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Showing posts with label Jon Astley Remasters. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jon Astley Remasters. Show all posts

Tuesday 5 March 2024

"Run With The Pack" by BAD COMPANY – January 1976 UK and US Third Studio Album on Swan Song Records featuring Paul Rodgers, Mick Ralphs, Boz Burrell and Simon Kirke (May 2017 UK Swan Song '2-CD Expanded Edition' with The Album Remastered on CD1 and CD2 Containing 14 Previously Unreleased Tracks – Jon Astley Remasters) - A Review by Mark Barry...






https://www.amazon.co.uk/Run-Pack-Deluxe-Bad-Company/dp/B06XFR47N2?crid=262N24B4AKHXB&dib=eyJ2IjoiMSJ9.LqqMwZI2hPCTNMgatDYvkpa_Abuow6r3vrrX680cBPY.Uhh50t8dogH_dKhIUB6fYcoH7wKZxLxcOPE-Drc_C6Q&dib_tag=se&keywords=081227953645&qid=1709668094&sprefix=081227953645%2Caps%2C116&sr=8-3&linkCode=ll1&tag=mabasreofcdbl-21&linkId=276cc02280053f3ad15f4a8230a7bc65&language=en_GB&ref_=as_li_ss_tl

RATING: ****

"...Silver, Blue & Gold..."

After the barn-storming of the self-titled "Bad Co." debut album in 1974 and especially "Straight Shooter" in 1975 with its two huge hits "Good Love Gone Bad" and "Feel Like Making Love" – it seemed that the ex-Free mob known as Bad Company could do no wrong. Island's coolest Rock Band seemed to take the best of what made Free (before them) so damn special and enhance that simple Rock sound for the rest of that halcyon decade. 

Then the Classic Seventies Rock band made the (perceived at the time) more than slightly lacklustre "Run With The Pack" and by early 1976 – that initial twofer outburst was already dust. Despite healthy chart positions of No. 4 in the UK and No.5 in the States where the album secured one-million sales – the writing seemed already on the washed-out wall for Bad Co. Their third studio effort was always the first LP fans would part with when hitting secondhand record shops and even in 2024 its less than £2.00 price-tag speaks volumes. The two studio efforts that followed "Burnin' Sky" and "Desolation Angels" (1977 and 1979) got lost in the Punk and New Wave explosion that made Bad Co music sound dated and tired in a cheesy macho way.

But – and this is always the big but – in hindsight - and with this toppermost 2017 Remaster and a slurry of very cool outtakes on CD2 (all fourteen of them unissued) – it is time to do right by your mangy cur once again. 

Deep LP dives like "Simple Man", "Silver, Blue & Gold" and "Do Right By Your Woman" are fabulous Bad Co tunes and sound suddenly HUGE on this '2-CD Expanded Edition' from Rhino/Swan Song. Throw in an inspired cover version of an Coasters Fifties R&B tune on Atlantic Records ("Young Blood"), the kicking radio-friendly opener "Live For The Music" and a couple of power ballads on either side – and "Run With The Pack" might just be one of those guilty-pleasure albums you return to more than the lauded pieces in their catalogue. Maybe its rainbow is overdue – to the Young Blood…

UK released 26 May 2017 – "Run With The Pack" by BAD COMPANY on Swan Song 081227953645 (Barcode 081227953645) is a '2-CD Expanded Edition' with the 10-Track Album Remastered on CD1 and 14 Previously Unreleased Tracks on CD2 that pans out as follows:

CD1 "Run With The Pack" Original Album Remaster (36:39 minutes):
1. Live For The Music [Side 1]
2. Simple Man
3. Honey Child
4. Love Me Somebody
5. Run With The Pack
6. Silver, Blue & Gold [Side 2]
7. Young Blood
8. Do Right By Your Woman
9. Sweet Lil' Sister
10. Fade Away 
Tracks 1 to 10 are their third studio album "Run With The Pack" – released January 1976 in the UK on Island ILPS 9346 and Swan Song SS 8415 in the USA. Produced by BAD COMPANY – it peaked at No.4 in the UK LP charts and No.5 in the USA.

CD2 "Run With The Pack" Bonus Tracks (51:09 minutes):
1. Live For The Music (Take 1, Alternative Guitar and Vocal) 3:35 minutes
2. Simple Man (Take 3, Early Mix) 3:41 minutes
3. Honey Child (Early Mix, Alternative Guitar Sound) 3:20 minutes
4. Run With The Pack (Extended Version, Alternative Vocals) 6:00 minutes
5. Let There Be Love (Take 1, Previously Unreleased Outtake) 4:11 minutes
6. Silver, Blue & Gold (Take 1, Early Mix) 5:14 minutes
7. Young Blood (Alternative Vocal) 2:45 minutes
8. Do Right By Your Woman (Alternative Vocal) 2:55 minutes
9. Sweet Lil' Sister (Live/Studio Backing Track) 4:31 minutes
10. Fade Away (Early Mix, Alternate Guitar Solo) 2:54 minutes
11. Do Right By Your Woman (Acoustic Version) 2:57 minutes
12. (I Know) I'm Losing You (Studio Jam, Previously Unreleased Outtake) 3:22 minutes
13. Young Blood (Alternative Version) 2:44 minutes
14. Fade Away (Island Studios Demo) 3:00 minutes

BAD COMPANY was:
PAUL RODGERS - Lead Singer, Keyboards, Guitar (Harmonica on "Do Right By Your Woman")
MICK RALPHS - Lead Guitar
BOZ BURRELL - Bass
SIMON KIRKE - Drums

These '2-CD Extended Editions' all come in a gatefold card Digipak - a threeway foldout two Swan Song logo CDs and usually a flap depicting the original master tape boxes (same here). The 16-page booklet features new liner notes from DAVID CLAYTON who promptly declares "Run With The Pack" as a bit of a guilty-pleasure nay even favourite. The text is peppered with rare Euro Picture Sleeves (Germany, Turkey), Tour Posters, Trade Adverts, Publicity Photos and interviews with Singer Paul Rodgers and Drummer Simon Kirke. It's a nice job done and Remaster Engineer JON ASTLEY who did much of The Who catalogue has done a fabulous job with the Remasters. In fact I can't stop playing CD2 as an alternate album - the outtakes and alternate versions are that good. 

