John Mayall “Looking Back”

Despite the incredible amount of critical acclaim afforded to John Mayall’s mid-sixties recordings with the Bluesbreakers, the mainstream seems to have left him behind by the time 1969 rolled around. It’s a little tempting to assume that popular taste had simply drifted away from Mayall’s trademark strain of rhythm and blues, and yet the band-leader’s affinity for experimentation has always given testimony to his willingness to run with the times. Indeed, 1968 saw the release of both Blues From Laurel Canyon and Bare Wires; unusual masterpieces filtered through a kaleidoscopic tangle of American roots music. The man’s earlier material was still more-than relevant, however, a fact to which Looking Back would firmly attest the following year.

Looking Back was originally released by Polydor Records in order to draw together an odd assortment of singles and unreleased sides, most hailing from an earlier era in Mayall’s career. From tightly-wound Chicago wailers to rambling slices of back-porch blues, Looking Back ultimately manages to touch on pretty much every facet of Mayall’s style. In fact, there are even a few numbers that would not be all that out of place on Laurel Canyon, such as the atmospheric Jenny, in which Peter Green’s reverbed guitar sends out lazy pulses and foreshadows later masterpieces such as Albatross and Heavy Heart. The clickety-clacking Sitting in the Rain is more or less exactly what you’d think of looking at the album’s fantastic cover, with a choogling electric guitar and thumping bass line accompanied by a trotting drumstick rhythm, while The Picture on the Wall is the obligatory country blues cut, with grooving Dobro playing and a typically lazy Mayall vocal.

Most of the material to be found here is more upbeat and rambunctious, however; solid Marquee Club rockers from the height of the British revival. Blues City Shakedown rides a fun, heaving guitar figure as Mayall lets his amplified harmonica rip. Recordings of the blues standards Stormy Monday, It Hurts Me Too and Double Trouble are all righteously tackled “ in all honesty you could hardly ask for a better interpreter on these songs. Between the crack ensembles assembled here and Mayall’s enviable talents as both bandleader and musician, these otherwise-overworked tunes are given fresh life. The instruments eschew just enough blues conventions and cliches to keep the train rolling all the way down the the end of the track. Dig the weird, warbled vocals on the latter cut, potentially bordering on the psychedelic but far too raw to fit in any one bag. Hell, there’s a lot to digest here, and it’s easy to see why it was Mayall’s groups that kept young musicians in England and the States on their toes and so  hungry to learn the trade back in the day.

So waste no time, go and check this one out! Deram Records has managed to keep Looking Back in print, and though it is technically only available as a British import it ain’t going to set you back any more than a domestic release would. The album cover may make it worthwhile to find a full-sized vinyl copy, however, and with this kind of music in the grooves its hard not to be pushed towards investing in the real deal. If there’s any extra selling point needed, might it be that I’ve heard said that the guitar solo on Stormy Monday is one of Eric Clapton’s all time bests? Surely we have some thoughts there.

mp3: So Many Roads
mp3: Sitting In the Rain

:) Original | 1969 | Deram | search ebay ]
:D Reissue | Universal | buy here ]


Also Recommended

3 Comments.

  • Len Liechti

    Great writing as ever, Nik, and gratifying to see another Mayall fan, and one from Across The Water at that. From ’68 onwards when I discovered him I was a Mayall devotee – still am – and regard his Decca period releases as one of the finest bodies of work by anybody ever, even notwithstanding his procession of stellar sidemen during that period. You’ll find my review of Blues From Laurel Canyon elsewhere on this site, one of my earliest submissions, and still one of my top five albums of all time. Looking Back is a fine collection of odds and sods, and the tracks that came out as singles in the UK – in the days when singles were separate releases and not just cuts from the current album – are every bit as good as the well-known album material. “Stormy Monday”, be warned, is an impromptu live recording and the sound quality is muzzy to say the least, but Clapton is certainly on fire and it’s the only extant recording to feature both him and Jack Bruce in a Mayall lineup, so historical value there. “Sitting In The Rain” is a wonderful B-side featuring Peter Green at his absolute best on a delightful country blues, playing clean and sweet without a trace of reverb or distortion. I love this song and occasionally play it in my Open Mic set. A few years later, after Mayall’s defection to Polydor, Decca put out a second collection of non-album tracks and cutting-room-floor material called Thru The Years which has a lot more Peter and is equally recommended. Both albums were reissued on CD by Deram in 1990 and are still in print and at budget prices to boot. Some years ago I saw Mayall live at the Colston Hall in Bristol with his Buddy Whittington lineup (another wonderful guitar player, BTW); Mayall was then 68 and he rode on stage on a mountain bike, and at the end of the set he jumped off the five-foot-high stage, shook hands with most of the front row, and then jumped back up again! A brilliant musician and a great showman.

  • There’s a breathtaking Peter Green solo sans trademark reverb on the title track. It’s great how this diverse Mayall collection hangs together so beautifully. I’d rate it more highly than Bare Wires and Laurel Canyon imho and a worthy companion to Bluesbreakers; Hard Road; and Crusade. A must-have for Mayall fans and all blues devotees. Here’s a gig review from the reformed Bluesbreakers’s 1982 Australian tour to add emphasis: http://ladlitter.blogspot.com.au/2007/08/great-gigs-i-john-mayall-and.html

  • I admire your work on this site, such great music. Thanks, keep it up.

Leave a Reply to Len Liechti [cancel]