Monthly Archives: September 2008

John Phillips: Pussycat

Papa John’s third LP w/Jagger, Richards, Wood & Taylor

After the demise of the Mamas & Papas in 1968, and the recording of their contractual obligation album People Like Us in 1971, Papa John Phillips embarked on a commercially ill-fated solo career. His debut, 1969’s John, The Wolf King of L.A., found Phillips forgoing the careful orchestrations and perfectly arranged harmonies of his former group, replacing naïve summer-of-love visions with more jaundiced visions. Critically lauded, the album stirred little commercial interest. Unable to find a starring role as a solo artist, Phillips turned to film, penning soundtracks for Brewster McCloud and Myra Breckinridge. He returned to solo sessions in the early 1970s, augmenting his Wrecking Crew regulars with members of the Crusaders, Traffic, and Mothers of Invention, turning his sound urban and funky. The results, shelved at the time, were released in 2007 as Varese’s Jack of Diamonds.

Phillips wrote music for a Broadway show, but in-fighting with the producers sunk the artistic vision and bad reviews closed the play after a short run. With his drug issues intensifying, Phillips’ musical productivity dropped, taking only the occasional project, such as the soundtrack for The Man Who Fell to Earth. While in London working on the film, Phillips made the acquaintance of Mick Jagger and Keith Richards, and with both Mick Taylor and Ron Wood helping out, cut six tracks for a prospective solo album. When drug use and Richards’ Canadian bust caused the London sessions to languish, Phillips returned to New York where the project resumed the following year. The music bounced from Stonesy rock and country to more highly produced pop, and with Phillips’ voice in good shape throughout, he showed more confidence in his singing than on either of his earlier solo projects.

Unfortunately, label disinterest and other Stones obligations once again sapped the project’s momentum. The results of both the London and New York sessions were left unissued at the time, and the original mid-70s master tape mixes went missing for three decades. Phillips revisited the project nearly fifteen years later, adding new overdubs, remixing the multitracks and changing the album’s running order. Issued shortly after his 2001 passing under the title Pay, Pack and Follow, the album received critical interest, but like his 1969 solo debut, found no commercial fortune. Two years later the original mid-70s mixes were found, and together with three session tracks and a pair of outtakes from The Man Who Fell to Earth are issued here for the first time. Producer Jeffrey Greenberg’s original mixes are more of their time than Phillips’ later re-workings, and the London tracks, in particular, fit well with the sound of the Stones’ work of the era.

The album opens with the slick production of “Wilderness of Love,” framing Phillips’ thin voice in liquid guitar, female backing vocals and a catchy, upbeat melody. There’s a similar slickness to “2001,” though its backing is more like the Stones’ Some Girls, with gentle country-blue guitars in the corners. The chipper backing vocals contrast to Phillips’ indifferent contemplation of a future in which everything may be different and humanity may have survived; it’s as if Prince’s century-ending party was stocked with ‘ludes. Phillips’ reserve is more wistful on the country-folk memory of home, “Oh Virginia,” but he sings from the gut with Jagger on backing vocals for the yowling blues-rock expose of his wild-child Mackenzie, “She’s Just 14.” Phillips imagines (or perhaps just enunciates) the inner thoughts of a strip bar patron in the showtune blues “Pussycat” and fantasizes being rescued from the dissipation of his Bel Air rock star mansion on “Sunset Boulevard.” He profiles a financier friend on “Mr. Blue,” and provides an early consideration of South African apartheid in “Zulu Warrior.” Both feature strong percussion from Traffic’s Reebop Kwaku Baah, the latter lanced with superb rhythm and solo guitar. The original album closes with a pair of songs that speak intimately about the discontent in his relationship and the craving to find something new.