Of the fourteen on CD2 fans will leap to Track 5 "Let There Be Love" - an unreleased Ralphs smoocher that is mid-tempo - its good without being great - but is a definite asset here. Better is the extended mix of "Run With The Pack" which has more guitar but they were right to tighten it up. Fans will thrill to a genuine fave like "Silver, Blue & Gold" having a Take 1 on here - it's remarkably similar to the finished version but just as lovely and lilting (time it takes for a love to go cold). Ralphs does cool guitar strums that smack of such musicality - a rainbow overdue. And dig those end-of-song vocal interplays they didn't use on the LP mix. 

Their grungy cover version of The Coasters 1957 Atco Records B-side "Young Blood" gets a grittier take - the call and response voices not as witty as the finished version (they were still working it out). But it is so well recorded - the band Funky as they Rock. Then the magic hammers home - an Alternate of "Do Right By Your Woman" - it's not as 'produced' as the finished version but that gorgeous Free/Bad Co. lilt is still there in its seductive flange sway. You get an Acoustic Version of "Do Right..." later (Track 11) which has a count-in and gorgeous audio - slide acoustics - I dig this the most even if it feels like they probably dubbed the original vocals over re-recorded acoustic guitars. And then a Harmonica echoed and lonesome. The second genuine outtake comes in a studio jam on piano doing "(I Know) I'm Losing You" - the old Motown hit the Faces turned into a Rock-Soul anthem. It's ramshackle for sure but damn is it cool to hear them still sound so good (even on a throwaway). And I prefer the Demo of "Fade Away" to the finished LP cut - feels more genuine.

These 'Deluxe Editions' are a hit and miss affair especially if the core album doesn't have the greatest reputation in the pantheon of Rawk Glory. But Bad Company's "Run With The Pack" in this 2-CD Expanded Edition form from 2017 is a winner. And as I say, I keep going back to Disc 2 as my go-to Play. Fantastic stuff really...

Thursday 29 June 2023

"Thirty Years Of Maximum R&B" by THE WHO – July 1964 to October 1991 Releases on Fontana, Brunswick, Reaction, Track, Decca and MCA Records featuring Roger Daltrey, Pete Townshend, John Entwistle and Keith Moon with Dave Arbus (of East of Eden), Kenny Jones (of The Small Faces and Faces), Nicky Hopkins, John "Rabbit" Bundrick, Tim Gorman, Simon Phillips, Steve Bolton (of Atomic Rooster) and more (July 1994 UK Polydor 4CD 79-Track Cardboard Long Box including 14 Previously Unreleased with Andy MacPhearson, Jon Astley and Tim Young Remixes and Remasters) - A Review by Mark Barry...





**** Rating

 

"...Join Together With The Band..."

 

When the unholy triumvirate of "Tommy" (May 1969), "Live At Leeds" (May 1970) and "Who's Next" (August 1971) hammered my squishy Irish noggin with riffage and anarchic lyrics a go-go – I was like most early Seventies teens – gone baby gone. I still have originals of them all on UK vinyl and in best nick possible (I even have the Headhunters Advert inner bag that came with first pressings of "Who's Next" in 1971 – serious nerdsville). In fact, I only have to look at the front sleeve of Next and I will always see wee-weeing on a concrete structure as a thing of unparalleled joy. "Quadrophenia" took our breath away in 1973 (another stunning themed double-album on Track Records) and thereafter (like so many others I suspect) all the Jules and Jims and Slip Kids have held a candle aloft for The Who most of our adult lives...

 

So back in the heady Nineties days of CD Box Set wonder-loads – like many a drooling dolly dimplecheeks, I awaited the July 1994 Box Set "Thirty Years Of Maximum R&B" by The Who with a frankly unnerving amount of physical excitement. And while it made great efforts in prep and sounded great and looked the presentation part too, I honestly found that the need for balancing desired studio tracks with Previously Unreleased live versions of them instead (to satiate fans like me) actually did for the Box (CD4 especially) and not necessarily in a good way.

 

Don't get me wrong - I love this guitar-jumping Moon-Loon gigglefest thing to death (and in July 2024 it will itself celebrate a 30th Anniversary). But if I am properly honest, it's a 4-star listen with 5-star presentation. Let's see action...

