the strong Swiss accent of Patrick Moraz when he pronounces "rhythmically". It's another 6-minute-long demonstration of ELP-style keyboard prog at it's absolute best, so you can expect another dazzling display of keyboard histrionics from Mr Moraz & Co. The final piece of music on the album is the second of the two epic suites. It's a thunderous 18-minute-long masterpiece titled "Credo". The majestic music is divided into eight movements of stunning symphonic splendour and delight, which just HAS to be heard to be believed. This is incredible!
 
You can't fail to be over-awed by this stunning display of ELP-style keyboard prog. This outstanding one-off album has a treasured place in the hallowed halls of ProgArchives. Refugee might not be in the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame, but they truly
deserve to be included with full honours and flags flying after this very impressive powerhouse debut!


Edited by Psychedelic Paul - February 24 2020 at 12:36
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BRIAN AUGER & JULIE DRISCOLL - Open (1967)
As a temporary substitute for the entire album, here's the album highlight: "Season of the Witch"
 
 
Album Review 110:- 4 starsBRIAN AUGER (born 1939) has a very long and complicated discography, so let's go right back to the beginning for this London-born Hammond organ maestro and Jazz-Rock legend. Brian Auger formed the soulful British blues band Steampacket in 1965, although they never recorded an official studio album together. He recorded his first solo album "Attention: Brian Auger" in 1965, although the album didn't come to the attention of the record-buying public until its belated release in 1972. The "Open" album  followed in 1967, which was billed as a Julie Driscoll & Brian Auger album. His first album as Brian Auger & the Trinity saw release in 1968 under the title "Definitely What" and another album with Julie Driscoll followed in 1969 titled "Jools and Brian". Later that same year, the "Streetnoise" album was released under the banner of Julie Driscoll, Brian Auger & the Trinity, followed by the Brian Auger & the Trinity album "Befour" in 1970, this time without Julie Driscoll. He formed the Jazz-Rock ensemble Brian Auger's Oblivion Express in the early 1970's, releasing a whole string of albums:- "Brian Auger's Oblivion Express" (1970); "A Better Land" (1971); "Second Wind" (1972); "Closer to It" (1973); "Straight Ahead" (1974); "Reinforcements" (1975); "Live Oblivion: Volume 1" (1975); "Live Oblivion: Volume 2" (1976) and "Happiness Heartache" (1977). The two volumes of Brian Auger's Live Oblivion albums are especially recommended.  He recorded one further album with Julie Driscoll in 1978, billed as "Brian Auger & Julie Tippetts - Encore", and there were three more albums to come from Brian Auger in the 1980's:- "Search Party (1981); "Here and Now" (1984) and "Keys to the Heart" (with Oblivion Express) (1987). And so, after that long introduction, it's time now to step back in time to swinging 1960's London for the Julie Driscoll & Brian Auger album, "Open", which features the spooky Halloween classic, "Season of the Witch". It's an album literally of two halves, with Side One featuring mostly instrumental Jazz-Rock numbers and Side Two where Julie Driscoll joins the party on vocals.
 
Opening the album, there are few surprises in store with "In and Out", a fairly routine funky jazz instrumental which will transport you right back in time to a 1960's mods dance floor of swinging chicks in bright mini-skirts and hip and trendy dudes in flared trousers, flowered shirts and kipper ties. Yes, this groovy number sounds like it could have come straight from an Austin Powers movie. It's fabulous, baby! The second instrumental Jazz number, "Isola Natale", is a reference to Christmas Island, a remote Australian territory in the Indian Ocean. The music is pretty laid-back but you can still tap your feet along to the funky rhythm, or you may even feel inclined to get up and dance to it if you're feeling particularly energetic, although this is more like the kind of easy-going cocktail lounge Jazz you can do a gentle hipsway to instead of boogieing on down and shaking your booty to down at the Disco. The third song "Black Cat" is where the album REALLY comes to life and hits you straight between the eyes. It's a storming Jazz rocker with Brian Auger taking lead vocals. This is where Brian Auger gets to display his amazing dexterity on the Hammond organ with some incredible keyboard runs. His fingers literally fly over the keys like lightning on the YouTube video that accompanies this barn-storming song. This song is no timid "Black Cat". No, this is a growling black panther which leaps out at you and grabs your attention right from the first blast from Auger's powerful Hammond organ. We're in suitably mellow mood for the next song, "Lament for Miss Baker", a soft and tender piano piece that's as light and breezy as a zephyr wind. The next song "Goodbye Jungle Telegraph" inevitably features tom-tom jungle drums, which conjures up images of Tarzan swinging from vine to vine shouting "Aaaaaggggghhhhhaaaaa!" - or something like that. The sassy saxophonist sounds like he's having a real blast here with a storming "Go wild in the jungle" sax solo, somehow keeping time with the pounding ape-crazy percussionist.
 