Tracks 11-13 are session outtakes almost too vibrant to fit the original album. “Time Machine” starts as a country-tinged ballad before picking up a Who-like rhythm, and “Feather Your Nest” is a hook-filled Stones-styled jam with a bubblegum melody. Tracks 14 and 15 provide remnants from Phillips’ soundtrack to The Man Who Fell to Earth. “Liar, Liar” is a reggae tune on which Phillips subtle vocal is surrounded by horns, organ and drums, and “Hello Mary Lou” is a rootsy piano-and-guitar led instrumental. Phillips’ dalliance with the Stones was a two-way collaboration, with the guitars of Richards and Taylor providing grit to Phillips’ pop-oriented dreams, and the confidence of Richards and Jagger inciting lead vocals that really lead. This is another truly pleasant surprise from Phillips’ post-Mama & Papas musical life. [©2008 hyperbolium dot com]

Listen to “Oh Virginia”

Elvin Bishop: The Blues Rolls On

Master blues guitarist has fun with his friends

Say “Elvin Bishop” to anyone weaned on 1970s pop radio, and they’ll answer “Fooled Around and Fell in Love.” The 1976 single’s vocal was so indelible that many listeners never realized it wasn’t Bishop, but instead soon-to-be Jefferson Starship vocalist Mickey Thomas. Bishop wrote the autobiographical lyrics, however, as well as an album (Struttin’ My Stuff) full of soul, pop, funk and even reggae. But his one trip to the upper reaches of the pop singles chart did little to reveal the depth of his musical credentials. In contrast, his previous solo outings had featured more direct helpings of the electric blues he’d developed as a founding member of the Paul Butterfield Blues Band. Struttin’ My Stuff’s pop leanings weren’t unprecedented, as Bishop had been mixing rock, country, soul and R&B into his blues for years, but its upbeat vibe borrowed more heavily from bicentennial euphoria and the party atmosphere of Bishop’s stage work than the Chicago scene in which he’d been musically bred.

Since Bishop’s chart breakthrough, he’s released over a dozen albums that have ranged from straight blues and country-tinged soul to humorous party-time sides. His latest, for Delta Groove, pulls together many of those elements for a guest-filled celebration of the blues. The title track opens the album with Bishop’s declaration of faith, recounting myriad influences and heroes and affirming the music’s future. The Fabulous Thunderbirds’ Kim Wilson adds his fine harp playing to the electric slides of Bishop and Allman Brother/Govt Mule’s Warren Haynes. A cover of “Night Time is the Right Time” is offered in tribute to Ray Charles, with John Nemeth and Angela Strehli sharing vocals and Bishop’s guitar playing call-and-response. Nemeth also provides a terrific vocal on the little-known Berry Gordy/Smokey Robinson blues “Who’s the Fool,” augmented by a bed-spring guitar solo from Kid Andersen.

Bishop revisits the Butterfield era “Yonder’s Wall,” slowed here to a muscular mid-tempo for vocalist Ronnie Baker Brooks, and updates the funk of “Struttin’ My Stuff” with the addition of a bluesy rap. B.B. King provides sophistication on “Keep a Dollar in Your Pocket,” though Bishop’s broad vocal keeps it light. A pair of Junior Wells covers include the low and steady “Come on in this House,” and the strutting “I Found Out,” the latter featuring James Cotton on harp. Bishop picks a howling, distorted solo backing for the autobiographical “Oklahoma,” and George Thorogood amps up “Send You Back to Georgia” to a battle between flatpick and slide. The album closes with an emotional, instrumental cover of Jimmy Reed’s “Honest I Do,” with John Nemeth providing the high, slicing harmonica and Bishop’s slide guitar doing the talking. By stacking his guest list with veterans and rookies, and picking tunes both historical and, Bishop’s love letter connects the blues’ history with the vitality of its future. [©2008 hyperbolium dot com]

Listen to “Struttin’ My Stuff”
Elvin Bishop’s Home Page
Elvin Bishop’s MySpace Page

Otis Redding: Live in London and Paris

Soul master at the peak of his powers

Redding’s live performances of the mid-60s are surprisingly well documented. Individual pieces of his work on Stax’s package tours of Europe can be heard on Live in Europe, The Stax/Volt Revue: Live in London, the Ace Records collection 1,000 Volts of Stax, and the DVD Stax/Volt Revue Live in Norway 1967. His stateside performances have turned up on several Monterey Pop artifacts, and two albums worth of tracks document his shows at the Whisky A Go Go (1 2). What separates this new release from the rest is the full picture of Redding’s set at the top of the Stax ticket. Stretching to over an hour, the nineteen tracks collect performances from back-to-back concerts in London and Paris, showing off not only the incendiary songs, but the excitement of the shows, from Emperor Rosko’s name-spelling introduction in London to the climactic renditions of “Try a Little Tenderness” that leave both audiences chanting for more.

