By the time of this 1966 release, Hardin had transformed himself almost fully from an average blues singer to a stellar folk artist. Failed sessions for Columbia found him re-signed to Verve for which he recorded this commercial debut. The album mixes spare demo takes with more fully produced tracks that feature tasteful strings. Hardin was apparently unhappy about the inclusion of both the unfinished tracks, which showed how his blues roots were translating into folk rock, and the overdubbing, which added a polish that elevated these tracks beyond a singer-songwriter sitting on a stool. The opening “Don’t Make Promises” found favor with a surprising range of other artists, including Bobby Darin (who later had a hit with Hardin’s “If I Were a Carpenter), Helen Reddy, Three Dog Night and Paul Weller. Even more famous is “Reason to Believe,” which became a hit for Rod Stewart. The rest of the album lives up to these standards, with small combos backing Hardin’s jazz-tinged vocals. Tim Hardin 1 has been packaged here as straight-up reissue, but it’s also been available as a two-fer with its followup, and as part of the complete Hang on to a Dream: The Verve Recordings. [©2009 hyperbolium dot com]
Tag Archives: Folk Rock
The Beau Brummels: The Beau Brummels
Fine 1975 reunion album from 1960s legends
After helping usher folk-rock onto the pop charts during their 1960s run on San Francisco’s Autumn records, and branching out more experimentally on albums for Warner Brothers, the Beau Brummels finally came apart in the wake of 1968’s Bradley’s Barn. This reunion session, recorded in 1974 and released the following year, is a surprisingly fine album, avoiding the temptation to wallow in nostalgia and also the inclination to fully contemporize the band’s sound. Which isn’t to say that the group didn’t update their music; the engineering is very clean, the arrangements lightly softened, and some of the guitars adopt a then-contemporary tone, but the core of the band’s ethos is still heard: Ron Elliot wrote a strong album, Sal Valentino’s vocals retained their emotional quiver and the group’s complex harmonies, missing on their last few albums, were as fetching as ever. This isn’t the raw invention of their earlier work, but the group’s artistic spark was still very much alive. The 1970s touches are light enough to keep this an earnest progression of the band’s original ideas, but different enough to signal something more than a rehash for cash. The country influences with which the group ended the first part of their career (recording for Owen Bradley in Nashville) can be heard in several songs, but the album also succeeds with ballads and mid-tempo rock. It’s a shame the reunion lasted for only one LP, as it’s clear the group transitioned the magic of their mid-60s roots to music relevant in the mid-70s. [©2009 hyperbolium dot com]
Jackie DeShannon: Don’t Turn Your Back on Me / This is Jackie DeShannon
Hit songwriter’s first two UK albums as a performer
Though Kentucky-born Jackie DeShannon had two major chart hits, a chart-topping 1965 version of Bacharach and David’s “What the World Needs Now is Love†and the 1969 original “Put a Little Love in Your Heart,†her work as a songwriter has commercially overshadowed her performing. The author of “Dum Dum,†“When You Walk in the Room,†“Come and Stay,†“Breakaway,†and “Bette Davis Eyes†has been represented on the charts for four decades, turning up on countless artist’s albums and greatest hits collections, but her own catalog of performances has had a difficult time gaining CD reissue.
A number of single-disc anthologies, including the Definitive Collection, Ultimate Jackie DeShannon, Come and Get Me and High Coinage have offered good overviews, but only in the past few years have her original albums found their way into the digital domain. This two-fer from BGO combines DeShannon’s first pair of British LPs, opening with the sensational rock sounds of 1964’s Don’t Turn Your Back On Me, and continuing with the more centrist orchestrations of 1965’s This is Jackie DeShannon. The jump from the debut’s pop, rock and folk-rock works to the industry productions of the sophomore release is stark, to say the least, and though the former is the more satisfying spin, the latter holds several charming works.
Don’t Turn Your Back On Me relies on Brill Building styled arrangements (courtesy of Phil Spector’s main man, Jack Nitzsche), with light violins adorning tracks powered by full-kit drumming, deep tympani, driving 12-string guitars and vocals that are both R&B rough and girl-group sweet. DeShannon’s original take of Nitzsche and Sonny Bono’s “Needles and Pins†is sung downbeat, making the vocal more tearfully bitter than the Searchers’ spitefully anxious hit cover. The mood recovers by song’s end, however, with DeShannon singing sassily across the beat and flinging away her pain.