We get to hear the soulful bluesy voice of Julie Driscoll for the first time on "Tramp", a well-known Soul Blues song which was most famously recorded by Otis Redding and Carla Thomas earlier that same year of 1967. The song has since become a funky Soul Blues standard. The seventh song "Why (Am I Treated So Bad)" is a raw and earthy blues number, with Julie Driscoll able to instil the song with all of the soul and powerful emotion of Janis Joplin. Both singers have the same "Don't mess with me" attitude and they also have the ability to sound like they're singing straight from the heart. A stuttering telegram-style tapping of the keyboard keys announces the arrival of our next song, "A Kind of Love In". This is no lovey-dovey ballad though. No, this is an up-tempo rocker that barrels along relentlessly at breakneck speed for 150 seconds, which is swiftly followed by another storming Jazz-Rock song, "Break It Up". This song opens to the tolling of wedding bells, although it sounds more like divorce might be looming if the title of this song is anything to go by.  This is the first real duet between Brian Auger and Julie Driscoll, with both impassioned singers angrily sounding like a real-life couple who are badly in need of a marriage guidance counsellor. Now comes the real highlight of the album, "Season of the Witch", a song originally co-written and recorded by Scottish songsmith Donovan in 1966 and also famously covered by Vanilla Fudge in 1968 in their own inimitable raucous style. This is spooky bedknobs and broomsticks music to listen to under a full moon on the night of Halloween with a glowing hollowed-out pumpkin for company, although in reality, the song is probably no more scary than a box of Black Magic chocolates.
 
If you're "Open" to the sound of some storming Hammond organ Rock, then look no further than this impressive debut from Brian Auger & Julie Driscoll. This album is bluesy Jazz-Rock with a heart full of Soul!
 
 


Edited by Psychedelic Paul - February 25 2020 at 11:10
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (1) Thanks(1)   Quote dr wu23 Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 25 2020 at 14:57
I have the Refugee on cd...decent lp...if one likes ELP type keyboards it's worth getting it.

I have the Auger- Driscoll Open on original vinyl...Streetnoise is even better...the two between never really did much for me.

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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Psychedelic Paul Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 25 2020 at 15:28
Originally posted by dr wu23 dr wu23 wrote:

I have the Refugee on cd...decent lp...if one likes ELP type keyboards it's worth getting it.

I have the Auger- Driscoll Open on original vinyl...Streetnoise is even better...the two between never really did much for me.

Refugee is definitely on my list of albums to buy. I also bought Budgie's three mid-1970's MCA albums recently after reviewing one of their classic albums here. They reminded me a lot of Rush. The Brian Auger & Julie Driscoll album I reviewed today was a last minute replacement for Robert Wyatt's Rock Bottom album which I didn't like at all, so rather than give Robert Wyatt's album a negative two-star review, I decided to review an album I do like instead. Smile


Edited by Psychedelic Paul - February 25 2020 at 15:28
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (1) Thanks(1)   Quote dr wu23 Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 25 2020 at 21:02
Originally posted by Psychedelic Paul Psychedelic Paul wrote:

Originally posted by dr wu23 dr wu23 wrote:

I have the Refugee on cd...decent lp...if one likes ELP type keyboards it's worth getting it.

I have the Auger- Driscoll Open on original vinyl...Streetnoise is even better...the two between never really did much for me.