Heading up a bill that featured Arthur Conley, Eddie Floyd and Sam & Dave, and backed by Booker T. and the M.G.’s and the Mar-Keys, Redding’s headlining slot found the party already well under way. Even so, his introduction was enough to take the crowd to a new level of excitement. With the M.G.’s kicking off the pulsing intro of “Respect,” Redding hits the stage like a soul hurricane at full speed, pulling the band into the cyclone with all his might. In the shorter London set he slows for a cover of “My Girl,” burning with emotion on what had been his first hit single in the UK. The band plays more grittily than Motown’s funk brothers, with the Mar-Keys’ horns stretching to hit high notes and Redding scatting to close the song. The rolling drum and horn intro of “Shake” elicits a cheer from the crowd, dialing up the electricity as the crowd shouts along to Redding’s exhortations.

Redding included two British Invasion hits in this set, working the Beatles’ “Day Tripper” and the Stones’ “Satisfaction” into Stax-styled soul shouts. The former found Redding weaving his way in and around the lyrics at double-speed with the horn section on his tail, the latter revs up Redding’s soul testimony to a frenzy. The London show closes with a tour de force seven-minute version of “Try a Little Tenderness,” opening with melancholy horns that segue into the opening stanza from Redding and organist Booker T. Jones. It’s the calm before the storm, as the song rises to crescendo after crescendo, sustained for three minutes by the emcee and crowd’s invitations for more, and culminating with most of the Stax revue joining in the finale.

The Paris program opens similarly to London’s with a call-and-response introduction and the pounding intro of “Respect.” Unlike the London show, which had a curfew, Redding’s Paris set was longer, and kept up the pulsing rhythm with “I Can’t Turn You Lose” before turning to the showcase ballad “I’ve Been Loving You Too Long.” The song’s starts and stops leave the crowd breathless, and Redding’s vocal pyrotechnics elicit both shouts and applause. The set list reprises several selections from London before adding a somber version of “These Arms of Mine” and closing the show with yet another barn-burning version of “Try a Little Tenderness.”

Remixed from the original multitrack masters (recorded originally by the legendary Tom Dowd), the results are crisp and punchy, with Redding’s vocals forcefully at the fore and the Stax band solidly underneath. The disc is delivered in a digipack with a 16-page booklet that includes period photos and poster art, and liner notes from Bill Belmont, Ace Records’ Roger Armstrong, French author Jean-Noel Orgouz, and M.G. guitarist Steve Cropper. Redding’s return to Europe was a triumph, and his stage patter showed deep appreciation for his audiences as he playfully acknowledged “it’s good to be home.” Home for Redding was anywhere that people loved soul music, and at the height of his powers there were few who could unleash anything more soulful than this. [©2008 hyperbolium dot com]

Listen to “I Can’t Turn You Loose”

Carole King: Tapestry (Legacy Edition)

Seminal singer-songwriter LP augmented with live tracks

At the time of this album’s 1971 release, Carole King had long since proven herself one of America’s greatest pop songwriters, but she had yet to be fully recognized as a performer. It wasn’t for a lack of trying. Early in her career she’d released a few singles from her perch at the legendary Brill Building, including the minor hit “It Might As Well Rain Until September.” She’d also produced a smattering of titles for the Dimension and Tomorrow labels in the mid-60s, an album with the group The City in 1969, and her solo debut, Writer, in 1970. The latter held many charms, but found King singing her way past rock ‘n’ roll backings or fitting herself into country rock. Writer‘s variety is broader than the piano-centered productions of Tapestry, but neither the upbeat numbers nor the placid ballads of King’s debut proved the expressive jazz-tinged singer-songwriter vehicles of this sophomore breakthrough.

