Tuesday, December 3, 2024

Thomas Dolby 5: The Gate To The Mind’s Eye

Having slowly wearied of trying to compete in the modern music industry marketplace, Thomas Dolby stayed true to his nature by following the latest in technology, which by the ‘90s had increasingly relied on computers. This meant he got gigs scoring computer-based video games, so it was an easy step to computer animation, just as it was starting to blossom. Since he was still signed to a label, The Gate To The Mind’s Eye was his soundtrack to the third in a series of computer-generated films, none of which we’ve seen and don’t plan to. (The previous soundtrack was scored by Jan Hammer, the next by Kansas founder Kerry Livgren.) As background music, it’s mostly inoffensive, but not exactly groundbreaking.

Much of it is instrumental, but there are some vocal pieces. “Armageddon” has lyrics, mostly in Latin, with operatic vocals that continue on “Planet Of Lost Souls”, which is nicest when it’s just the piano. “N.E.O.” is mostly spoken by respected (so we’re told) Italian astrophysicist Fiorella Terenzi; he’s credited with the closing “rap” but at least he’s not trying to be the most illinest B-boy. Despite beginning with a quote from one of Napoleon’s letters to Josephine, “Valley Of The Mind’s Eye” is a fairly lush love song, while “Nuvogue” is a swing jazz tune that would have fit fine on Aliens Ate My Buick. But “Quantum Mechanic” is a techno song warbled by Dr. Terenzi, who also supplied the words. These days it almost sounds like a parody.

The album didn’t do much for his record sales, but for those who weren’t interested in following his esoteric muse, earlier in the year a compilation cleverly titled Retrospectacle delivered the handful of hits and a few deep cuts. The main attraction for fans was the availability of “Urges” and “Leipzig”, which had been added to the first US version of the first album but soon dropped in favor of “She Blinded Me With Science” and “One Of Our Submarines”. Beyond that, it samples each of his first four albums for a chronological yet cohesive sampler.

Thomas Dolby The Best Of Thomas Dolby: Retrospectacle (1994)—
Thomas Dolby
The Gate To The Mind’s Eye Soundtrack (1994)—

Friday, November 29, 2024

Fairport Convention 3: Unhalfbricking

Like a lot of bands, Fairport Convention truly hit their stride with their third album. On Unhalfbricking they moved much closer to electrified English folk, setting the standard for others to follow. By this time Ian Matthews had left the band, bringing the core members down to five, but the presence of Dave Swarbrick on fiddle and mandolin would lead to his joining full-time, and we’re getting ahead of ourselves again.

As befits an album with a mysterious, meaningless title, it’s opened by the keening electric dulcimers on “Genesis Hall”, a typically brooding Richard Thompson lyric. Bob Dylan would get a chunk of the publishing royalties from this album, as three of his more obscure songs are included, the first being “Si Tu Dois Partir”, a near-jug band rendition of “If You Gotta Go, Go Now” translated into French. The complicated meter of “Autopsy” only enhances the gothic tone of the lyrics, but it’s “A Sailor’s Life” that is the literal and figurative centerpiece. Over eleven minutes this traditional tune begins quietly and builds much like the rolling sea, Sandy Denny sounding every inch of a fair maiden, Thompson tearing off a terrific guitar line against Swarbrick’s violin once let loose. And then the sea is calm again.

The 12-bar “Cajun Woman” is something of a rockin’ palate cleanser, as the tender and wistful “Who Knows Where The Time Goes?” is finally heard in Sandy’s own rendition. Another Dylan obscurity, “Percy’s Song”, gets something of a campfire treatment but for those electric dulcimers and organ, and everyone gets a turn at a verse of “Million Dollar Bash”, back when The Basement Tapes was still a bootleg. (A later British CD added two Dylan-related bonus tracks: an outtake of “Dear Landlord”, plus “Ballad Of Easy Rider”—to which Dylan supposedly contributed one line—that was an outtake from the next album, but included for thematic reasons.)