 

UK released 5 July 1995 - "Thirty Years Of Maximum R&B" by THE WHO on Polydor 521 751-2 (Barcode 731452175120) is a 79-Track 4CD Cardboard Long Box Set (including 14 Previously Unreleased) with New Remasters and Remixes that play out as follows:

 

CD1 (75:49 minutes):

1. Pete Townshend Dialogue (Live At Long Beach Arena, 1971, Previously Unreleased)

2. I'm The Face (July 1964 UK Debut 45-single as The High Numbers, Fontana TF 480, A-side – Newly Remixed, B-side is Track 4 on CD1)

3. Here 'Tis (Recorded 1964 in London as The High Numbers, Previously Unreleased, Bo Diddley cover version)

4. Zoot Suit (see Track 2 on CD1)

5. Leaving Here (Recorded 1964 in London as The High Numbers, First Issued on the November 1985 LP compilation "Who's Missing" on MCA Records, Remixed for the Box Set)

6. I Can't Explain (January 1965 UK 45-single on Brunswick 05926, A-side – their debut single as The Who and first song-writing credit on a 45 for PT – also their first 45 to chart as The Who in the USA on Decca 31725, released there in February 1965 and peaked at No. 93 on Billboard)

7. Anyway, Anyhow, Anywhere (May 1965 UK 2nd 45-single on Brunswick 05935, A-side – also used as the theme to the BBC Pop Music Programme 'Ready Steady Go!' – features unannounced BBC Interview Intro with PT)

8. Daddy Rolling Stone (B-side of "Anyway, Anyhow, Anywhere" – see Track 7 – an Otis Blackwell song)

9. My Generation (October 1965 UK third 45-single on Brunswick 05944, A-side)

10. The Kids Are Alright (from the debut UK LP "My Generation" released December 1965 in the UK on Brunswick LAT 8616, April 1966 in the USA as "The Who Sing My Generation" on Decca DL 4664 – both in Mono)

11. The Ox (as per Track 10, Instrumental with Nicky Hopkins guesting on Piano)

12. A Legal Matter (as per Track 10)

13. Pete Dialogue recorded Live At Leeds University, 14 February 1970 – Previously Unreleased - see Track 14)

14. Substitute (Track 14 from the "Live At Leeds" LP, May 1970, UK on Track Records 2406 001, USA on Decca DL 79175 – for further LAL songs see Track 27 and 28 on CD2)

15. I'm A Boy (August 1966 UK 45-single, Reaction 591004, A-side)

16. Disguises (November 1966 UK 5-Track Extended Play EP "Ready Steady Who" on Reaction 592001, Track 1, Side 1)

17. Happy Jack Jingle (0:31 seconds of studio dialogue)

18. Happy Jack (December 1966 UK 45-single, Reaction 591010, A-side)

19. Boris The Spider (from the second studio album "A Quick One", December 1966 in the UK on Reaction 593 002, issued May 1967 in the USA as "Happy Jack" on Decca DL 4892 (Mono) and Decca DL 74892 (Stereo). Same LP as the UK variant but with the song "Heat Wave" replaced by "Happy Jack" that was only a single in the UK)

20. So Sad About Us (as per Track 19)

21. A Quick One, While He's Away (9:39 minutes, a combination mix of the original LP version with a live version recorded for The Rolling Stones Rock And Roll Circus in December 1968)

22. Pictures Of Lily (April 1967, UK 45-single, Track 604002, A-side)

23. Early Morning Cold Taxi (Recorded October 1967 – Previously Unreleased)

24. Coke 2 (0:48 seconds of guitar-riffage singing Coca Cola)

25. The Last Time (June 1967, UK 45-single, Track 604006, A-side – a Rolling Stones cover done in support of Jagger and Richards being arrested on Drug Charges – the B-side is "Under My Thumb")

26. I Can't Reach You (from their third studio album "The Who Sell Out", December 1967 on Track 612 002 (Mono) and 613 002 (Stereo) – January 1968 USA on Decca DL 4950 (Mono) and DL 74950 (Stereo) – see also Tracks 1 to 10 on CD for more)

27. Girl's Eyes (Recorded in 1967 – Previously Unreleased)

28. Bag O'Nails (0:05 seconds)

29. Call Me Lightning (June 1968, UK 45-single, Track 604023, B-side of "Dogs")

NOTES on CD1:

Tracks 3, 23 and 27 are PREVIOUSLY UNRELEASED Songs; other tracks are versions as noted

 

CD2 (75:45 minutes):

1. Rotosound Strings (0:06 seconds)

2. I Can See For Miles (October 1967, UK 45-single, Track 604011, A-side, also on "The Who Sell Out" LP)

3. Mary-Anne With The Shakey Hand (from their third studio album "The Who Sell Out", December 1967 on Track 612 002 (Mono) and 613 002 (Stereo) – January 1968 USA on Decca DL 4950 (Mono) and DL 74950 (Stereo))

4. Armenia City In The Sky (as per Track 3 on CD2)

5. Tattoo (as per Track 3 on CD2)

6. Our Love Was (as per Track 3 on CD2)

7. Rael 1 (as per Track 3 on CD2)

8. Rael 2 (Recorded 5 July 1967 in New York, 0:52 seconds, Previously Unreleased)

9. Track Records/Premier Drums (0:31 seconds)

10. Sunrise (as per Track 3 on CD2)

11. Russell Harty Dialogue (0:21 seconds)

12. Jaguar (Recorded November 1967 in London, Edited Version of a Previously Unreleased Recording)

13. Melancholia (Recorded May 1968 in London – Previously Unreleased)

14. Fortune Teller (Recorded May 1968 in London – Previously Unreleased)

15. Magic Bus (October 1968, UK 45-single, Track 604024, A-side)

16. Little Billy (first appeared on the September 1974 LP compilation "Odds And Sods" on Track Records 2406 116 (UK) and October 1974 in the USA on MCA Records MCA 2126)