Additional tunes from Jack Nitzsche (the girl-group “Should I Cryâ€) and Randy Newman (the stagey ballad “She Don’t Understand Him Like I Do,†the Lesley Gore styled “Hold Your Head High,†and the girl-group “Did He Call Today, Mamaâ€), are complemented by DeShannon’s original version of her own “When You Walk in the Room.†The latter, taken again at a slower tempo than the Searchers’ hit cover, has an edgier vocal and wields the lyrical beat like a hammer. DeShannon’s voice turns to a Brenda Lee styled growl on “The Prince,†the 1950s R&B tune “It’s Love Baby (24 Hours a Day)†provides a fine 1960s rave-up, and her cover of “Oh Boy†charts the transition from Buddy Holly’s reign to the Beatles then-current dominance.
The two-fer arrangement of this CD finds the last track of Don’t Turn Your Back On Me, a rousing cover of Allen Toussaint’s “Over You†segueing into the muted brass introduction of “What the World Needs Now is Love,†which opens This is Jackie DeShannon. It’s a segue that was really meant to be heard with a year’s gap in between. With the rock drums and guitars stripped away and the arrangements turned to sweeping orchestrations, DeShannon still shines on covers of Gershwin’s “Summertime†and Bacharach and David’s “A Lifetime of Loneliness,†but mostly without the electricity of her earlier sides. The originals “Am I Making It Hard on You,†“Hellos and Goodbyes†and “I Remember the Boy†sound as if they were recorded during the sessions of the previous album.
“What the World Needs Now is Love†fit DeShannon like a glove, but the attempts to replicate its orchestrated formula weren’t as successful. In contrast, the album cuts on Don’t Turn Your Back On Me are enjoyable, if not hit single quality, as are the rock performances grafted on to This is Jackie DeShannon. This is a fine two-fer, though more for the debut than the follow-up, though even the latter has a number of cuts that will find space in your regular rotation. [©2009 hyperbolium dot com]
Jackie DeShannon’s Home Page
Jackie DeShannon Appreciation Society
Jackie DeShannon: What the World Needs Now Is… Jackie DeShannon- The Definitive Collection
Famous songwriter, underappreciated performer
American songwriter Jackie DeShannon had two monumental top-10 hits as a performer, her own “Put a Little Love in Your Heart†and an indelible cover of Burt Bacharach and Hal David’s “What the World Needs Now.†But even with major chart success, she’s been more commercially successful writing songs others brought to fame, including The Searchers’ “When You Walk in the Room,†Marianne Faithfull’s “Come and Stay With Me,†and Tracey Ullman’s “Breakaway.†Many of he compositions are perennial cover bait, returning to the charts in new versions by artists ranging from Dolly Parton to Al Green to Tom Petty to Pam Tillis.
As her own albums and hits collections show, however, her immense talent as a songwriter was matched by her work as a singer. Her original versions of “When You Walk in the Room†and “Breakaway†aren’t merely songwriter demos – they’re templates of the angst and joy that would mark every subsequent version. Her early version of “Needles and Pins,†written by Sonny Bono and Jack Nitzsche, has all the hooks that made the Searchers’ subsequent cover a hit, and her original take of “Till You Say You’ll Be Mine†showed a young Olivia Newton John just how the song should sound (the Searchers’ string-lined cover pales in comparison to both the ladies’ versions).
This 28-track collection spans 1958 to 1980, but focuses most heavily on DeShannon’s output for Liberty between 1959 and 1970. Both of her hit singles are here, along with singles the flopped and originals of songs that became hits for others. DeShannon proves herself to be much more than a songwriter trying to cut their own tunes, she’s a talented vocalist equally comfortable with chirpy rockabilly, pop, soul, girl group harmony, and especially chiming folk-rock. DeShannon’s later ballads (those recorded after the success of “What the World Needs Now is Loveâ€) often suffered from mundane orchestrations, but this collection keeps such tracks to a minimum.