The album’s release was unfortunately clouded by the death of drummer Martin Lamble two months earlier in a van accident while the band was traveling back from a gig. What’s more, while the British cover depicted the band partially concealed behind a fence at Sandy Denny’s parents’ house (they’re the pair in front), for some reason the American label decided to use a clearer snapshot of the band, albeit in the corner of a sleeve dominated by dancing elephants. Nonetheless, the music within is quirky yet solid, garnering the rating below. There’s really not much more we can say about it.

Fairport Convention Unhalfbricking (1969)—4

Tuesday, November 26, 2024

Roger Daltrey 10: A Celebration

Perhaps knowing what his legacy would always be, Roger Daltrey turned his attention to staging a pair of all-star concerts at Carnegie Hall for his 50th birthday. A Celebration: The Music Of Pete Townshend And The Who put Roger—tux-clad but tie- and sleeve-less for the first half, shirtless under a leather jacket for the second—in front of an orchestra conducted by Michael Kamen and a band featuring veterans of the 1989 tour and such Townshend familiars as Jody Linscott, Rabbit Bundrick, Phil Palmer, Jon Carin, Pino Palladino, and Simon Phillips. The set consisted of a curious mix of familiar songs and surprises, even a few solo choices, the spotlight occasionally ceded to or shared with special guest performers.

A Michael Lindsay-Hogg-directed pay-per-view special followed, while the official Bob Ezrin-produced album only presented half of the music performed at the 2½-hour shows. As Roger no longer had a solo deal of his own, it was released on an independent label the same damn day as the Who’s heralded box set.

The show opened with an “Overture”—not the one from Tommy, but a new medley of orchestrated Pete melodies. From there Roger sang some of the expected hits, but also some deep cuts. Yet the most startling and best rendition was that of “The Sea Refuses No River”, making us wish he’d explored more of Pete’s solo catalog.

Relegating contributions from Spin Doctors, Eddie Vedder, Lou Reed, and Alice Cooper to the video document, CD listeners were treated to Linda Perry, then of 4 Non Blondes, with a frankly excellent take on “Doctor Jimmy”, and the Chieftains, who augmented “Baba O’Riley” and “After The Fire”. (SinĂ©ad O’Connor, who was still getting booed in those days, sang on the last two, but was not included in the mix.) David Sanborn was touted as a featured soloist on “5:15”, John Entwistle contributed bass to “The Real Me”, and Pete himself played a few songs without the other two; of those, only “Who Are You” was included.

A Celebration wasn’t exactly a sales smash, but the subsequent “Daltrey Sings Townshend” tour attempted to keep the party going with some of the same players, plus key additions like John Entwistle, Pete’s brother Simon on guitar, and young Zak Starkey on drums. As John always needed the money, more tours would follow, making the album something of a catalyst for future Who activity.

Roger Daltrey A Celebration: The Music Of Pete Townshend And The Who (1994)—3

Friday, November 22, 2024

Guns N’ Roses 4: Use Your Illusion II

Releasing two albums at once meant that the chances of both hitting #1 in Billboard were slim, even for Guns N’ Roses. Somehow Use Your Illusion II (the blue and purple one) beat out its brother for the top slot. Arguably it was the better album anyway, with more variety and depth.

“Civil War” had been out for a year already, having been recorded when Steven Adler was still in the band, and included on an album compiled to benefit a charity founded by Olivia Harrison. It begins with Strother Martin’s iconic speech from Cool Hand Luke, and sets a somber tone for the rest of the album. “14 Years” was Izzy Stradlin’s best song of the batch he brought to the project; he sings the verses and Axl Rose handles the choruses, and they might as well be two separate songs stuck together. “Yesterdays” is less bitter but still disgruntled, and one of Axl’s better tunes. Their cover of “Knockin’ On Heaven’s Door” had also been released previously on a Tom Cruise movie soundtrack, but in a slightly different mix.