Presciently, Writer’s closing cover of “Up on the Roof” did point the way to Tapestry, taking what had been a signature 1962 performance by The Drifters and rearranging its Latin beat and swirling strings into an introspective piano ballad. It’s the same magic King performed in transforming the searching adolescence of the Shirelles’ “Will You Love Me Tomorrow” into the thoughtful worry-wonder of a woman on the brink of thirty. The feats are all the more impressive for the lyrics having been written when King was barely twenty-years-old herself, writing for commercial acceptance on AM radio rather than pure self expression. Here, as throughout Tapestry, King’s piano is the instrumental focus, allowing her to emote through her voice and fingers in parallel.

The funky opener, “I Feel the Earth Move,” finds King’s vocals equally at home up-tempo. Her emancipated expression is breathtaking, and a bluesy piano solo enhances the euphoric freedom. Such openly emotional writing would be cloying in less talented hands, but King was not only an expert wordsmith, but a definitive interpreter of her own material. Her gospel-tinged version of “You’ve Got a Friend” is heavier than James Taylor’s contemporaneous single, amplifying both the pain and relief of the song’s lyrics, and the closing take of “(You Make Me Feel Like) A Natural Woman” is stripped of Aretha Franklin’s arrangement and supported instead by King’s piano playing and an overdubbed backing vocal. The spare instrumentation brings this closer to a songwriter’s demo, but King’s performance finds a dedication to the lyrics that reclaims her stake in the song.

In addition to re-imagined versions of earlier songs, King composed intimate new works of relationships being strained (“So Far Way”) and broken (“It’s Too Late”), loneliness (“Home Again”), salvation (“Way Over Yonder”) and faithfulness (“Where You Lead”). It’s only with “Smackwater Jack” and the album’s title track that King took to more fictional abandon. The sum total of Tapestry swept the 1971 Grammys, netting King awards for Album of the and Pop Vocal Performance, as well as Record of the Year ( “It’s Too Late”) and Song of the Year (“You’ve Got a Friend”). The album launched “It’s Too Late” to the top of the charts, and followed with “So Far Away” as a top twenty. Both singles’ B-sides, “I Feel the Earth Move” and “Smackwater Jack,” got their share of airplay, with the album peaking at #1 at the start of a six-year stay on the charts.

Legacy’s two-CD reissue features the original album on disc one, and a second disc of live takes recorded at various locations in 1973 and 1976. The eleven tracks of disc two repeat the Tapestry song list, save “Where You Lead,” whose lyrics King had deemed servile, and left off her set list. Over the years, this material was performed in a variety of musical settings, but Legacy has selected arrangements featuring only voice and piano. There’s not much distance between Lou Adler’s lean arrangements for the original album and these solo takes, but removing the intermediation of studio recording pushes King even closer to her songs. She adds an occasional inflection to her melodies, but what really sets these performances apart is the communication with her audience. The songs are transformed from interior expressions of a songwriter to vehicles for sharing emotions and responses.

King really digs into her songs on stage, bringing the sleeper “Beautiful” fully to life and adding extra passion to “Way Over Yonder.” As on the original album her “covers” of songs made into hits by others reveal new emotional layers. “You’ve Got a Friend” spurs King to vocal exclamation, and “Will You Love Me Tomorrow” is sung with a declarative force that’s in startling contrast to its intimate lyric. Even more so than on the studio versions you get a hear King’s singing and playing as natural expressions. Running the live tracks in the same order as the album suggests just how carefully the album was sequenced; but what isn’t shown here is how these songs fit into King’s larger live set. It’s also interesting to note that none of these tracks were selected from tours that promoted Tapestry itself; they’re all from subsequent album tours.

Those who purchased earlier versions of Tapestry will enjoy the new light shed by the live tracks; they can be purchased individually from on-line download services. Those picking up their first Tapestry CD may also want to reach back to the 1999 reissue for the bonus track “Out in the Cold,” likewise available as a download. This latter track is reputed to be a Tapestry outtake, though its provenance remains disputed. Legacy’s deluxe gatefold digipack includes new liner notes by Harvey Kubernick, period photos from the recording sessions, and song-by-song lyrics and instrumental credits. This is a superb reintroduction of one of the 1970s most endearing and enduring albums. [©2008 hyperbolium dot com]