17. Dogs (June 1968, 45-single, Track 604023, A-side – for B-side see Track 29 on CD1)

18. Overture (from the 2LP studio set "Tommy", May 1969 UK on Track 613 013/4, May 1969 USA on Decca DXSW 7205)

19. Acid Queen (see Track 18 on CD2)

20. Abbie Hoffman Incident (0:16 seconds, Live At Woodstock, see Track 21)

21. Underture (Version Recorded Live At Woodstock, 17 Aug 1969 and Finally Issued on the 2LP Soundtrack set "The Kids Are Alright" in June 1979 (UK Polydor 2675 179, USA on MCA Records MCA2-11005)

22. Pinball Wizard (see Track 18 on CD2)

23. I'm Free (see Track 18 on CD2)

24. See Me, Feel Me – Live (Tommy track recorded Live At Leeds University, 14 February 1970 – Previously Unreleased)

25. Heaven And Hell – Live (July 1970, UK 45-single, Track 2094 002, a John Entwistle song and B-side to "Summertime Blues")

26. Pete Dialogue (0:36 seconds)

27. Young Man Blues – Live (from the "Live At Leeds" LP, May 1970, UK on Track Records 2406 001, USA on Decca DL 79175 – a Mose Allison cover version - for more LAL songs see also Track 14 on CD1)

28. Summertime Blues – Live (see Track 27 on CD2 – an Eddie Cochran cover version – LP cut)

NOTES on CD2:

Tracks 8, 12, 13, 14 and 24 are PREVIOUSLY UNRELEASED

 

CD3 (75:01 minutes):

1. Shakin' All Over – Live (see Track 27 on CD2)

2. Baba O'Riley (from the LP "Who's Next", August 1971 UK on Track 2408 102, August 1971 USA on Decca 79182)

3. Bargain (original studio song on the "Who's Next" LP – this version recorded Live at San Francisco Civic Auditorium, 12 December 1971 and first released on the November 1985 US LP compilation "Who's Missing" on MCA Records MCA-5641)

4. Pure And Easy (first appeared on the September 1974 LP compilation "Odds And Sods" on Track Records 2406 116 (UK) and October 1974 in the USA on MCA Records MCA 2126)

5. The Song Is Over (as per Track 2 on CD3)

6. Studio Dialogue (0:47 seconds)

7. Behind Blue Eyes (as per Track 2 on CD3)

8. Won't Get Fooled Again (as per Track 2 on CD3, for another variant of a "Who's Next" LP song see also "My Wife", Track 11 on CD4)

9. The Seeker (Edit) (March 1970, UK 45-single, Track 604036, A-side)

10. Bony Maronie (Recorded at the Young Vic Theatre, London, 26 April 1971 and first issued on the June 1988 UK 4-Track CD Single for the reissue of "Won't Get Fooled Again" on Polydor POCD 917 – also 12" Single on Polydor POSPX 917)

11. Let's See Action (October 1971, UK 45-single, Track 2094 012, A-side)

12. Join Together (June 1972, UK 45-single, Track 2094 102, A-side)

13. Relay (January 1973, UK 45-single, Track 2094 106, A-side)

14. The Real Me (original version on the double-album "Quadrophenia" – released October 1973 – This Version recorded January 1979 during auditions for Kenney Jones to become the new drummer with The Who – Previously Unreleased)

15. 5:15 (Single Mix) (Full Version on "Quadrophenia" – This Edit released October 1973, UK 45-single, Track 2094 115, A-side)

16. Bell Boy (as per Track 14 on CD3)

17. Love Reign O'er Me (as per Track 14 on CD3)

NOTES on CD3:

Track 14 is PREVIOUSLY UNRELEASED

 

CD4 (76:17 minutes):

1. Long Live Rock (first appeared on the September 1974 LP compilation "Odds And Sods" on Track Records 2406 116 (UK) and October 1974 in the USA on MCA Records MCA 2126 – also released April 1979 in the UK on a 3-Track Retro Compilation 45-Single on Polydor WHO 2)

2. Life With The Moons (1:43 minutes)

3. University Challenge (0:30 seconds)

4. Slip Kid (from the October 1975 LP "The Who By Numbers" on Polydor 2490 129 in the UK, USA on MCA Records MCA 2161)

5. Poetry Cornered (0:39 seconds)

6. Dreaming From The Waist (studio version on the 1975 LP "The Who By Numbers" – this version recorded live at Swansea Football Grounds, 12 June 1976 – Previously Unreleased)

8. Blue Red And Grey (as per Track 4 on CD4)

9. Life With The Moons 2 (0:46 seconds)

10. Squeeze Box (as per Track 4 on CD 4, also UK 45-single, January 1976, Polydor 2121 275, A-side)

11. My Wife (original studio version on the "Who's Next" – this version recorded live at Swansea Football Grounds, 12 June 1976 – Previously Unreleased)

12. Who Are You (Single Edit, 5:00 minutes, July 1978, Polydor WHO 1, A-side – Full Version on the August 1978 LP "Who Are You" – see Track 13 on CD4)

13. Music Must Change (from the August 1978 "Who Are You", UK on Polydor WHOD 5002 and USA on MCA Records MCA 3050)

14. Sister Disco (see Track 13 on CD4)

15. Guitar And Pen (see Track 13 on CD4)

16. You Better You Bet (from the March 1981 LP "Face Dances", UK on Polydor WHOD 5003, US On Warner Brothers WB HS 3516 – also February 1981 UK 45-single on Polydor WHO 4)

17. Eminence Front (from the September 1982 LP "It's Hard" on Polydor WHOD 5066)

18. Twist And Shout – Previously Unreleased

19. I'm A Man – Previously Unreleased

20. Pete Dialogue (0:37 seconds)

21. Saturday Night's Alright (For Fighting) (from 1991 tribute album to Elton John called "Two Rooms")

NOTES on CD4:

