Wednesday, November 17, 2021

The Best of 1971 Fifty Years On

There has been a lot of discussion this year of the music from 1971. And why not. It was 50 years ago, and it was a fine year for music (or was it?). Before I began this post, I went and looked at 1971, but I also looked at 1970 and 1972 to see if there was anything particularly special about 1971. Honestly, it seemed to me that 1970 was just as interesting as 1971, but 1972 did not seem to live up to the 1971 standard. Anyway, it's covid days and distractions are welcome, so let's just say that 1971 was special. I know it was special to me, because I was very into music and I was sixteen years old. Music (and lots of things) from your impressionable teen years can leave a mark. I was surprised just how many of the classics from 1971 I own and still enjoy.

So you can browse the "Best of 1971" sites for yourself, and when you do you'll find many of these classics:

Rolling Stones Sticky Fingers
Joni Mitchell Blue
Marvin Gaye What's Going On
Carole King Tapestry
Allman Brothers At Fillmore East
Rod Stewart Every Picture Tells A Story
T Rex Electric Warrior
John Lennon Imagine
Funkadelic Maggot Brain
Led Zeppelin IV
Harry Nilsson Nilsson Schmilsson
David Bowie Hunky Dory
Beach Boys Surf's Up
Janis Joplin Pearl
Yes The Yes Album, and Fragile
Grateful Dead Grateful Dead (Skull and Roses)
Santana III
 
That does look like an impressive list. In addition to artists, it was an incredible year for engineer-turned-producer Glyn Johns. In 1971 he produced The Who's Who's Next, The Faces' A Nod Is As Good As A Wink (arguably the best records by those two bands), and Boz Scaggs' Moments and Boz Scaggs And Band. He was a busy guy. 
 
And 1971 also included some other bright spots that may not be as well remembered as the classics, but that were no less interesting and/or influential. Some of these include:
 
Can Tago Mago - I didn't get hear Can until many years later, but it amazes me that this record came out in 1971. This music seems so alien to the era, and so different from anything else then, or now.

The Kinks Muswell Hillbillies - Maybe their last great record, and definitely the end of a spectacular five-year run.

Fleetwood Mac Future Games - Bob Welch and Christine McVie head the band in a new direction. Serious candle-lit stoner rock jams.

Laura Nyro Gonna Take A Miracle - Songwriter Nyro, with help from LaBelle, does an all-covers record that stands the test of time. A lesser-known gem that still sounds great.

The Rascals Peaceful World - Although it further alienated their pop fans, this smooth jazz/rock hybrid is a great record that went almost completely neglected.

Elton John 11-17-70 - The big lists like to talk about Madman Across The Water, but this is such a singular and riotous Elton John record, and Madman was only OK.
 
New York Rock Ensemble Roll Over - Great record, great band, should have been, could have been...

The Band Cahoots - Their fourth, and last near-perfect studio album.
 
Poco From The Inside - Paul Cotton's first with Poco, and one of their better ones all things considered.
 
Ten Years After A Space In Time - Again, maybe their last great record at the end of a string of them. Includes the hit I'd Love To Change The World. 

Oh, I almost forgot. 1971 was the year of The Sons Follow Your Heart (the one without horns), the title track of which contains my favorite guitar break, by the fantastic Terry Haggerty.

Sunday, November 7, 2021

Bob Dylan Time Out Of Mind 1997

A while back I mentioned Mary Lee Kortes' brilliant live performance of Dylan's Blood On The Tracks. In that post I also included my list of "best" Dylan albums. I got only one comment regarding (mainly) Dylan's Street Legal, an album I am quite fond of, but still one that I didn't deem worthy of the "best of" list. But the whole thing got me going and checking out the many Best of Dylan and Dylan Albums Rated entries on blog and professional publication articles. 

And I began to realize that I maybe never heard Time Out Of Mind more than once, and maybe never. I love Dylan's better work, and as a fan, I bought I don't know how many really crappy Dylan records in the eighties and nineties, only to regret those purchases. I mean, from 1979 (Slow Train Coming, which is pretty good if you don't mind the proselytizing) to 1993 (World Gone Wrong, which could just be called Dylan Gone Wrong) there was a lot of serious dreck. In fact, looking back on his career, he's made more mediocre and worse records than great ones. I know, there's almost always something worth hearing, but if you own all the Dylan albums, you've bought a bunch of terrible records along with the classics.

I went and took Time Out Of Mind out from the library, and by golly, it is indeed a keeper. Even with Daniel Lanois producing (in my view, not a great sign), the record has some of Bob's great songs and performances, and much more than half of it is right there with his best work. I'll let you read everyone else's song by song rehash, but suffice it to say that almost everything is excellent, and everything else is at least solid. I disagree with those who feel that Make You Feel My Love is a lesser track, and even the 16-minute Highlands that ends the album is good Dylan. 

So what do you know, I've got ten now. They are:

Bringing It All Back Home 1965
Highway 61 Revisted 1965
Blonde On Blonde 1966
John Wesley Harding 1967
New Morning 1970
Blood On The Tracks 1975
Desire 1976 
Time Out Of Mind 1997
Love And Theft 2001
Modern Times 2006