Carole King’s Home Page

The Youngers: Heritage

Chiming, tough country-rock Americana

This Pennsylvania quartet’s second album opens with a combination of country, rock and ringing guitars so deft you’d be hard-pressed not to hum the verses and sing the chorus their second time around. The lyrics of “Heartbreaker” lash out in the best wounded-but-prideful pop tradition, dragging out the words in enervated late-night heartache. The worn spirit remains for “Heritage,” but as the ire of a railroad driver’s frustration with an overtaxing, unresponsive government. The song is driven by the drums’ steady march beat, with electric guitars adding country-rock grit. Recorded at Johnny Cash’s cabin studio (with John Carter Cash producing), the lyrics provide a contrast to the elder Cash’s nostalgic songs of railroading, yet still match the man in black’s respect for the underclasses. The driver of “Truck Driving Man” is also wearied, fatalistically worn from a working man’s pains.

Several of the album’s songs suggest open plains and Western landscapes, similar to the Sadies’ recent New Seasons CD. A farmer’s armed defense of his land in “In the Morning” could just as easily be set a hundred years ago as today, and the gambling drifter/drunk of “Highway 9” could be found wandering a stretch of asphalt or a dusty trail. Bassist Randy Krater steps to the microphone for the country waltz “The Ride,” a song whose allusions intertwine a dying love, suicide and the light of the hereafter. More traditional are the honky-tonk broken hearts of “Our Little Secret” and “Right all the Wrongs,” the latter a weepy waltz that opens with the drunken, a capella moan “I guess I closed the bar again tonight.” Tears rain down from the pedal steel of Ralph Mooney and fiddle of Laura Cash.

The bluegrass edged “Big Ol’ Freight Train” sports the more traditional theme of a love taken away, though one has to wonder why the singer’s mate was taken away on a freight train. Maybe she’s a brakeman or hobo. Two of the band’s influences are paid straightforward homage, starting with the tumbling, introspective poetry of “Seat 24” and its melodic reinterpretation of “Mr. Tambourine.” This is followed by the E-Street styled “Middle of the Night,” replete with wordy, rapid-fire rhymes and a Clarence Clemons inspired sax solo. Each feels like a writing exercise that ended up too close to its source, but they’re a minor distraction from the band’s original material, Todd Bartolo’s engaging vocals and the band’s muscular Americana sound. [©2008 hyperbolium dot com]

Listen to “Highway 9”
The Youngers’ Home Page

Mark Erelli: Delivered

Moving Americana folk-country and rootsy rock

Over the past nine years Mark Erelli’s explored a variety of Americana sounds, including singer-songwriter folk-country, western swing, nineteenth-century traditional tunes, and mid-American roots rock. His latest collection of folk and roots rock songs focus on family and society, including intimate first-person discoveries and broader political and social commentaries. The disc opens with “Hope Dies Last,” detailing the endless stream of horrific news with which we’re beaten on a daily basis. Sung intimately, Erelli sounds like Paul Simon worn down from the battles of younger years, provoked by a president who’d “rather talk to Jesus than to anyone who disagrees,” and pragmatically stifling his anger in the face of the endless bad news cycles. The same combination of confusion and resignation threads through “Volunteers” and its harrowing look at a weekend guardsman’s entrapment as a full-time soldier in Iraq. Sung starkly to an acoustic guitar, the pained vocal wails that close the song provide a live wire abstract of the lyrics’ horrors. The guitars toughen on “Shadowland,” as does Erelli’s critique of the extra-legal measures employed in the war and the resulting depletion of our moral foundation.

Several songs explore isolation and spirituality. The traveling musician of “Unraveled” looks home for salvation, and the questioning “Not Alone” travels between breezy images of nature, sleepy small town Sundays, and the heart of the city. The music climbs sympathetically from acoustic folk to full-blown country-rock and back. More peaceful is the first-person anticipation of a believer’s reward in “Delivered,” and its comfort for those left behind., and more contemplative is the working stiff of “Five Beer Moon,” dejectedly downing a six-pack and starting at the sea. Contemplating his small-town circumstance he finds himself trapped in a place where freedom is only in the imagination. Things turn upbeat with the rootsy rock of “Baltimore.” Its romantic longing and on-the-road lyrics (“I got a pawnshop ring and a yellow rose bouquet, honey that I bought in a cheap truck stop”) couple with shuffling drums and whistling organ to echo the character of Steve Earle’s Guitar Town. Erelli turns personal with two moving songs of fatherhood. In “Man of the Family” he steps into his late father’s shoes, wondering if he’s ready for the responsibility and realizing he’d been left all the tools he’ll need; in the lighter “Once” Erelli luxuriates in the love of fatherhood. Whether drawing from personal experience or creating fictional scenes, Erelli’s songs remain grounded with human emotion in every performance. [©2008 hyperbolium dot com]

View a video of Mark Erelli performing “Volunteer” here.