Tracks 6, 11, 18 and 19 are PREVIOUSLY UNRELEASED

 

The 72-page long-format colour booklet is comprehensive and pleasingly detailed. Principal songwriter and founder of The Who Pete Townshend starts his 3-page March 1994 notes on Page 5 with a typically self-deprecating analysis of his four-man brawling brat. PT is also unrepentant and rightly so – literally telling his and Keith Moon's detractors to f-off in the last few sentences. But also – deep amidst the post hurt and rancor is a pride that his band broke down so many doors and are beloved for a reason. Following that is a series of essays – Keith Altham on The Who in Britain (fabulous photos, gig flyers, reviews, Moon in a dress) that in turn is followed by a fabulous Chris Charlesworth piece on their broader reach that includes a month-by-month and year-by-year timeline.

 

But my fave piece of scripture is the Dave Marsh piece on The Who in America. Marsh wrote the first book on Springsteen, did loads of Rolling Stone Magazine stuff and a book on The 1001 Great Singles of All Time etc. Marsh explains how the band didn't really mean much there until well into 1966, after the release of their second album (entitled "Happy Jack" in the USA after the single). The live aspect of The Who too is also (not surprisingly) given serious verbiage. They blew people's heads off and still do with only Daltrey and Townshend left of the original four. Last is a track-by-track breakdown (where, when, which album, 45-single etc) that is followed by a full singles and LP discography wisely providing both UK and US releases (debut was 1965 in the UK, 1966 in the USA – the second album had a different title and slightly altered track list and so on). Explanations too – compilers Chris Charlesworth and Jon Astley talk about tapes (or lack of them) for the Previously Unreleased stuff for a whole page - in many cases justifying decisions and putting to bed rumors about better versions. In short (forgive the pun), the long booklet is a visual feast and even now in 2023 as I write this, a seriously great deep dive into every aspect of this fab band. The color photos and endless memorabilia shots, picture sleeves, press hoopla – is fantastic to look at – especially of course the Sixties and Seventies stuff when they along with other huge British exports like Jethro Tull, Humble Pie, Pink Floyd, Yes and The Stones – became among the biggest and most popular bands in the World. Even the title of the Box Set is followed with the moniker 'The Best Rock 'n' Roll Band In The World'.

 

The 1994 Box Set was Remixed, Remastered and Sequenced by ANDY MacPHEARSON and JON ASTLEY with CD Mastering done by JON ASTLEY and TIM YOUNG. You can hear not just the Volume - but Care. They knew this was a prestige release and due diligence has been done. To the music...

 

CD1 opens with anger (of course), Pete giving the crowd some shut up - this is a Rock & Roll concert not a f-in tea-party diatribe before we launch into a truly fantastic sounding "I'm The Face" by The High Numbers. Fans are then treated to a Previously Unreleased Bo Diddley cover "Here Tis" – an all night long shuffler with Harmonica driven R&B rhythms (good but not nearly as exciting as the debut single). The snappiest dresser B-side "Zoot Face" could really have been any British R&B act of 1964 aping the American scene – but what it does have is lovely clarity in the audio – drums, Bass, strummed guitar and picked out notes. Better is "Leaving Here" where The Who shows their love of Motown – an Eddie Holland cover version that had only been released in the USA in early December 1963 (Motown M-1052, A-side). Already that drum and guitar sound they mastered is already there – even if the recording is compromised in its obvious weedy nature.

 

Things return to Who brilliance with "I Can't Explain" – a single that sounded old and new at the same time – a fantastic urgency to it. Without any warning, "Anyway, Anyhow, Anywhere" is preceded by dialogue where Pete is being grilled by a particularly plummy sounding DJ as he introduces their new bash-and-trash sound. The instrumental "The Ox" exemplifies their truly wild side – a thrasher from the My Generation debut album that features Nicky Hopkins equalling the squealing guitar mayhem with his piano playing. You could argue that the Box should have used the original 45-single mix for "Substitute" but here they set up the live single with unheard Pete dialogue from the Live At Leeds concert on 14 Feb 1970 and it so works. In August 1966 there were few bands saying I'm A Boy - I'm a head case - I'm A Boy – And My Ma Won't admit it. Kinda cool too to hear the lesser-appreciated grunge guitar of "Disguises" from the "Ready Steady Who" EP – more thematic cross-dressing references. The audio on "Happy Jack" is fabulously clear – Bass and Drums given clarity. The unreleased "Early Morning Cold Taxi" is OK but far better is the "Dogs" deep dive B-side "Call Me Lightning" which ends CD1 perfectly.

 

The first ten tracks on CD2 are essentially "The Who Sell Out" sessions and album (new in 1994). There is good and superfluous. While "Sunrise" is a gem (Pete on Acoustic) – the supposed Previously Unreleased Rael 2 is a 52-second nonsense – the Russell Harty jokey dialogue is witty for twenty seconds. Both the edited "Jaguar" and "Melancholia" are excellent unreleased outtakes as is the cover version of "Fortune Teller". But if I want real Who magic I go to Track 15 for "Magic Bus" – a piece of 45-single genius that combines Cochran acoustic with riffage towards the end. Do I need Pete telling a political activist to f-off at Woodstock while they launch into a wobbly recording of "Underdog" (eventually issued on the 1979 Kids Are Alright Movie Soundtrack) – not really. At least "Pinball Wizard" sounds amazing as the Tommy tracks begin to kick in. It rollicks home with the excellence of "Dogs" and the emergence of them as a Seventies powerhouse with "Live At Leeds" beginning to make its presence known. I never really liked the flipside "Heaven And Hell" if I am honest but I love that Previously Unreleased Pete Dialogue intro that sets up the Mose Allison and Eddie Cochran covers from "Live At Leeds" – the band tight and on fire even when trashing it.