Refugee is definitely on my list of albums to buy. I also bought Budgie's three mid-1970's MCA albums recently after reviewing one of their classic albums here. They reminded me a lot of Rush. The Brian Auger & Julie Driscoll album I reviewed today was a last minute replacement for Robert Wyatt's Rock Bottom album which I didn't like at all, so rather than give Robert Wyatt's album a negative two-star review, I decided to review an album I do like instead. Smile
I'm a fan of Auger;s work...have most of his things on either vinyl or cd.
I'm not a big fan of Rock Bottom either (I have an original vinyl)....I do like some of Wyatt's music here and there and of course his work with Soft Machine. 
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Psychedelic Paul Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 26 2020 at 01:24
Originally posted by Cosmiclawnmower Cosmiclawnmower wrote:

Probably one of the most obscure and rarest of the Spiral Vertigo releases..
Image result for dr z three parts to my soul
Three Parts to my Soul (1971)
Thanks! I'll add Dr. Z's album to my long list of albums to review. It's currently the 145th album on my list so it'll be a while yet before I get around to reviewing the album. Smile
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Psychedelic Paul Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 26 2020 at 10:20
THE SALLYANGIE - Children of the Sun (1969)
Until the full album becomes available, here's a high-flying album highlight: "Balloons"
 
 
Album Review #111:- 4 stars   THE SALLYANGIE may have been a short-lived Prog-Folk duo, but both members went on to have long and distinguished solo careers, because they were none other than sister and brother duo Sally and Mike Oldfield! The SallyAngie recorded their one and only hippyish Folk album "Children of the Sun" in 1968. It would be another five years before Mike Oldfield stunned the world with his landmark "Tubular Bells" (1973) album. Sally Oldfield launched her long solo career as a Folk singer  five years after brother Mike with the release of her "Water Bearer" album in 1978. The Oldfields were a very musical family - their brother Terry Oldfield was also a multi-talented musician who appeared on Mike Oldfield's "Hergest Ridge" (1974), "Ommadawn" (1975) and "Incantations" (1978) albums. Terry Oldfield also went on to establish a long solo career, specialising in his own particular brand of New Age World music. And so, it's time to travel back over half a century in time now to the late 1960's for Mike Oldfield and sister Sally's unique Prog-Folk offering, "Children of the Sun". The 2002 CD re-issue included a bonus disc, adding eight songs to the original fourteen songs on the album.
 
Right from the opening few bars of "Strangers", we're in very familiar territory with the honey-sweet demure vocals of Sally Oldfield. She's best-known for the song "Mirrors" from her first "Water Bearer" album in 1978. Sally performed the song on Top of the Pops and the single reached #19 in the U.K charts, although the hippyish Sally Oldfield would be the last person to regard herself as a Pop star. One of the most surprising things about The SallyAngie album is hearing Mike Oldfield singing for the first time, when he's not normally noted for his vocal abilities, although he sounds in remarkably fine voice on this endearing Folk album, admirably accompanying his sister Sally in a duet. Mike Oldfield also provides accompaniment on acoustic guitar (obviously!) and there's the sound of a flautist to be heard too on this brief but charming 70-second-long opening introduction to the album. "Strangers" sounds more like two familiar old friends. We're off to meet "Lady Mary" next, a saccharine-sweet Folk song with some lovely harmonies and rich orchestration. Mike Oldfield even takes the vocal lead for a brief time on this song. There's no inkling of the masterpiece to come in five years time, when Tubular Bells was still a twinkling in Mike Oldfield's eye at this early stage in his career. The music on this charming Folk album so far sounds as delicately exquisite as a warm gentle breeze. And now we come to the title track and one of the longest songs on the album at five minutes long: "Children of the Sun". The song opens with a spoken introduction from Sally Oldfield before brother Mike joins in for a duet. This song sounds like the kind of pleasant pastoral Folk number that Peter, Paul & Mary or The Seekers might have recorded back in their heyday. The song certainly has commercial potential, had it ever been released as a single, although a warm and tender Folk melody probably wouldn't have stood much of a chance in the charts when they would have been up against some of the mighty giants of late-1960's Pop/Rock such as The Beatles. The fourth song "A Lover for All Seasons" continues in similar vein with another acoustic guitar and vocal duet, so there are no real surprises in store here. Although The SallyAngie are billed as Prog-Folk, you won't find many proggy elements here, as this is more of a traditional pastoral Folk album, but that's no bad thing as the gentle music contained within is very pleasing on the ears. The SallyAngie features a percussionist, although he's so low-key that you hardly even notice he's there. You certainly won't hear any pounding drums on this album. There's no sign of Mike Oldfield's trademark electric guitar sound to be heard either on this totally acoustic album, but it's still turning out to be a very agreeable Folk album judged on its own merits. Next up is the "River Song" which has a macabre sting in its tail, because despite the pleasant melody and the dulcet tones of sweet-voiced Sally, the lyrics reveal a shocking tale of a brutal murder, so there are no happy endings here. The frightful lyrics to this song bring to mind the classic Neil Young song "Down by the River", which also involves a murder.  We'd better not delve too deeply into the horrifying lyrics of "River Song", so we'll move swiftly on to the next song, which is: "Banquet on the Water". We're on much safer ground here as this lovely song is all about going for a pleasant stroll along the river and  stopping for a picnic with a romantic partner for company.
 
