Tag Archives: Collectors’ Choice

Blue Ash: No More, No Less

Power-pop classic finally on CD after thirty-five years

At the time of its 1973 release, No More, No Less, received glowing reviews from Rolling Stone, Creem and Bomp, and the band was on their way with opening slots for Aerosmith, Bob Seger and Nazareth, and even Dick Clark gave them a spin on American Bandstand. By the following year, however, a lack of sales led to the dissolution of their contract with Mercury. The band managed one more album in 1979, but essentially disappeared without making a lasting popular mark. Further, unlike fellow cult pop heroes such as the Rubinoos, Blue Ash’s unreissued catalog left their legacy in the hands of a small but influential cadre of fans: Chicago columnist Bob Greene mentioned Blue Ash in an end-of-the-70s best-of column, the Records covered “Abracadabra (Have You Seen Her?),” and Scram’s Lost in the Grooves highlighted the No More, No Less as a lost treasure. While the band’s debut continued to languish in the vault, a 2004 two-CD set Around Again served up demos and outtakes that suggested what we were all missing.

Apparently the haggling over rights and the location of master tapes appears to have been settled, because thirty-five years after its initial release, the original dozen tracks are finally on CD. Best of all, this is a rarity that lives up to its hype, delivering on all the promises of early-70s power pop. Blue Ash, like Big Star, The Raspberries, Badfinger and less commercially successful peers such as the Flamin’ Groovies and Hot Dogs, melded the best of mid-60s harmony with the beefier guitar and drum sounds of the early-70s. They then pressed this combination into the compositionally economic mold that commercial FM borrowed from its AM cousins and used to dethrone its free-form older brothers. The results are effervescent three-minute radio gems that pack musical adventure into a tightly scripted form: guitar solos that sting with energy rather than drag with excess showmanship, Keith Moon-inspired full-kit drumming that serves as a motor rather than an gaudy accessory, melodies that lay their barbed hooks in the first verse, and choruses that lend themselves to immediate sing-a-longs.

As much as the band set out to make pop music that reflected the Beatles, Kinks and Beau Brummels, they did so in a new context. The album’s two covers are instructive: Dylan’s then-unreleased acoustic-and-harmonica travelogue “Dusty Old Fairgrounds” was rearranged into a blazing Who-styled drums-and-guitar rocker, and the Beatles’ “Any Time at All” mimics the original’s gentler verses, but lays down heavier rock for the choruses. That stretching between the sweet pop and rock dynamic characterizes much of the album, as the group employed Byrdsian jangle, Left Banke harmonics and even Brewer & Shipley styled country folk-rock, and then turned around to lay on guitar and rhythm section muscle. The opening “Abracadabra (Have You Seen Her?),” the wishful “All I Want” and the closing “Let There Be Rock” offer the glam-guitar energy of Mott the Hoople and Slade, and though “Smash My Guitar” never attains Who-like ferocity, it still manages to play out its angst with a one-take real-life smashup.

The traditional hard-luck broken hearts of power-pop turn up on “Plain to See,” and the nostalgic tone of the Flamin’ Groovies is heard on “I Remember a Time” and “Wasting My Time.” There are country influences on “Just Another Game,” bubblegum on “Here We Go Again” and West Coast folk rock (with wonderful accents of volume-pedal guitar) on “What Can I Do for You.” It’s easy to tag all these influences and fellow-travelers in retrospect, but in 1973 these sounds were simply part of the atmosphere, rather than icons already ripened for imitation. Blue Ash interpreted their ‘60s influences in the context and conventions of their times. What’s surprising is how undated it still sounds, particularly compared to the radio pop of just a few years later. By sticking to the basics of guitar, bass, drums and a hint of piano, by relying on classic pop melody and craft, Blue Ash minted a timeless classic. [©2008 hyperbolium dot com]

Margie Joseph: Ready for the Night

‘70s soul singer returns to Atlantic for mid-80s dance

After six years away, Joseph returned to Atlantic for this keyboard-heavy 1984 dance release. Those who enjoyed the funkier soul sounds of her early works on Stax, and her Arif Marden-produced albums for Atlantic will be surprised to hear her powerful voice singing throwaway lyrics to the sort of hackneyed production into which disco morphed. However, if you enjoyed the direction Joseph was heading on the Johnny Bristol-produced 1978 release Feeling My Way, and you have fond memories of dancing to drum machines in the mid-80s, you may very well enjoy this. Joseph herself sounds great, and the presence of Narada Michael Walden and Randy Jackson insures that the album was produced and performed with great care. But while Joseph had plenty of vocal power (ala Narada’s later stars, Whitney Houston and Mariah Carey), her warm, soulful sound simply doesn’t connect with these synthetic backings. [©2008 hyperbolium dot com]