 

CD3 is the one I play more than all others (and CD4 the one I ignore). The sheer power of The Who doing their version of the Johnny Kidd & The Pirates classic "Shakin' All Over" (even if it still has that cackle) is liable to punish your speakers (listen to Pete soloing, Entwistle hammering the Bass while Moon anchors it all on his kit). But then another kind of magic starts with Dave Arbus of East of Eden guesting on Violin for the magnificent "Baba O'Riley" – the keyboards and out there in the fields Side 1 opener from the August 1971 "Who's Next" album. I admit to tears on this – I go to mush over it. Daltrey suddenly sounds like the best vocalist ever – and then that riff just sees the song take off. This is a sophisticated-sounding Who – a band finding a sound and a zone where it all meshes into something huge. Teenage wasteland had never sounded like this. I would have much preferred the studio version of "Bargain" – instead we get the December 1971 live version finally issued in 1985 on the "Who's Missing" album. It is powerful, but it does not flow as well as the LP cut would have.

 

The March 1973 recording of "Pure And Easy" follows that is followed by the 1971 Side 1 finisher "The Song Is Over" from "Who's Next" – but despite the date difference – the placing works (sing my heart to the Infinite Sea). The witty studio dialogue ahead of "Behind Blue Eyes" works too – setting up the pain with a laugh. And what can you say about the 8:30 minutes of "Won't Get Fooled Again" – the full LP version given to fans in Remastered Riffage Monster Wallop and not the edited single version (15 June 1971) - Wow! There is a rare Apple Label Acetate of the 45-single displayed as the centrepiece of the credits page ("Won't Get Fooled Again" as an Acetate – yummy). We then get a huge fave of mine and one of their forgotten gems "The Seeker" (1970) – the first of four stand-alone 45s they did in the Seventies. The others are here too - "Let's See Action" (October 1971), "Join Together" (June 1972, Acetate pictured too) and "Relay" (December 1973). CD3 then romps home with an unreleased and a trio from "Quadrophenia" including two fab winners in "5:15" and the majestic "Love Reign O'er Me".

 

CD4 is a bummer for me. I like the singles "Squeeze Box", "Who Are You", "You Better You Bet" and the magnificent "Eminence Front" from the swansong of sorts LP "It's Hard" which was prepped for single release but withdrawn. "Eminence Front" is featured in many Who Live Shows nowadays precisely because (like "The Seeker") - it's one of those songs that deserves reappraisal and thrills the crowd. But the replacement of live tracks for studio versions and the backwards retro of "Twist And Shout" (even if it is previously unreleased) do not come across great. For sure deep LP cuts like "Guitar And Pen" and "Slip Kid" will get any fan-vote, but somehow the sequencing all feels like a let down.

 

In the end, I cannot be rational about The Who nor this "Thirty Years Of Maximum R&B" 4CD Box Set. It rocks like a stone mason with a demonically possessed chisel and a leery look in his one good eye. 

 

Speaking of which - U2, The Rolling Stones, The Who and AC/DC have all laid claim at one point in time to being 'The Best Rock 'n' Roll Band In The World'

 

Truth be told – they all are – but The Who in their voluminous prime – Yippie Ki-Yay Mo-Fo's!

Friday 13 May 2022

"The Hurting" by TEARS FOR FEARS - March 1983 UK Debut Album on Mercury Records [April 1983 USA] featuring Roland Orzabal, Curt Smith, Manny Elias and Ian Stanley with Guests Chris Hughes, Ross Cullum, Mel Collins and Phil Palmer with Producer Chris Hughes (June 1999 UK Mercury UK CD Reissue Digitally Remastered with Four Bonus Tracks - Jon Astley Remasters) - A Review by Mark Barry...




 
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This Review And Many More Like It 
Available In my Kindle e-Book (June 2022 Version)
 
LOOKING AFTER NO. 1 
Volume 2 of 2 - M to Z...
 
Your All-Genres Guide To
Exceptional CD Reissues and Remasters 
For Music from 1956 to 1986
Over 1,760 E-Pages of In-Depth Information
240 Reviews From The Discs Themselves
No Cut and Paste Crap...

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"...Intrusion In My Illusion..." 

This early March 1983 debut album takes me back, and how. I can remember standing in a Dublin chart shop hustling to hear what was new and this excited 20-something hipster (so 80ts hair day) queued up Track 3 on Side 1. He plopped the startlingly honest and uncluttered album artwork in front of me like it was important but he didn't know how. It had some mopey Muppet on the cover with his hands up to his traumatized eight-year-old mush. The song was the hugely sophisticated "Pale Shelter" by Tears For Fears and the March 1983 LP was "The Hurting". I was quietly taken aback. Then he flipped Sides and I heard the manic but sensationally good "Change" and I was done for. 

For certain - England's TFF sounded like Depeche Mode, New Order, The Thompson Twins or The Human League and all those in-yer-face bands grasping technology and going forward with the Synth revolution. But while all of them would cut out their own mazes and paths of glory, there was (dare we tread on dangerous ground here) - just something that bit more brilliant about Tears For Years that engendered cult feelings at the time and lifelong allegiance ever since.
 