Mark Erelli’s Home Page

Jobriath: Creatures of the Street

1974 glam-rock LP crushed by the hype of its predecessor

Jobriath’s self-titled 1973 debut received positive notices, but the ensuing publicity hype all but sunk the artist’s critical reputation. He’d delivered the musical goods, but his manager’s hype machine and a failed-to-materialized grand tour of European opera houses hung over this follow-up like a rain cloud. The notoriety that greeted the first openly gay rock star’s debut had turned to scorn and apathy, resulting in little notice of a sophomore album that featured some wonderfully crafted, dramatic glam-rock. It probably didn’t help that Jobriath’s manager stuck his name in the credits as “Jerry Brandt Presents Jobraith in Creatures of the Street,” and suggested the album was a romantic comedy.

Co-producing once more with engineer Eddie Kramer, Jobriath’s second album’s broadens his reach with additional orchestrations and showy production touches. He continues to sing in a high register, retaining a tonal resemblance to Mick Jagger and Mott the Hoople’s Ian Hunter, but here he adds gospel and classical elements to both the vocal arrangements and his piano playing. Despite suggestions that this was a concept album, the concept remains obscure. Still, much of the album sounds as if it were a cast album to a stage musical with rock-opera pretensions. “Street Corner Love” is rendered as mannered show rock, and the stagey “Dietrich/Fondyke” combines a full orchestral arrangement, piano flourishes and a female chorus into a dramatic splash of film nostalgia. The funky “Good Times” sounds as if its tribal-rock vibe was lifted from “Hair” – a period play in which Jobriath had performed a few years earlier.

More inventively, the grittily-titled “Scumbag” is rendered as the sort of music hall country-folk the Kinks recorded in the early 1970s, and Jobriath’s orchestration for “What a Pretty” is impressively threatening. Only a few songs, “Ooh La La” and “Sister Sue,” break free of the theatricality to stand on their own as glam-rock. There are many similarities to Jobriath’s debut here, but the overall result is more fragmented and contains few nods to radio-ready compositions. After promotional fiascos consumed Jobriath’s debut, there seemed to be no interest in commercial pretensions on what would be his swansong. Dropped by both his manager and label, he retreated from the music industry, reappearing a few years later as a lounge singer named “Cole Berlin,” and passing away largely unnoticed in 1983. With the reissue of his two Elektra albums, modern-day listeners can hear his music in place of his hype, and the music – particularly the debut album – is worth hearing. [©2008 hyperbolium dot com]

Jobriath: Jobraith

Superb 1973 glam-rock LP rescued from purgatory

Thirty-five years after its initial release, it’s hard to grasp the critical invective that followed this artist’s solo debut. Taken on its musical merits, this 1973 release is a gem: an inspired album of glam-rock that drank deeply of Bowie’s theatricality, Queen’s grandiosity, Lou Reed’s decadence, and T. Rex’s trashy glamour. Jobriath even personally expanded upon the gender-bending sexuality of the times by outing himself as the first-ever openly gay rock star. Without considering the overblown promotional hype that surrounded this album, it’s hard to imagine its failure, and how the critically ignored follow-up album all but consigned Jobriath to the footnotes of rock ‘n’ roll.

Jobriath’s pop music story began the Los Angeles tribe of the stage musical Hair. He subsequently became lead singer, songwriter, guitarist and keyboardist of the Los Angeles group Pidgeon, combining stagey California vocal-harmony sunshine production pop with baroque and psychedelic influences. The group’s self-titled 1969 release on Decca failed to fly, and Jobriath languished in obscurity for another four years. Fortuitously (or perhaps just legendarily), the rejection of his audition tape by Clive Davis led to a chance encounter with industry veteran Jerry Brandt. Brandt’s promotion of Jobriath met brick walls at A&M and Elektra, and the artist was finally left to produce his own debut with engineer Eddie Kramer. Jobriath scored the sessions (teaching himself orchestration in the process), recorded in London with a full orchestra, and created a surprisingly grand and muscular rock album.