This 1994 set was nominally replaced in the EMI catalog by the cover-laden and less satisfying Ultimate Jackie DeShannon. Better is Raven’s Come and Get Me and its recent companion, High Coinage. Of the four, What the World Needs Now still provides the most balanced portrait of DeShannon’s key years and the best starting point into DeShannon’s catalog. All four collections feature tracks not on the other three, so you might pick up more than one, or use any of the four as a map to the recent original album reissues. Finally, the Ace volume Break-A-Way: The Songs of Jackie DeShannon provides a good helping of others’ covers of her writing. [©2009 hyperbolium dot com]
Jackie DeShannon’s Home Page
Jackie DeShannon Appreciation Society
Various Artists: Four Decades of Folk Rock
An expansive take on “folk rockâ€
Time Life Records was founded in the early ‘60s as a division of Time Inc., but sold off in 2003 to operate independently as part of the international conglomerate Direct Holdings Worldwide. Though no longer a part of the Time media empire, the label continues to be a terrific voice in the music reissue market, selling its wares via the Internet, standard retail channels, and most famously through television informercials. The latter may give Time Life the taint of earlier reissue labels like Ronco and K-Tel, but the high quality of their sets puts them firmly in league with the cream of the reissue industry. The label scored a coup last year with the first official reissue of the Hank Williams “Mother’s Finest†radio transcriptions, and their more recent anthology of music from the civil rights movement, Let Freedom Sing, was a tour de force.
This 2007 4-CD set explores the combination of folk and rock that sprang from the intersection of the late-50/searly-60s folk revival and the arrival of the Beatles on U.S. shores. Each of the four discs covers a decade (more or less), starting with the ‘60s on disc one and Dylan’s explosive electrification of “Like a Rolling Stone.†It might have made more sense to open with the Byrds’ “Mr. Tambourine Man,†which hit the charts in June of 1965, but the compilation producers’ focus on Dylan pegs Newport as the pivotal moment; the Byrds are represented by their end-of-65 hit of Pete Seeger’s “Turn! Turn! Turn!†Notable in their absence are the Beatles, Beau Brummels and Simon & Garfunkel. The ‘60s could easily have consumed all four discs (and virtually do so on the Folk Years set), so the producers chose to cover a generous helping of familiar bases and flesh out the first disc with brilliantly selected album sides by Tim Hardin, Fred Neil, Jefferson Airplane, Tim Buckley, The Band and Tim Rose. The latter’s oft-covered “Morning Dew,†is particularly impressive in this original incarnation.
Folk rock passed to singer-songwriters in the 1970s, the most commercially successful of which were more socially passive than their 1960s antecedents. There was still discontent to be found, but it was found on the more expansive and less commercially mainstream FM dial. Arlo Guthrie could lift a hit onto the charts with the non-contentious “City of New Orleans,†but his counterculture “Flying into Los Angeles†flew under AM’s radar. Disc two finds the social consciousness of folk rock’s first wave transplanted, post-Woodstock, into heavier arrangements and picking up progressive sounds from British acts Fairport Convention, Traffic, Thin Lizzy, Nick Drake, Steeleye Span and Pentangle. U.S. singer-songwriters are heard here, but some of the sharper edges, like Joni Mitchell and John Prine are missing.
The moribund ‘70s provoked a punk backlash by decade’s end, and the DIY aesthetic sparked a parallel movement of retro-pop and roots. The “Paisley Underground†in Los Angeles took cues from Gram Parsons, the Lovin’ Spoonful and Buffalo Springfield, and as imitation spun into innovation, the Bangles, Dream Syndicate, Rain Parade and Dave Alvin each found original footings. At the same time, a second wave of country outlaws began to chafe against the crossover aspirations of ‘80s Nashville, and unencumbered by mass commercial concerns, stretched their roots to the same folk sources from which their musical ancestors had grown. For a time the artists stayed underground, even as their songs, such as Lucinda Williams’ “Passionate Kisses,†became hits for others (Mary Chapin Carpenter in this case). In the next two decades, the underground would find more direct channels to its listeners.