I remember too that I was so on a Peter Gabriel 3 (1980) and Peter Gabriel 4 (1982) tip in those years - the weirder it was - the better - challenge my ears and my brain why don't you nutty Brits. I loved Talk Talk too for those reasons, the genre-bending Talking Heads out of America with their Rock-meets-Funk jerkathon tunes. 
 
But there was just something about Bath's Tear For Fears and its troubled duo that made you feel there's someit-special going on here my dear - magic that would only get better as the years went on. And when you think about the huge leaps made with March 1985's "Songs From The Big Chair" and especially the hypnotic opus that is "The Seeds Of Love" from September 1989 - our gut instincts back in the day proved right. Besides, any band who penned a tune called "Ideas As Opiates" gets my vote.

Which brings us to this beautifully transferred CD Remaster of "The Hurting" tastefully bolstered up with Four period-relevant Bonuses. Let's get to the mad world and those intrusions in all our illusions...
 
UK released 28 June 1999 - "The Hurting" by TEARS FOR FEARS on Mercury 558 104-2 (Barcode 73145810424) is an Expanded Edition Digitally Remastered CD Reissue with Four Bonus Tracks that plays out as follows (66:20 minutes):
 
1. The Hurting [Side 1]
2. Mad World 
3. Pale Shelter
4. Ideas As Opiates
5. Memories Fade 
6. Suffer The Children [Side 2]
7. Watch Me Bleed 
8. Change 
9. The Prisoner 
10. Start Of The Breakdown 
Tracks 1 to 10 are their debut album "The Hurting" - released March 1983 in the UK on Mercury MERS 17 and April 1984 in the USA on Mercury 422 811 039-1. Produced by CHRIS HUGHES - it peaked at No.1 in the UK and No. 73 in the USA on the LP charts. 
 
BONUS TRACKS: 
11. Pale Shelter (Long Version, 7:09 minutes) 
12. The Way You Are (Extended, 7:44 minutes)
13. Mad World (World Remix, 3:43 minutes)
14. Change (Extended Version, 6:00 minutes)
 
The 12-page booklet contains 1999 interviews with both boys about the beginnings of the band - how they were essentially a duo of songwriters with other musicians satelliting around them. IAN CRANNA - who did a press blurb on TFF back in 1982 Smash Hits days - provides great liner notes that are smart enough to get out of the way and allow Curt and Roland tell it like it was. The lyrics are here too, original LP credits and the fact that original Producer CHRIS HUGHES has done the incredible Remaster with Audio Engineer (and part-time Pop Star himself) JON ASTLEY at his Close To The Edge Studios. Astley has handled huge amounts of The Who catalogue, Level 42 and Wishbone Ash and if you know any of those clean and your living-room Remasters, then you will know what to expect here. The Audio is fantastic - hiss-less but still alive - even the Bonuses kick ass. To the tunes...  

The first thing that wallops you is the SOUND - it's huge and clean as a whistle. The punch off the synths, guitar and drum whacks. Also I'd forgotten how good the subtle underplay of pain is in "The Hurting" - that child-in-pain image even more haunting in 2022 (and dig that break at about two minutes in - brilliant). Mercury had slipped out "Mad World" in September 1982 (months before the LP) after "Suffer The Children" and the original "Pale Shelter" had failed to chart in November 1981 and May 1982 respectively. The remaster for "Mad World" is fantastic - those chimes, drums and tambourine as it fades out and segues into the sublime "Pale Shelter" - such a winner.   

Roland says TFF took "Ideas For Opiates" from the thoughts of psychotherapist Arthur Janov - a chapter in one his books - Mel Collins blasting away on Saxophone to the bare drone backdrop. "With hungry joy, I'll be your toy...memories fade but the scars still linger..." Roland sings with real sincerity in the deeper-than-deep hurt of  "Memories Fade" - surely one of the debut's highlights (the Remaster is fantastic). Their debut 45-single in late 1981, "Suffer The Children" is personal chains dressed up in Pop Bop - an only child in an only room able to get out through a song. But again you're hit with the LP's other forgotten nugget "Watch Me Bleed" - all the deeds of yesterday paving the way (love that guitar and those big chunky chorus moments). Although I don't personally like "The Prisoner" - the ridiculously cool bop of "Change" is absolute genius and a perennial oldies radio fave to this day. And on it goes... 
 
I had completely forgotten about those Extended Versions and Remixes - especially at a time when those things tried your patience way more than they tickled your fancy. At least three of them  - "Pale Shelter", "Mad World" and of course the stunning "Change" are brilliant and in my opinion, the Long Version of "Pale Shelter" is actually better than the LP (I'm sure it's the re-recorded version).  

Currently languishing in a digital dosshouse near you for only one of her Majesty's skydiver banknotes - "The Hurting" is one of those fab LPs you've forgotten about. And here it's reissued on a CD Remaster that sports both kick-ass audio excellence and decent annotation for less than a Movie Voucher. Vistas and joy...I like it...

Two Other Titles in this UK 28 June 1999
TEARS FOR FEARS Digitally Remasters CD Series 
Each with Four Bonus Tracks and Expanded Booklets 
 
1. "Songs From The Big Chair (Mercury 558 106-2 - Barcode 731455810622)
2. "The Seeds Of Love" (Mercury 558 105-2 - Barcode 731455810523)

Saturday 7 May 2022

"Blues Breakers" by JOHN MAYALL with ERIC CLAPTON - July 1966 UK Debut Album on Decca Records in Mono (December 1969 UK in Stereo) - featuring Bassist John McVie later with Fleetwood Mac and Drummer Hughie Flint later with McGuinness Flint and The Blues Band with Guests Johnny Almond, Alan Skidmore and Dennis Healey on Horns (July 1998 UK Deram CD Reissue with Both Mono (Tracks 1 to 12) and Stereo (Tracks 13 to 24) Mixes of the Album Remastered by Jon Astley) - A Review by Mark Barry...