Side Two opens with "Balloons", the longest song on the album at five and a half minutes long. The song begins as a very twee-sounding lullaby that sounds so light and delicate, you feel it might get blown away like a balloon by the slightest of breezes, but don't let that put you off, because it's really a great song once you get past the first minute or so. This song comes the closest to Psych-Folk of any of the songs so far on the album. Not that you'll hear any psychedelic fuzz guitars, but the music is a hauntingly-beautiful Folk refrain, featuring some eerie-sounding harmonising and witchy chanting in the style of Comus, although nowhere near as creepy as those witch-finder generals of Psych-Folk. "Balloons" is a helium-filled uplifting highlight of the album. We're travelling right back in time to the world of Shakespeare now for "Midsummer Night's Happening". This fluty duet sounds like a typical Elizabethan madrigal that you might hear accompanying a medieval banquet, so watch out for those flying chicken bones and glasses being thrown into the hearth fire with gusto and gay abandon! Yes, this is definitely minstrels in the gallery music, so you'll know exactly what to expect here with this merry-making music. The intriguingly-titled "Love in Ice Crystals" conjures up a frosty image of some romantic brief encounter at the South Pole, which is not that far from the truth, as the lyrics are about making love on a rug in front of the warm comfort of a blazing fire when it's freezing cold and snowing outside. Listen out for the soaring echoey vocals on this song, the like of which you may never have heard before. They're really quite incredible! Side Two of this lovely album is so far turning out to be even better than Side One. The next piece of music "Changing Colours" is a brief prelude, featuring some offbeat twangy guitar  strings where Mike Oldfield sounds like he's tuning his guitar up, so we'll leave him there and move on to the next song which is the aptly-titled "Chameleon", which follows on nicely from "Changing Colours". The enchantingly mystical lyrics to this haunting refrain deserve a special mention here:- "The king of Orion brings, The jewels from his belt and his sword, The emeralds shine through the trees, To dance upon the high forest lord, I am to you as I am to me, I am a star in a deep blue sea, I am the queen of a million queens, I am a ripple on a crystal stream, The three kings from the east bring gifts of gold frankincense and myrrh." ..... It's a complex tune in which Mike Oldfield cleverly sings in counter-point to Sally Oldfield, bringing a whole extra dimension to this engaging piece of music. The next brief 30-second-long acoustic instrumental "Milk Bottle" sounds just like a "born on the bayou" twangy country steel guitar, which it probably is! This leads us into the penultimate Psych-Folk song on the album, the ominously-titled "The Murder of the Children of San Francisco". Mike Oldfield's semi-whispered vocals sound quite sinister on this song, giving the song an ethereal other-worldly haunting atmosphere, which makes a  stark contrast to Sally Oldfield's traditional sweet-voiced Folky tones. This is another album highlight in what is turning out to be quite an extraordinary album, featuring mainly traditional Folk songs on Side One, spiced up with some spookier off-kilter Psych-Folk tunes on Side Two. We're entering a twilight zone world now, as it's time to bed the album down for the night with the 14th and final song and what better way than with the "Twilight Song", a delightful Folk melody where Sally Oldfield's gorgeous dulcet tones carry you away blissfully to a land of sweet dreams and peaceful slumbers. 
 