Just when you think they’ve grown up, “Get In The Ring” sends us back to grade school. Yelled by Axl and Duff McKagan, between audience chants recorded live on tour only months before, it’s a basic eff-you to anyone and everyone, and particularly various writers and magazines who had been less than complimentary about the band. Duff helps out also with “Shotgun Blues”, which is just as angry and profane but doesn’t name names. The side is redeemed by “Breakdown”, another long but well-constructed track with introspective lyrics, with another film reference; this time Axl impersonates Cleavon Little from Vanishing Point over the last couple minutes.

Izzy returns with “Pretty Tied Up”, which seesaws between mythology in the verses and an incongruous chorus, but it’s got an undeniable strut. And while thus far they’ve chosen to open or close sides with the epics, “Locomotive” runs nearly nine minutes in the middle of side three. It’s a showcase for Slash, and we’re amazed that with all the tweaking these albums underwent, they never bothered to fix Axl’s time issues on the choruses. It’s even got a cool piano-driven coda. But then Duff steps up to the mic to mewl the bulk of “So Fine”, a mostly inoffensive power ballad with a truly stupid bridge.

We’re not done with the epics yet, as “Estranged” runs for nine minutes, has a lot of Axl on piano and Slash soloing constantly, and can be heard as something of a companion to “November Rain”. But it’s mainly remembered today for its truly bonkers video, released two years after the album came out, wherein Axl is chased by SWAT teams, sent to the nut house, and pursued by helicopters, finally leaping from an oil tanker to swim with dolphins. Then it’s back to the beginning of the cycle with “You Could Be Mine”, first released on the Terminator II soundtrack and something of a rockin’ sorbet in the spirit of the debut. “Don’t Cry (Alt. Lyrics)” has different verses but the same choruses as the “Original” on the other album, and nobody was ready for “My World”, basically an Axl-driven industrial rap experiment that sounds like a joke but probably wasn’t.

While there are some truly cringey moments on Use Your Illusion II, it remains an excellent demonstration of the band’s collective and individual talents. They weren’t just another hair metal band. (A week later, the major-label debut from a Seattle band called Nirvana was released, also on Geffen. The first album by another Seattle band, called Pearl Jam, had come out at the end of August. Meanwhile, new albums by such previously multiplatinum acts as Skid Row, White Lion, and Tesla did not break any sales records. The music business was changing again.)

Once again the Deluxe Edition added a disc of various live tracks from the shows, not all of which were included in the Super Deluxe Use Your Illusion box. And once again most of the GN’R songs were on the main album, with some interesting extras, like “Mama Kin” and “Train Kept A-Rollin’” with Steven Tyler and Joe Perry of Aerosmith at a show in Paris. A segment from the same show encompasses a seven-minute drum solo, a four-minute Slash guitar solo that finds its way to the Godfather theme, and Queen’s “Sail Away Sweet Sister”. For some reason “Civil War” is bookended by the “Voodoo Child” riff, and “Knockin’ On Heaven’s Door” is prefaced by the riff but no sung lines from Alice Cooper’s “Only Women Bleed”. By this time the band had two keyboard players, backing vocalists, and a horn section, so Axl didn’t have to handle both playing and singing things like “Estranged”. And boy, did he holler a lot.

Guns N’ Roses Use Your Illusion II (1991)—3
2022 Deluxe Edition: same as 1991, plus 13 extra tracks

Tuesday, November 19, 2024

Guns N’ Roses 3: Use Your Illusion I

Back in 1991, Guns N’ Roses had been taking an eternity to complete their next album. They were touring to promote it while still tinkering with it, to the extent that Use Your Illusion would finally arrive as two double-album-length CDs, available separately. This was the biggest thing to happen in the record business in years, as demonstrated by nationwide midnight sales. Nobody wanted to be the only one at school to not have the new GN’R albums, and everyone had to have them both.