 
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This Review And Many More Like It 
Available In my Kindle e-Book (June 2022 Version)
 
LOOKING AFTER NO. 1 
Volume 2 of 2 - M to Z...
 
Your All-Genres Guide To
Exceptional CD Reissues and Remasters 
For Music from 1956 to 1986
Over 1,760 E-Pages of In-Depth Information
240 Reviews From The Discs Themselves
No Cut and Paste Crap...

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"All Your Love..." 
 
You have to love the stories and legend that surround this (well) legendary album. 
 
July 1966's "Blues Breakers" on Decca Records is what many believe to be the true starting point for the genre Blues Rock. And not just in the UK either, but in America too where none other than James Marshall Jimi Hendrix was a huge fan and cited it as the influence on him and so many of his contemporaries. 
 
"Blues Breakers" turned gee-tar-players into axe-wielding Guitar Heroes and Rock Gods (and that's just the tremolo arm). Stories like the Mayall and Clapton original "Double Crossing Time" on Side 1 originally being called "Double Crossing Mann" because it was about Cream's Bass Player Jack Bruce walking out on Mayall's new band to join (well) Manfred Mann! Eric Clapton reluctantly stepping up to the microphone (on Mayall's insistence) to cover his Blues obsession of the day - Robert Johnson and "Ramblin' On My Mind" - and thereby kick-starting a career in both Blues and Rock that stills shines now in 2022 with the passion he had for it back in the day. Let's get stuck into the Beano of albums...
 
UK released July 1998 (reissued 2006) - "Blues Breakers" by JOHN MAYALL with ERIC CLAPTON on Deram 844 827-2 (Barcode 042284482721) is a Reissue that offers both the 1966 Mono and 1969 Stereo mixes of the album Remastered onto 1CD that plays out as follows (75:20 minutes):
 
MONO Version 
1. All Your Love [Side 1]
2. Hideaway 
3. Little Girl 
4. Another Man 
5. Double Crossing Time 
6. What'd I Say 
7. Key To Love [Side 2]
8. Parchman Farm 
9. Have You Heard 
10. Ramblin' On My Mind 
11. Steppin' Out 
12. It Ain't Right 
Tracks 1 to 12 are the debut album "Blues Breakers" - released 22 July 1966 in the UK on Decca Records LK 4804 in MONO 
 
Tracks 13 to 24 
As per Tracks 1 to 12, only the whole album in STEREO, first released in the UK December 1969 on Decca SKL 4804. 
 
Bluesbreakers Band:
JOHN MAYALL - Lead Vocals, Piano, Organ and Harmonica
ERIC CLAPTON - Lead Guitar and Vocals 
JOHN McVIE - Bass
HUGHIE FLINT - Drums (Tracks 1, 2, 3, 6 and 12) 
 
Guests: 
JOHNNY ALMOND - Baritone Sax (Tracks 7, 9 and 11)
ALAN SKIDMORE - Tenor Sax (Tracks 7, 9 and 11)
DENNIS HEALEY - Trumpet (Tracks 7, 9 & 11)
 
Having had this Mono album on vinyl for more decades than I care to contemplate, my battered copy (like everyone else's) never sounded this clean I can tell you, or in your face (and for all the right reasons too).
 
But I will readily admit that every time I play the album in the digital age, I start at Track 13 for the STEREO version – why – it absolutely rocks! I love the JON ASTLEY Remaster on both variants yes, but even if the Stereo separation is crude on say the likes of "Key To Love" - brass buried in the left channel while guitars do battle over on the right - I keep playing the STEREO run first. Check out the eerie Stereo imaging on "Another Man" where Mayall goes alone on the Harmonica with only handclaps and air - stirring up his best Sonny Boy Williamson - fantastic audio.
 
The Otis Rush classic "All Your Love" opens Side 1 and sets the tone – great Blues with a smidge of Rock and not too po-faced about either. And who could resist that comic-reading artwork – earnest men on an earnest mission and hoping to have a few highs along the way too. The album includes several so-cool instrumentals – Freddie King’s signature tune "Hideaway" and the Memphis Slim track "Steppin' Out" – while the sheer passion of Mayall’s playing alongside EC for the closer "It Ain't Right" makes you wonder what lucky sods got to see this band in its live prime – wow!
 
The 8-page inlay with new lner notes from PAUL TRYNKA of Mojo Magazine does just about enough work to explain its history and influence and there are period photos too of the four in the studio with Mike Vernon and Gus Dudgeon - Vernon thinking about Blue Horzion Records and Dudgeon dreaming of Reg Dwight (Elton John). But the bully beef is the short-but-sweet track-by-track commentary by John Mayall – fleshing out why for instance he chose "It Ain't Right" to close the LP (his passion for Little Walter of Chess Records fame, Walter's Harmonica style and range suiting JM).
 
Many albums that followed "Blues Breakers" would explore the genre even more and morph into that stunning Blues Rock hybrid of 1967 to 1969 when Paul Butterfield's Blues Band, Chicken Shack, Savoy Brown, Peter Green's Fleetwood Mac, Johnny Winter and Led Zeppelin all took the core music rhythms to another level. 
 
But this wee gem is where they all dipped their liquorice stick into the Sherbet Fountain bag first – the kind of platter the phrase ahead of its time was invented for. Dennis The Menace come on down...

INDEX - Entries and Artist Posts in Alphabetical Order