Mike Oldfield and sister Sally have come up with a very pleasant album of gentle pastoral Folk in their first musical outing together. It's not going to take the progosphere by storm, but it makes a pleasurable diversion to while away a warm summer's afternoon when we can all be transported back in time to the late 1960's and be "Children of the Sun" all over again. That's the theory anyway. If music be the food of love, then let Mike & Sally Oldfield play on forever!


Edited by Psychedelic Paul - February 26 2020 at 13:40
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (1) Thanks(1)   Quote dr wu23 Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 26 2020 at 10:36
I think 'Sallyangie' -Children of the Sun is a mediocre folk rock lp....but mildly pleasant at times as you pointed out. 
But one thing that has always perplexed me is why so many people like Oldfield's solo stuff....I bought TB when it came out because of the film The Exorcist and thought it was some what boring . All of his albums seem a bit too pieced together for me and not that interesting. There are some nice moments on the records here and there but overall it just doesn't hold my interest. Just goes to show how tastes vary among prog heads.
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Psychedelic Paul Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 26 2020 at 10:57
Originally posted by dr wu23 dr wu23 wrote:

I think 'Sallyangie' -Children of the Sun is a mediocre folk rock lp....but mildly pleasant at times as you pointed out. 
But one thing that has always perplexed me is why so many people like Oldfield's solo stuff....I bought TB when it came out because of the film The Exorcist and thought it was some what boring . All of his albums seem a bit too pieced together for me and not that interesting. There are some nice moments on the records here and there but overall it just doesn't hold my interest. Just goes to show how tastes vary among prog heads.
I like all of Mike Oldfield's albums apart from Heaven's Open. I doubt if The SallyAngie album will appeal to prog-heads generally, but it's an album I'd be happy to go out and buy for £10 if I could find it in a record store. Smile
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (1) Thanks(1)   Quote dr wu23 Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 26 2020 at 14:30
Originally posted by Psychedelic Paul Psychedelic Paul wrote:

Originally posted by dr wu23 dr wu23 wrote:

I think 'Sallyangie' -Children of the Sun is a mediocre folk rock lp....but mildly pleasant at times as you pointed out. 
But one thing that has always perplexed me is why so many people like Oldfield's solo stuff....I bought TB when it came out because of the film The Exorcist and thought it was some what boring . All of his albums seem a bit too pieced together for me and not that interesting. There are some nice moments on the records here and there but overall it just doesn't hold my interest. Just goes to show how tastes vary among prog heads.
I like all of Mike Oldfield's albums apart from Heaven's Open. I doubt if The SallyAngie album will appeal to prog-heads generally, but it's an album I'd be happy to go out and buy for £10 if I could find it in a record store. Smile
It;s somewhat collectable on original vinyl because it;s old...it might go for 20 or 30 dollars here in the states..... saw a copy vg+ on Discogs for about $20 US.
I don't think I have seen one in a while.
Just curious...what do you find interesting about Oldfield's solo work....I think they are  mediocre when it comes to prog lp;s.


Edited by dr wu23 - February 26 2020 at 14:34
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Psychedelic Paul Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 26 2020 at 15:02
Originally posted by dr wu23 dr wu23 wrote:

Originally posted by Psychedelic Paul Psychedelic Paul wrote:

Originally posted by dr wu23 dr wu23 wrote:

I think 'Sallyangie' -Children of the Sun is a mediocre folk rock lp....but mildly pleasant at times as you pointed out. 
But one thing that has always perplexed me is why so many people like Oldfield's solo stuff....I bought TB when it came out because of the film The Exorcist and thought it was some what boring . All of his albums seem a bit too pieced together for me and not that interesting. There are some nice moments on the records here and there but overall it just doesn't hold my interest. Just goes to show how tastes vary among prog heads.
I like all of Mike Oldfield's albums apart from Heaven's Open. I doubt if The SallyAngie album will appeal to prog-heads generally, but it's an album I'd be happy to go out and buy for £10 if I could find it in a record store. Smile
It;s somewhat collectable on original vinyl because it;s old...it might go for 20 or 30 dollars here in the states..... saw a copy vg+ on Discogs for about $20 US.
I don't think I have seen one in a while.
Just curious...what do you find interesting about Oldfield's solo work....I think they are  mediocre when it comes to prog lp;s.
I'm genuinely shocked! Are you saying you think Tubular Bells and Ommadawn are mediocre too?
 