Use Your Illusion I, or the red and yellow one, was probably the closest in spirit to the debut, in that it was more about straight-ahead rock. By now Steven Adler had been bounced from the band, replaced by Matt Sorum, who was best known for touring with the Cult, but had also done time with a woman soon to be known as Tori Amos. He was, and is, a heavy hitter, exactly the type of drummer needed to fill a stadium P.A., but frankly lacked the swing that Adler exhibited on the first album. Another sign that we’re on the other side of the bell curve is the individual writing credits; where previous songs were credited to the band as a whole, now it was clear which ones Axl Rose wrote by himself, and moreso when it was an Izzy Stradlin tune.

Duff McKagan’s bass and a Slash riff kick off “Right Next Door To Hell”, one of several rapid-fire vocals from Axl. Izzy takes the first of three(!) lead vocals on the album for “Dust N’ Bones”, though it’s mostly buried under Slash’s lead line. Their cover of Wings’ “Live And Let Die” was surprising yet nearly note-for-note, but most people were probably on board for “Don’t Cry”, their new power ballad and smash single, and wondering if he really held that last note for 30 seconds. “Perfect Crime” is more high-speed yelling, and best during the slower break.

Izzy dominates what LP owners called side two, starting with “You Ain’t The First”, which could have fit on side two of Lies. Michael Monroe of Hanoi Rocks honks harmonica and saxophone on “Bad Obsession”, and we can also hear new member Dizzy Reed on piano. It’s one of several songs here that garnered the parental advisory sticker and prevented the album(s) from being sold at stores like Walmart, along with the overly angry “Back Off Bitch”. “Double Talkin’ Jive” is another piledriver riff, mostly sung by Izzy with Axl helping, that manages to find its way to an extended flamenco-style coda.

The centerpiece of the album was “November Rain”, the epic piano-based showstopper Axl had been concocting since he bought his first Elton John album. It was made even more inescapable in those days thanks to its over-the-top video, which ran the full length of the song’s nine minutes. (The canned strings used on the original album were replaced thirty years later by actual strings for the album’s Deluxe Edition, and still sound cheesy.) “The Garden” begins somewhat subdued, and wanders around one chord until Alice Cooper’s guest appearances. It tends to drag, which can’t be said about the oddly sequenced “Garden Of Eden”, which is twice the speed and half the length. “Don’t Damn Me” is this volume’s response to Axl’s critics over his homophobia, racism, misogyny, etc. It’s another song that benefits from the dynamics of a slowed-down midsection.

“Bad Apples” begins with a taste of funk but soon descends into straight boogie, while “Dead Horse” is bookended by Axl singing and strumming his acoustic, in the same style as the main, heavier meat of the song. All this is a mere prelude to “Coma”, which Axl and Slash wrote after separate overdoses and takes up the final ten minutes of the album. The riff offsets the heartbeat kick drum, and spoken interludes by medical experts with matching sound effects aren’t too gratuitous—though the nagging female voices don’t evoke much sympathy for the singer’s plight—and the cyclical music manages to support Axl’s closing rant.

As with most double albums, Use Your Illusion I could have easily been shaved down to a single, but that wasn’t part of the plan. Considering that two of the best songs together took 20 minutes, Izzy likely would have seen only one of his songs included, if at all, had they tried to condense it. But we can only take so much of Axl’s wordy screaming song after song—even he needed a teleprompter onstage to get all the words right.

In addition to the new mix of “November Rain” inserted into to the original sequence, the album’s Deluxe Edition added an hour’s worth of live tracks from a variety of shows—mostly songs from the album, plus such unique tunes as a cover of the Misfits’ “Attitude” sung by Duff, “Always On The Run” with Lenny Kravitz (who wrote the song with Slash), “November Rain” prefaced by Black Sabbath’s “It’s Alright”, and a mostly instrumental take on the Stones’ “Wild Horses”. Shannon Hoon, eventually of Blind Melon, sings on two songs. Not all of these were included in the seven-CD-plus-Blu-ray Super Deluxe Edition, which added two full concerts: two discs from the Ritz (the former Studio 54) at the start of the tour, and three discs from Las Vegas eight months into it. A lot of music, to be sure.