By the ‘90s, the media landscape changing, and by the ‘00s the marketing landscape was quickly losing the friction imposed by major record labels. Music radio had all but imploded, replaced by individually programmed channels of a listener’s iPod, and streams of music found their way through film and television, commercials, on-line downloading (both legal and illegal), YouTube videos, and a wealth of Internet critics and bloggers clamoring to tout their latest discoveries. The directness with which artists could connect to listeners via MySpace returned the intimate fan connection of the ‘60s coffeehouse. Ironically, the underground flourished amidst the mass exposure of the Internet.
Though “folk rock†as a named genre is generally regarded as having only opened a brief window in the ‘60s, its influence trickled into many subsequent forms, as collected across discs two through four. It’s may seem like a stretch to apply the label to country-tinged works such as found on disc four, but there is a line through the singer-songwriters of the ‘70s, the roots movement of the ‘80s and the emergence of Americana (or at least its labeling) in the ‘90s. It’s that through-line, rather than a catalog of songs from mid-to-late ‘60s, that is this set’s offering. Transiting around from Uncle Tupelo, Wilco and Son Volt to the Band’s 1968 cover of Dylan’s “I Shall Be Released†on disc one completes an unbroken circle. Disc one gives a solid shot of nostalgia, discs two through four carry forward the producers’ theme and provide deep content for connoisseurs.
The 63-page booklet accompanying this set includes a lengthy essay by author Bruce Pollock and extensive song notes by ex-Rhino Records producer Ted Myers. Discographical details include recording dates and locations, personnel, and release and chart dates. Everything here is stereo except for tracks 4, 11, and 13 on disc one, and the mastering engineers at DigiPrep have done a fine job of knitting disparate material into cohesive sounding discs. If you can get past thinking the title implies four CDs of music from 1965-1969, you’ll be fascinated by the expansive view essayed here. [©2009 hyperbolium dot com]
The Mojo Men: Not Too Old To Start Cryin’ – The Lost 1966 Masters
Superb cache of mid-career garage/pop/folk/psych demos
The San Francisco-based Mojo Men are best remembered for their top-40 hit cover of Stephen Stills’ “Sit Down, I Think I Love You.†By the time that ornate 1967 single was released, the original group had recorded several bravado-filled sides for Tom Donahue’s Autumn label, fallen out with their drummer, picked up former Vejtables drummer/vocalist/songwriter Jan Errico, and recorded these demos before recording for Reprise. To be fair, “demos†is a coarse description given the recordings’ sparkling studio quality and the care lavished on the vocals and overdubs. But even though many of these tracks rival their output on Autumn and Reprise, the sessions were used to work out new material, showcase the band’s songwriting to their new producers, and to suggest outside material that might be suitable. The only aural artifact that really suggests “demo†are hotly mixed vocals that don’t always lay firmly in the instrumental backings.
The addition of Jan Errico had a noticeable impact on the band’s sound, pulling them in more melodic directions and adding a folk-rock vibe to numerous tracks. The macho sentiments of the group’s earlier “She Goes With Me†may not have fit the new lineup (though they did essentially reprise their earlier “Dance With me†on “There Goes My Mindâ€), but Errico could sing with full-throated force. The vocal attack of “What Kind of Man,†for example, sounds like a midway point between the sharp verbal punctuation of Mary Travers and the snotty garage attitude of Paula Pierce. Errico and bassist/vocalist Jim Alaimo made a solid rhythm section, and their voices blended into winning harmonies. The group could equally well rock a primitive Bo Diddley beat for “’Til I Find You†as they could take it down tempo for the ballad “Don’t Leave Me Crying Like Before.â€
The influence of former Autumn labelmates The Beau Brummels is heard on “Is Our Love Gone,†and a cover of Jay and the Americans’ “She Cried†adds fine group harmonies. Several of Alaimo and Errico’s originals were re-recorded for later albums, but many more are only heard here. These mid-career recordings fit perfectly between the garage rock of the Mojo Men’s Autumn sides and their more polished Reprise recordings, and are sure to enthrall fans of either. Big Beat’s “West Coast Promotion Man†Alec Palao offers up top-quality liners and photos from his personal archives to round out a stellar package. [©2008 hyperbolium dot com]