Had the album been allowed to sell itself, things might have been different, but in circling back to Elektra (and becoming label founder Jac Holzman’s last signing), Jobriath and Brandt unleashed a publicity wave of gigantic billboards, hyperbolic press (“Elvis, The Beatles, Jobriath”) and plans for a fantastical stage show that never materialized. Jobriath’s space-oriented fantasies were not unlike Bowie’s, but his theatricality was more finely attuned to American entertainments such as Tin Pan Alley and Hollywood. The nostalgic piano-and-vocal “Movie Queen,” for example, speaks more to Irving Berlin and Cole Porter (whose names Jobriath would combine a few years later for his lounge lizard persona “Cole Berlin”) than to then-contemporary hard-rock influences.

But even with Jobriath’s feints to the past, the album rocks with dramatic, high-register vocals, scorching electric guitars, thundering piano, and a soulful backing chorus. The disc opens with an edgy, obsessive love song, but one that’s more Jim Steinman grand than Lou Reed (i.e., “Venus in Furs”) cold. The low piano notes and backing chorus of “Be Still” give way to more lyrical passages and Jobriath’s fascination with outer space threads its way into the lyrics. Back on Earth, the proto-rock-rap “World Without End” takes on religion, hypocrisy, prophesy and reincarnation, analogizing the latter to looping repeats of vintage films, and “Earthling” essays an alien’s point-of-view.

Bowie’s vocal influence is heard on “Space Clown” amid crashing circus sound effects and calliope themes woven into the background. On “I’m A Man” you can hear the theatrical vocal and arrangement style Ray Davies’ developed for his rock operas, with music hall dynamics instilling grandeur into the productions. Jobriath paints a poetic picture of a rainy day on “Inside,” sketching the chill, splash and soak from the confines of a warm, dry perch, and “Rock of Ages” decorates its salute-to-roots with the squealing electric guitar leads of glam. The album closes with the moody, tortured soul of “Blow Away (A Peaen for P.I.T.).”

When his grandiose tour of European opera houses failed to materialize, the dilettantish claims to rock music’s crown sparked an inevitable backlash. Stateside critics had been generally kind to the album, but UK critics dismissed it amid the surrounding hype. A follow-up album, Creatures of the Street, faired even less well, prompting Jobriath’s retirement and rendering him a rock ‘n’ roll footnote who passed away in 1983. With this reissue, the audience that never found Jobriath can now hear him outside the cloud of controversy. While this isn’t the game-changing album its publicity promised, it is a superb glam-rock album that deserved a broader hearing than it was originally afforded. [©2008 hyperbolium dot com]

Margie Joseph: Margie

Joseph’s third for Atlantic re-finds the funk

Soul singer Margie Joseph’s third album for Atlantic, originally released in 1975, revisited the funkier bottom end of her 1973 label debut (confusingly titled Margie Joseph). Where 1974’s Sweet Surrender had smoothed out the R&B grooves and nosed its way towards disco’s rhythms, this new set offered more grit on the upbeat numbers and deeper soul on the ballads. Arif Mardin continued in the producer’s chair, and the song list was again constructed with a large dose of covers and a pair of originals. Joseph and Mardin’s “Sign of the Times” opens the album with P Funk-styled synthesizer and plucked bass, and a melody that anticipates a seamless segue into Carole King’s “Believe in Humanity.” Both songs offer up early-70s social spirituality in their lyrics. A cover of King’s “After All This Time” appears later on the album, transitioning smoothly from a softer mid-tempo to a beefier soul shout as the strings and percussion start and stop for emphasis. “The Same Love That Made Me Laugh” is taken at a slow tempo, drawn out and more worn down than Bill Withers’ original, while “Who Gets Your Love,” is given a lighter treatment than Dusty Springfield’s earlier version. Joseph gets a chance to scat briefly at the end of “Promise Me Your Love,” unfortunately just in time for the fade, and the album closes with a cover of “I Can’t Move No Mountains” that’s decidedly more urban than Blood, Sweat & Tears earlier horn-lined release. Many of Joseph’s fans vote this as their favorite of her releases. It’s more sophisticated and less brash than her label debut, which is a plus or minus depending on your preference for polish over roots. What this album makes clear is that Joseph was maturing as an artist, and her pairing with Mardin, which ended with this album, had developed over the course of their three albums together. [©2008 hyperbolium dot com]