Guns N’ Roses Use Your Illusion I (1991)—3
2022 Deluxe Edition: “same” as 1991, plus 13 extra tracks

Friday, November 15, 2024

Nilsson 9: Son Of Schmilsson

With Nilsson Schmilsson, Harry Nilsson had pretty much become the big star he’d always seemed to want to be. And with that, he proceeded to buck trends and his own producer’s desire to repeat the formula. With its horror movie-inspired cover art and lettering, Son Of Schmilsson thumbed its nose at the very idea of a sequel, even with all-star help from two pseudonymed Beatles, Peter Frampton, Nicky Hopkins, Jim Price, Bobby Keys, and Klaus Voormann.

“Take 54” provides a peek at the increasingly difficult task of making records, particularly when distracted by a young lovely for whom the singer “sang [his] balls off”. Following a trailer-style announcement for the album, “Remember (Christmas)” is a lovely little ballad that has nothing to do whatsoever with the word in the subtitle, yet is exactly what everybody wanted. “Joy” is a country music parody, on which he doubles down the satire. Near the end he asks her to listen for him on the radio, and sure enough “Turn On Your Radio” presents another lovelorn lament but in a more pensive tone. Then there’s the wonderfully nasty “You’re Breakin’ My Heart”, with its opening line that guaranteed zero airplay, paving the way for Cee-Lo some 38 years later.

Speaking of odd connections, “Spaceman” is something of the flip-side to Elton John’s “Rocket Man”, in that the protagonist is tired of begin stuck in space; the strings were arranged by Elton (and Nilsson) regular Paul Buckmaster. With its sweet sentiment and lingering hopefulness, “The Lottery Song” hearkens back to his earlier songs. But his disdain for playing nice is epitomized by the opening of “At My Front Door”, wherein he begins to croon “Remember (Christmas)”, then belches and the track switches to an upbeat piano-driven cover of an old doo-wop tune. “Ambush” is a sneaky one, loping along with a tale of a platoon of soldiers singing to keep their spirits up, only to be wiped out by enemy gunfire. If you think that’s morbid, consider “I’d Rather Be Dead”, sung to the accompaniment of a jaunty accordion with the help of a choir comprised of pensioners happily crooning along with “I’d rather be dead/Than wet my bed.” Richard Perry’s hope for a big Disney finale with “The Most Beautiful World In The World” is compromised by the first half, sung in a faux-reggae voice with a gargled solo.

As long as people can handle the humor and chauvinism, Son Of Schmilsson actually is a worthy follow-up, especially when taken in the context of his catalog. Connoisseurs would very much appreciate the most recent reissue of the album, which added several bonus tracks: an early version of “What’s Your Sign”; an alternate “Take 54”; a comical busk of “It Had To Be You” that leads into “I’d Rather Be Dead”; an unused recording of Jimmy Webb’s “Campo De Encino”; and “Daybreak”, the one new song included on the soundtrack to 1974’s cinematic debacle Son Of Dracula, which otherwise recycled selections from this album and Nilsson Schmilsson.

Nilsson Son Of Schmilsson (1972)—3
2006 CD reissue: same as 1972, plus 5 extra tracks

Tuesday, November 12, 2024

Todd Rundgren 1: Nazz

Countless American bands were influenced by the British Invasion, and most of them were never heard from past their first hit single, if at all. When Nazz comes up these days, it’s almost always because they included a songwriter and guitarist named Todd Rundgren.

They took their name from an obscure Yardbirds B-side, and that was just one of their touchstones. Somehow they got signed to a Monkees-adjacent label distributed by Atlantic, and were immediately hyped in magazines like Tiger Beat before they’d even finished their first album. If any of those teenyboppers bought their eponymous debut unheard, did they like it? The cover of Nazz is a direct cop from the Beatles, while the back depicts them in fringe, corduroy, and kerchiefs with mod haircuts. Only the inner gatefold said who was who, the singer named merely as “Stewkey”. A few paragraphs from Jon Landau, about five years before he met Bruce Springsteen, add hype.