I think they're two of the finest prog albums of all time!
 
I'll definitely look out for The SallyAngie album the next time I'm in Nottingham, and I may even order it specially if it's not too expensive. I'm a big fan of Sally Oldfield as well as brother Mike. Smile
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (1) Thanks(1)   Quote dr wu23 Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 26 2020 at 15:14
Originally posted by Psychedelic Paul Psychedelic Paul wrote:

Originally posted by dr wu23 dr wu23 wrote:

Originally posted by Psychedelic Paul Psychedelic Paul wrote:

Originally posted by dr wu23 dr wu23 wrote:

I think 'Sallyangie' -Children of the Sun is a mediocre folk rock lp....but mildly pleasant at times as you pointed out. 
But one thing that has always perplexed me is why so many people like Oldfield's solo stuff....I bought TB when it came out because of the film The Exorcist and thought it was some what boring . All of his albums seem a bit too pieced together for me and not that interesting. There are some nice moments on the records here and there but overall it just doesn't hold my interest. Just goes to show how tastes vary among prog heads.
I like all of Mike Oldfield's albums apart from Heaven's Open. I doubt if The SallyAngie album will appeal to prog-heads generally, but it's an album I'd be happy to go out and buy for £10 if I could find it in a record store. Smile
It;s somewhat collectable on original vinyl because it;s old...it might go for 20 or 30 dollars here in the states..... saw a copy vg+ on Discogs for about $20 US.
I don't think I have seen one in a while.
Just curious...what do you find interesting about Oldfield's solo work....I think they are  mediocre when it comes to prog lp;s.
I'm genuinely shocked! Are you saying you think Tubular Bells and Ommadawn are mediocre too?
 
I think they're two of the finest prog albums of all time!
 
I'll definitely look out for The SallyAngie album the next time I'm in Nottingham, and I may even order it specially if it's not too expensive. I'm a big fan of Sally Oldfield as well as brother Mike. Smile

Well..I own TB, Ridge , and Ommadawn and I think all three are 3.5 star lp/s...on a good day. IMO he's a mediocre guitar player and composer....when I compare someone like him to Yes, KC, or Genesis with Gabriel...imho he's not even close to their compositions. His lp's  meander and are stitched together musical pieces that to me are slow and boring at times. Overrated imho.  But then...I have always favored band oriented music and I'm hard on star ratings in general. I think many prog lp's here are overrated. I think many prog fans are enamored with it and  living in a fantasy world with the music and tend to be too generous when rating things.
Again that's just me....we all have favorites , etc. I'm an older guy and been listening to these things for a long time,,, longer than most on the forum....I think I'm getting a bit cranky and jaded after all these years.


Edited by dr wu23 - February 26 2020 at 15:19
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (1) Thanks(1)   Quote Cosmiclawnmower Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 26 2020 at 15:24
The Sallyangie 'Children of the Sun has been re-issued a couple of times in the last few years on vinyl; I had a spare copy and only just recently sold it! Ive got a white label promo copy which is worth a few quid! Its a nice enough lp, very much of its time..

Funny thing, personal tastes.. im as horrified that you'd find 'Rock Bottom' a 2 star lp as you are finding someone who doesn't find Mike Oldfield's lps very interestingWink... There are nuances to Robert Wyatt's work that are truly sublime, particularly on Rock Bottom.. it is an lp that takes a few listens to let it seep in.. and maybe reading a bit about Robert's Life (his 'different every time' book is one of the best books- not only biography but giving a real feel of how the decades changed, politically, socially and artistically) will give a bit of insight.. He is a true genius and someone who has quietly kept his distance from the progressive tag (despite being one of the pioneers).Smile

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