Archive for October, 2007

The Pretty Things “Parachute”

Parachute

In our world, the Pretty Things are as big as the Pink Floyd, and Parachute is our Dark Side of the Moon. And while this analogy works in terms of production values and signature albums, Parachute really owes more to The Beatles and Abbey Road.

The Pretties’ early material is strong and bluesy. They were pioneers in the style that influenced the Rolling Stones in the 60s. In 1968 they recorded the seminal rock opera S.F. Sorrow, known to have influenced Pete Townshend in recording Tommy. Parachute followed two years later and, unlike most albums reviewed here, was a critical success, receiving the Best Album of 1970 accolade from Rolling Stone magazine. It’s an amazing leap from Sorrow as well. While I love S.F. Sorrow for the gutsy and no-holds-barred psych bomb that it is, I must confess that I believe Parachute to be the better album for its intricate production, dynamics, and developed songwriting.

The opener tears it up with massive drum sola and intimidating rhythm section. Abruptly, we are swept into a soothing number that rallies into the next, The Good Mr. Square into She Was Tall, She Was High. And though we may not have a concept record here, the flow of Parachute continues as such, a dramatic experience, seamlessly passing from heart-pounding rock anthems to smartly arranged acoustic-based gems.

If you are a fan of rock music, this is a completely essential album. Bonus tracks are excellent quality.

“Grass”

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The Outsiders “Songbook”

Songbook

After the Outsiders delivered their super raw, half live half studio lp in 1966, they released perhaps one of the finest records of the mid 60’s, Songbook (1967). At the time, this record was viewed as a proper sophomore release. In recent years Songbook has been seen as a compilation, consisting of 3 compositions from the debut album along with 11 singles only tracks recorded throughout late 1966 to mid 1967.

Songbook showed that Wally Tax and the band within a years time, had grown substantially as musicians and songwriters. The first four songs of the album were out of the box classics. Bird In A Cage is a sizzling live cut with studio quality fidelity that opened the album. The excellent static fuzz blues of Bird In A Cage gives way to two classic folk-rockers, Keep On Trying and Lying All The Time. This is arguably the Outsiders at their peak, making tough engaging outlaw rock n roll that few have equaled before or since. Filthy Rich was one of the few cuts from the debut, a proto slice of pure punk rock and angst.

It’s been reported that they even upstaged and outplayed the Rolling Stones at around the time of these recordings.

Other killers on this classic Nederbeat record are an eloquent european folk ballad, Summer Is Here, a forlorning but stately I’ve Been Loving You So Long and the bitter Monkey On Your Back. The latest recording sessions yielded the above fruits and hinted at the direction the Outsiders would take on a future release, the immortal CQ. Monkey On Your Back is a catchy pop rocker with Tax’s soulful world weary vocals and it’s priceless stuff. Tax’s vocals were always so brutally honest and had a matter of fact quality about them. It’s what made the Outsider’s so special, along with Ron Splinter’s blazing fuzz leads. Touch was another frantic, brutal rocker that had a unique euro-folk bridge and wild guitar riffs.

The Outsiders were one of the best of a fertile Holland scene that produced great bands like the Q65, Ro-d-y’s, Group 1850, Sandy Coast, Focus, the Zipps, Brainbox, the Motions, and the Golden Earring amongst many others. In recent years I have seen quotes floating around the rock critic world claiming the Outsiders to be one of the greatest unknown rock bands of the 60’s that are from a non-English speaking territory. I believe them to be one of the greatest underground groups period, regardless of territory or timeframe.

“Summer Is Here”

Below, one of their earlier tracks, the great punk classic, Won’t You Listen:

“Won’t You Listen”

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Link Wray (self-titled)

Link Wray

This is a great record with which to understand the appeal of raw lo-fidelity recordings. Modern bands like Whiskeytown and early Wilco wrote music that could equal the work of alt-country masters of the past, but their tunes are hampered by modern recording technology, sounding so pretty and sterile that there is no authenticity or character. When you learn to love the toneless piano, acoustic guitar riffin, unaffected treblelectric guitar, and clanky assortment of found percussion objects driving this record, you might wonder why audiophiles ever bothered to enhance recording technology beyond 1971.

Link Wray was a guitar sensation in the late 50s and 60s who had instrumental hits in songs like Rumble and Jack the Ripper. He has the truly awesome distinction of being called the first guitar player to use overdrive and power chords! It wasn’t until 1971, however, during Link’s comeback that his masterpiece works emerged, in a style and sound akin to that of the Stones and V. Morrison, but a roots rock swamp muddy and smokin’. These albums were recorded in a converted chicken shack on Link’s Maryland farm using makeshift equipment.

Link Wray self-titled is an album that was hard to find in recent years. I had to get it on an OOP box set called Guitar Preacher which was a good, if incomplete, collection of Link’s comeback stuff. Now we are blessed with Wray’s Three Track Shack, a 2005 collection of these three excellent albums from 1971-1974. Beans & Fatback is every bit the equal of the self-titled record, and Mordicai Jones features singer Bobby Howard taking a Little Feat white-soul approach on lead vocals for the album. However, I do prefer Link’s tattered and gritty voice on the other records.

Songs on these records range from fuzz git rockers to country-grass interludes, but the best of them just drive with that laid back Stones feel that gets everyone to nod in time. This compilation is a one of a kind treat that should appeal to all roots rock and music lovers.

“Fire And Brimstone”

“From Tulsa To North Carolina”

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