The music sits on two sides of the spectrum: Who-stained, acid-inspired rock and Bacharach-tinged pop not dissimilar to the Association. In the first category, the single “Open My Eyes” turns the “I Can’t Explain” chords into the Ventures’ “Walk Don’t Run” for a psychedelic classic. “Back Of Your Mind” is nice and trashy, and “Wildwood Blues” descends into some very out-there tape effects. On the softer side there’s “Hello It’s Me”, its first incarnation dreamily crooned by Stewkey, and “If That’s The Way You Feel” is remarkably similar. “Crowded” shows that Todd wasn’t the only one who knew how to craft AM radio ear candy.

If anything, Nazz suffers from a muddy mix, which led Todd to become even more dominant in the studio for the follow-up. He was writing and even singing more, and had to be talked out of releasing a two-record set. What did come out as Nazz Nazz begins like the first album, with “Forget All About It” something of a retread, and Todd taking over the keyboards and vocals for the driving “Not Wrong Long”. “Under The Ice” and “Hang On Paul” are cool extended guitar workouts, and “Kiddie Boy” is R&B with a horn section. “Gonna Cry Today” fills the “Hello It’s Me” slot in more ways than one, with only “Letters Don’t Count”, bookended by a glass harmonica effect as the only other ballad. The album’s ambition is crystalized by “A Beautiful Song”, the multipart symphony that takes up almost twelve minutes at the end of side two, comprised of layered guitars and keyboards, as well as horns and strings. The vocal-and-piano section is lovely, and overtaken by the instruments that came before. But there’s simply no explaining “Meridian Leeward”, which can’t decide if it wants to be a twisted fairy tale or an allegory about police brutality; either way, it misses.

By the time Nazz Nazz came out, Todd had quit the band with the intention to make his fortune in engineering and producing. (Bass player Carson Van Osten followed; he’d end up working for Disney as a respected animator.) That was that for a couple of years, until Todd had started getting notice on his own. So the label strongarmed Stewkey and drummer Thom Mooney into compiling Nazz III from everything that was rejected from the second album. (The two also hooked up with a couple of guys in Illinois who had a band called Fuse that would one day evolve into Cheap Trick, but that’s another story.)

These aren’t necessarily cast-offs; the biggest difference is that Stewkey is singing most of the tracks, and there are more slow tunes. There are a couple of oddball tracks, like the cover of Paul Revere & The Raiders’ “Kicks” that wasn’t supposed to be on any album, and “Loosen Up”, a brief send-up of Archie Bell and the Drells that’s funny the first time you hear it. Carson contributed the meandering “Plenty Of Lovin’” and “Christopher Columbus”, both mostly notable for the guitar work, which also comes through on the more rocking “Magic Me” and “How Can You Call That Beautiful?” Mostly we can hear Todd’s infatuation with Laura Nyro on several tracks, like “Only One Winner” and “Resolution”, culminating with the lush, yearning “You Are My Window”.

The albums aren’t masterpieces, but they do fit into the bigger picture, and start the Todd trajectory. Because of his connection, Nazz would become somewhat beloved as cult heroes and early power pop icons. Rhino even reissued their albums in the ‘80s, a few years before doing the same with Todd’s solo catalog. Eventually, 2002’s Open Your Eyes anthology crammed all three albums onto two discs, but shuffled the order completely, and added their unreleased cover of “Train Kept A-Rollin’”. Seven years later, all three albums were reissued with bonus tracks, like outtakes and demo versions with Todd singing what Stewkey would emulate, and in a set called The Complete Nazz, which was exactly that. But some people wanted more, so the oddly named Lost Masters & Demos presented the complete proposed Nazz Nazz double album sequence and a collection of alternate mixes from preserved acetates. While interesting—especially if you’re used to hearing the tunes in other contexts—it’s no White Album. Sometimes the label is right.

Nazz Nazz (1968)—3
Nazz
Nazz Nazz (1969)—3
Nazz
Nazz III (1971)—3
Nazz
Open Your Eyes: The Anthology (2002)—3
Nazz
The Complete Nazz (2009)—
Nazz
Lost Masters & Demos (2022)—