Margie Joseph: Feeling My Way

Soft soul and disco abyss

Perhaps “abyss” is too strong a word, since there are a few fine string-lined ballads and mid-tempo numbers to be found on this 1978 release, Joseph’s fifth for the Atlantic label group. Having worked with Arif Mardin on her earliest Atlantic albums, then with Motown legend Lamont Dozier on 1976’s Hear the Words, Feel the Feeling, Joseph hooked up with Motown writer/producer Johnny Bristol this time out and lost herself in his unmemorable songs and clichéd production. Joseph’s voice remains fetching, but the majority of the tracks pass by without leaving an impression, and the phased guitars, swooping strings and backing singers sound dated. Highlights include a passionate cover of Bristol’s 1976 original “You Turned Me on to Love,” and the faithful, romantic “Picture of a Clown.” Those who enjoy the soft soul sounds of mid-70s may very well enjoy this album, but fans of her Joseph’s early works on Stax, and her Mardin-produced albums for Atlantic (particularly 1973’s Margie Joseph and 1975’s Margie) won’t find the same funky spark here. [©2008 hyperbolium dot com]

Margie Joseph: Hear the Words, Feel the Feeling

Atlantic soul singer teams up with Motown mainstay

After a pair of albums for Stax and three Arif Marden-produced albums for Atlantic, Joseph took to the studio with the legendary Lamont Dozier. Unsurprisingly the production and Dozier-penned songs retain a good deal of the Motown sound. What sets this album apart, again unsurprisingly, is Joseph herself, whose gutsy vocals are more rooted in the South than the typical Hitsville singer’s. Freed of Motown’s conventions, Dozier let Joseph vocalize passionately, providing contrast rather than conformity with the arrangements of McKinley Jackson. As on her next album, Feeling the Way, there are some proto-disco sounds here, but Dozier and Jackson keep things fresh, and the players, which include Detroit transplants and Los Angeles hotshots, combine the heat of Motor City with the cool of Southern California. This is an unassuming album whose charms are more subtle than Joseph’s earlier work, but still quite intoxicating. [©2008 hyperbolium dot com]

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]

Gene Clark: Silverado ’75 – Live & Unreleased

An intimate look into a former-Byrd’s soul

As a founding member of the Byrds, Clark was known for both his singing and songwriting, having written and sung several of the Byrds most memorable tunes. His departure in 1966 led to a one-off recording with the Gosdin Brothers whose fusion of country and rock pre-dated the Clark-less Byrds turn (Sweetheart of the Rodeo) by a year. Clark rambled further on the country-rock road with Doug Dillard for a pair of albums, and finally recorded his first solo release in 1971. His songwriting and singing remained strong throughout, but his commercial fortunes never matched the success he’d found early on; even a 1973 reunion of the Byrds’ original lineup failed to generate any real sparks in the marketplace; what it did provide was an introduction to David Geffen, who offered Clark a solo deal on Asylum.

The resulting 1974 solo album, No Other, was miles from the rootsy directions Clark had been exploring, befuddling listeners with layers of instruments and studio effects. His label was likewise nonplussed, cutting the planned double album to a single, failing to fully promote the release, and providing little tour support; the album disappeared after slinking on to the bottom of the chart. So it was in the shadow of these failures that Clark set out on a lengthy tour of club dates with a trio composed of himself, Roger White on guitar and Duke Bardwell on bass. The artist’s disappointment and sadness is evident on this 1975 live recording in both the weariness of his vocals and the dismissal of the album with only two tracks (“No Other” and “Silver Raven”) on his set list.

The drumless, stripped-down sound of the trio is fleshed out with harmonica and three-part harmonies. This follows from Clark’s earlier country-rock work, and his pre-Byrds career as a folkie shows in the directness of his singing. Besides the folk-country staple “Long Black Veil” and the traditional “In the Pines,” the songwriting is all Clark’s. He reaches back to the Byrds first two albums (1, 2) for “Here Without You” and “Set You Free This Time,” each more weary and resigned than the originals, and Dillard & Clark’s nostalgic mid-western train song, “Kansas City Southern,” a mainstay of Clark’s live set, is less bluegrass-frenetic than the studio original and and more country-soul groove. Drawing “She Darked the Sun” from Dillard & Clark’s first album, Clark turns in his most focused and heartrending (if not always on-key) performance of the set.

In addition to a pair of songs from No Other (“No Other” and “Silver Raven” the latter included as an encore), Clark includes a song cut from the original release, “Train Leaves Here This Morning,” and a pair of new songs “Daylight Line” and the poetic, metaphorical “Home Run King.” The CD’s 65-minute running length includes some of Clark’s between-song banter, revealing the intimate space (both physical and personal) in which the show was performed. In many ways it’s fitting that the emotional strain of Clark’s lyrics are underlined by the physical exertion of club touring; this may not be Clark’s best recording, but it’s lack of artifice provides an unobstructed view into the songwriter’s soul. [©2008 hyperbolium.com]