Showing posts with label Graham Nash. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Graham Nash. Show all posts
Friday, October 9, 2020
Review: The Mirage's 'You Can’t Be Serious: 1966-1968'
Between 1965 and 1968, The
Mirage released a mere eight singles, one of which they put out under the name
Yellow Pages, and no LPs. The Hertfordshire quintet still left behind a pretty
terrific legacy. Yes, their first two singles for CBS —a cover of Betty
Everett’s “Shoop Shoop Song (It’s In His Kiss)” and a second rate Graham Nash
composition called “Go Away”—were weak. Yes, the two singles they released
under their own name and duress on the Page One label were downright lousy
(their A-side as Yellow Pages, “Here Comes Jane”, is pretty good). But none of
that matters on Guerssen Records’ You
Can’t Be Serious: 1966-1968, because this compilation only collects the
sides The Mirage recorded for Philips.
Wednesday, September 20, 2017
Review: Two Judee Sill Reissues
There’s no question that Judee Sill’s back story is
fascinating and disturbing. The biological daughter of a man who imported
exotic animals for films, she emerged from a violent home life with a step dad
who animated Tom and Jerry cartoons
to become an armed robber, drug addict, prostitute, scam artist, and convict.
Then she apparently discovered Jesus and became a recording artist.
While her lyrics take the occasional glimpse into the shadows
(most fearlessly on “The Lamb Ran Away with the Crown”), Sill’s first recordings fail to reflect her harrowing experiences. Her voice is full bodied and pitch perfect, but it
does not exactly exude emotion, making her sound like she should be serenading kids on The Magic Garden and leaving folky compositions such as “Crayon
Angels” and “Jesus Was a Cross-Maker” pleasant but not terribly
moving. The religiousness of her lyrics won’t appeal to everyone either. Without a
doubt the most striking song on Judee Sill is the heart-rending “Lady-O”, which The Turtles recorded with more acute emotion in 1969. These songs all appear
on Sill’s 1971 self-titled debut co-produced by Graham Nash. The inoffensive
acoustic arrangements are in line with Nash’s work with CSN’s softer songs. The Paul Buckmaster-esque string arrangement on “Lopin’ Along Through
the Cosmos” is the one unquestionably potent ingredient in an otherwise bland stew.
On her second album, 1973’s Heart Food, Sill taps into her experiences more effectively with country-ish arrangements that place her work in that genre’s
tradition of hard living. More of the grand string arrangements that were the
highlights of Judee Sill prevent the Heart Food
from ever feeling like mere rural pastiche. Most importantly, Sill lets down her guard in front
of the mic. The inherent quality of her voice is still very present, but by
allowing it to droop into audible despair, to soar with intensity, to bend and even crack,
she bridges the emotional gap that made her debut feel distant. The most explicitly religious thing here is an epic called “The Donor” yet it is so breath-taking that even we heathens can dig it. There’s nothing
as recognizable as “Jesus Was a Cross-Maker” or “Lady-O” on Heart Food, but it is most definitely
the superior album.
Intervention Records is now giving the only two records Judee
Sill completed before her death in 1979 deluxe treatment with a new audiophile
reissue that splits each album between two 180 gram, 45-rpm records. True to
advertising, the vinyl is whisper quiet and the all-analog masters are exceptionally
present and detailed. Some of the music is merely pretty but the presentation
is consistently beautiful.
Tuesday, September 6, 2016
Review: 'The Everly Brothers: Harmonies from Heaven'
There’s a great story behind every great Rock & Roll
act. The Everly Brothers were one of the greatest, certainly among the very
best half-dozen artists of the genre’s first era. The brotherly discord behind
their beautiful music began a tradition that would continue with the similarly
combative kin in The Beach Boys, Kinks, Creedence Clearwater Revival, and many
family acts to follow. However, George Scott’s recent BBC documentary The Everly Brothers: Harmonies from Heaven
is really mainly concerned with that beautiful music.
A clutch of talking heads that include rock writers, music
executives, and artists such as Keith Richards, Graham Nash, and Art Garfunkel
spend most of the film’s hour analyzing the duo’s unique harmonies, Don
Everly’s aggressive guitar rhythms, their songs and arrangements. Don is on
hand to give new firsthand details on his music, while his late brother Phil
appears in relatively recent footage from 2010. Even in a music-focused film,
it would be dishonest, and frankly, kind of boring to only discuss the music,
and the brothers’ fall out is addressed, Don basically chalking it up to his
being a democrat and Phil being a republican.
It is not Scott’s OK documentary that makes Eagle Vision’s
new blu-ray of the film a must own. It is the bonus DVD containing a live
performance from Sydney, Australia, in 1968. Those talking heads can talk about
how great The Everlys are all they want to, but there is no better proof than
that club date in which the guys not only showed off their unimpeachable
harmonies and rocked with total abandon with the assistance of a sharp blues
trio called The Tabernacle Three, but also flaunted their significant comedic
gifts. This is as much of a stand-up gig as it is a Rock & Roll one with
Don delivering really funny shtick between songs while Phil plays the silent
straight man. This is one of the most thoroughly entertaining performances I’ve
ever seen, and the roughness of the footage isn’t much of an issue except in
one small stretch with several missing frames. Unfortunately, this means we
lose a few beats from “Wake Up, Little Susie” and Don’s comedy riff on smoking banana peels.
Wednesday, August 24, 2011
Review: 'The Hollies: Look Through Any Window (1963-1975)'
Despite their past conflicts, the guys are respectful of each other in the new interviews. In retrospect, it’s pretty amazing to think they clashed over “Midas” and considered it such a departure from their hit-making formula when it’s really just as catchy and accessible as anything else they did (and quite a bit more substantial than, say, “Jennifer Eccles” or “Sorry Suzanne”). Or that Nash parted ways with The Hollies to hook up with Stephen Stills and David Crosby, whose music was only moderately edgier than that of his former band. And let’s not forget how unusual the chiming “Bus Stop”, the steel-drum-speckled “Carrie Anne”, or “Stop! Stop! Stop!”— with its balalaika-simulating banjo and wacky tale of a horny spectator’s ejection from a belly-dancer show (based on a true story, as funnily recounted by Nash)—were. Perhaps the most interesting aspect of The Hollies: Look Through Any Window (1963-1975) is how it puts such subtle innovations and the band’s abilities into perspective. Seeing Hicks recreate that tricky “Stop! Stop! Stop!” riff on his electric banjo today may inspire you to head back to your old Hollies records to truly appreciate his playing for the first time.
The Hollies: Look Through Any Window (1963-1975) will be screened at the American Cinemateque’s Aero Theater in Santa Monica, California, this September 22. After the screening, Nash, Clarke, and the film’s producers will take part in a panel discussion. Reelin’ in the Years Productions’ DVD release follows on October 4.
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