Hal Ketchum: Father Time

Soulful live-to-tape studio album from country hit maker

Ketchum’s been a country hitmaker since the early ’90s, with consistently interesting albums that have often shaded to the smoother, adult-contemporary side of Nashville’s output. In 1998 he split the sessions for I Saw the Light between Nashville and Austin, employing a more rustic choice of material and arrangements for the latter. The resulting album wasn’t as cohesive as his earlier releases, but taking the sessions individually one finds Ketchum standing authoritatively in both worlds. More importantly, the alternatives to Nashville’s way would again be exercised the following year with the electric blues “Long Way Down” and the Zydeco-inspired “You Love Me, Love Me Not.” Ketchum continued to revert to pop-influenced country, but he also wailed on a Bo Diddley beat for 2003’s “The King of Love,” found a soulful vocal gear for “On Her Own Time,” and championed the common man on the shuffle blues “The Carpenter’s Way.”

Ketchum’s last album, the 2007 release One More Midnight, was released in Europe but not the U.S., making this CD his first domestic issue in five years. In addition to some fine new songs (most newly written, a few selected from Ketchum’s catalog of previously unreleased works) and superb vocal performances, the presence of this live-in-the-studio recording is ear opening. Ketchum and his engineer (Craig White) capture the sort of intimate sound one used to expect from vinyl half-speed masters and direct-to-disc pressings. The purpose-built band, featuring Bryan Sutton, Darrell Scott, Eddie Bayers, Chip Davis and other A-listers, responds to the live challenge with performances miles beyond the baffle-separated, multi-track chart readings of modern recording. And it all took two days, no overdubs and only a few second takes.

From the opening track you can hear Ketchum roughing up the polish of Nashville’s manicure as his first-person narrative explores the human estrangement and philosophical implications of a panhandler’s hopelessness. A soulful backing chorus provides a taste of Muscle Shoals, but it’s Ketchum’s pained, emotional vocal that brings the song’s protagonist to life. He manages the same feat on “Ordinary Day,” crossing genders to voice the tired-but-satisfied voice of a waitress, and on “Sparrow” he laments the cost of war from the perspective of a Civil War soldier. More fantastically, the jazzy bluegrass and cooking Southern funk of “Millionaire’s Wife” backs a steamy noir-styled tale of cheating and betrayal, ending with the imprisoned mark’s death sentence: “She got a house and a long black Lincoln / I got a ticket straight to hell.” Think of Body Heat or The Postman Always Rings Twice as told by a poor sap on death row. A swampier second-line rhythm can be heard on the kiss-off “If You Don’t Love Me Baby (Just Let Me Go),” and the band fires up gypsy jazz sounds with Bryon Sutton’s fleet-fingered acoustic guitar playing on “Million Dollar Baby.”

Ketchum frequently writes about family, including a loping Marty Robbins-styled waltz, “Yesterday’s Gone,” that profiles his grandfathers’ decline upon the passing of their spouses, and the poor-but-rich nostalgia of “Surrounded by Love.” His great-grandmother’s passing provided the inspiration for the moody “The Day He Called Your Name,” and the album’s only cover, Tom Waits’ “Jersey Girl” is sung as a soulful fiddle-and-steel country love song for his Jersey-born wife. Closer to home, “Down Along the Guadalupe” paints an inviting picture of a summer evening on Texas’ Guadalupe river, with Spanish-tinged guitars providing fittingly lazy accompaniment. As noted earlier, Ketchum’s always been a consistent album artist, but freed to record as a musician (rather than a studio artist) he’s delivered a CD whose lack of production artifice inspires a level of artistry and soulfulness well beyond his middle-of-the-road hits. [©2008 hyperbolium dot com]

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