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Album, Reviews

Jack Of Diamonds | John Phillips

John Phillips was one of the most notable pop/soft-rock songwriters and vocal arrangers (see The Mamas & The Papas) to emerge from the psychedelic 60s, but he had a fairly rough go of it after the band imploded in 1968. A highly anticipated solo release followed in 1970, but most critics, while praising Phillips’ lyric craft, felt it would have made a far better M&P album.
Among a myriad of other projects Phillips began shortly thereafter was a fairly extended stab at a follow-up, with members of the Crusaders, Traffic and The Mothers Of Invention lending a decidedly urban, jazz-rock ambience to most of the tracks. Even Phillips’ oft-covered title song (better known as Me & My Uncle) sounds nothing like the well-known Grateful Dead cover in either of the two versions offered here.
Other eye-openers include an imagistic Devil’s On The Loose, the tell-tale saga of Mister Blue and an exotic Chinatown, along with the strings-enhanced titles such as Yesterday I Left The Earth and Cup Of Tea. The most intriguing bonus tracks are a couple left off the final M&P studio album: a sunny Fantastic Four and a work-tape version of No Dough. More Phillips collections are promised in this ongoing series.

Varese Sarabande | 3020668192
Reviewed by Gary von Tersch
Back to Issue 342

Franz Ferdinand

The quartet led by Alex
Kapranos took to the stage at
9:05 and delivered a 16-song
set before a day-glo backdrop,
films, strobes and lasers. The
30s/40s crowd jigged through
the 75-minute set, singing
along on better-known cuts,
such as stop-start opener
Matinee. Tonight spurred some
pogoing and the jagged beat of
Twilight Omens wa…

Middle Eastern Rock

This is a prime
example of
why
knowledgeable
reissue record
companies are
so important to furthering our
collective musical experiences.
Track back to 1969, when
musical worlds both sides of
the Atlantic were looking way
beyond their musical reference
points and attempting fusions
of rock with whatever took their
fancy. The New York…

BBC Live In Concert

Like several Island acts of the early 70s (Fairport Convention, Nick Drake, etc), Martyn was given a fairly loose roaming brief. Big sales were a mere secondary consideration to the pursuit of a muse, allowing the artist to follow flights of fancy experimentation. For a major label signing to be afforded such a luxury seems unthinkabl…

King Strings: King- Federal Guitar Grooves 1949-1962

Cincinnati’s King label was always a seminal source of… blah blah blah. This record rocks. Some of the greatest guitarists of the 50s do what they do best: show off, make a noise, and make you realise just why six wires and an electromagnet remains rock’s dominant force. These guys communicate straight. It was necessary: there wa…

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