Saturday, March 26, 2022

Ten Years After 1967-1974

Ten Years After were early English blues enthusiasts that, along with John Mayall, Yardbirds, Chicken Shack, early Fleetwood Mac, Cream, and others, took the American export and repurposed it for the rock market. Ten Years After had the lightening fast guitar hero in Alvin Lee, but the whole band were a talented group that could drive a blues riff into your head with sustained vigor.

They managed nine records in the UK top 40 (four top 10) and six in the US top 40. US sales improved after the release of the movie Woodstock, which featured Ten Years After's I'm Going Home in a smoking hot performance. They toured extensively and had one top 40 single in the US, the somewhat out of character I'd Love To Change The World in 1971.

Their eponymous debut from 1967 is a hot number that includes solid versions of Willie Dixon's Spoonful, Sonny Boy Williamson's Help Me, Al Kooper's I Can't Keep From Crying, Sometimes, and several good ones from Alvin Lee's pen. Keyboardist Chick Churchill gets a highlight on Adventures Of A Young Organ. It is a strong debut, showing off the bands many strengths and displaying just a bit more jazz influences than most blues-rock of the time.

Next up was the live Undead 1968. The live setting shows off Lee's hot guitar chops and snarling vocals, and the whole band cooks. A hot version of Woody Hermann's Woodchopper's Ball and the first recorded version of I'm Going Home (in a modest six-minute version) are highlights. The original's five songs are nicely augmented by four extra tracks on the 2002 CD reissue.

Stonedhenge 1969 is a studio album written entirely by Alvin Lee and the band members. Beside some strong songs from Alvin Lee, including the jazzy shuffle Woman Trouble, the slow blues of A Sad Song, the driving Speed Kills, and the rocking I'm Going To Try and Hear Me Calling, each other member gets a feature. Drummer Ric Lee does a drum solo version of Three Blind Mice, and keyboardist Chick Churchill and bassist Leo Lyons both perform solo pieces as well. It is almost there, but Alvin Lee's best songs are yet to come, and the solo band member's features could have made room for more rocking.

1969 also saw the release of Ssssh, one of their better records overall, and the beginning of their run of solid studio outings. I reviewed it here back in 2014. All eight tracks are strong, and Lee snarls out the vocals and plays lightening fast runs on the guitar while one of the best driving rhythm sections in blues-rock just push the songs into your ears. The rockers Bad Scene, Stoned Woman, Good Morning Little Schoolgirl, The Stomp, and Woke Up This Morning never let up, while Two Time Mama features nice acoustic guitar, and If You Should Love Me is a strong mid-tempo ballad.

We are into the best period for the band, and Cricklewood Green 1970 continues and expands on the excellence of Ssssh. The rockers here are all solid, including organ and guitar driven Sugar The Road, the driving Working On The Road, the seven-minute showcase 50,000 Miles Beneath My Brain, the hit single, stomping Love Like A Man, and the slow burn of As The Sun Burns Away. Add to that the jazzy Me And My Baby, and one of Lee's better ballads, the haunting Circles, and you've got a sure winner. It is easy to see how it was their highest charting record.

1970 also saw the release of Watt. It is hard to believe that Watt came out between Criclewood Green and A Space In Time, two of their best records. The singing and playing are all fine, but the songs are just not as strong as either of those other two. It sounds like Alvin Lee needed more time to write some better ones, so these could have mostly been the bonus tracks on the reissue thirty years later. It's not terrible, but it is almost entirely unnecessary, especially compared to their best work. 

A Space in Time 1971 saw the band broaden their sound with more acoustic guitar, and even strings on Over The Hill. The single I'd Love To Change The World was their biggest hit, mixing acoustic guitar verses with searing leads on the chorus and breaks. It's killer, but not really like much else they had done, and was rarely performed live. And while the album features more ballads and mid-tempo material than usual, there's solid rock here too with One Of These Days, Baby Won't You Let Me Rock 'n' Roll You, I've Been There Too, and Let The Sky Fall. The record plays well, and is consistently strong.

1972 brought Rock And Roll Music To The World, and they continue to offer their driving blues-rock they had become known for by now. Strong songs include Standing At The Station, Choo Choo Mama, You Give Me Loving, and the boogie title track. Some of the rest feels less fresh, and the limits of Alvin Lee's songwriting shows up again as it did on Watt.

1973 saw Recorded Live, a respectable live recording with some questionable song selections, including the I Can't Keep From Cryin' Sometimes/Extension on One Chord jam that takes up all of side three. Everything is done to the nines, and yet the album doesn't feel all that cohesive. There's good versions of One Of These Days, You Give Me Loving, Good Morning Little Schoolgirl, Choo Choo Mama, and I'm Going Home (again).

Positive Vibrations 1974 was released just before the band broke up, and as such probably didn't receive much record company push. A mix of hard rockers and a few mid-tempo numbers, it's a pretty good one overall. Rockers Nowhere To Run, Going Back To Birmingham, It's Getting Harder, You're Driving Me Crazy, and I Wanted To Boogie are all quality Ten Years After, and most of the material holds up well. But Alvin Lee had one foot out the door, and the record only made it to #81 in the US, and didn't chart in the UK at all.

Alvin Lee continued on as a solo act and with bands Ten Years Later and The Alvin Lee Band. He made a dozen studio solo records between 1973 and 2012. In 1989, he reunited with the original members for About Time, a decent record with some good songs and some weak ones, and the band sounds good. It suffers from Lee's guitar sound, that over-driven, pure tone heard on Boston and Journey records of the same time period. Lee's guitar sound in the seventies was always a bit more organic. They toured together off and on until 2003 when Lee left and the band replaced him with Joe Gooch, with whom they recorded several more albums. Alvin Lee died in 2013 from complications from surgery.

When they were hot, they were hard to beat. They deserved more fame than they achieved. Their debut is a landmark given that it came out in 1967. Ssssh and Cricklewood Green are the bomb, the pinacle of their work, and A Space In Time is excellent. Positive Vibrations is a strong swansong, and should have sold better.

Sunday, March 20, 2022

Marti Jones Match Game 1986

Marti Jones didn't make any bad records. Any and all of her releases are worth your coin, and most of them are excellent displays of carefully chosen, well-written folk-pop mixed with the best of Don Dixon's writing credits, and also Dixon's most attentive productions. After her 1985 debut Unsophisticated Time featured that exact formula to near perfect results and limited sales, they tried one time to make a rock record.

And what a record it is. Unlike any of her records (although the excellent Live At Spirit Square also rocks at times), Match Game is singular in it's rocking, and yet maintains the organic sound that Dixon applies to all of her recordings. This is especially important because it was 1986, and this record eschews the slick sound of the eighties (think Pat Benatar), and instead sounds like those fine Bowie and Mott analog recordings of the early seventies.

The record includes premiere songwriting throughout. Dixon brings his Be Myself Again, Touch Tone, and Inside These Arms, all solid efforts. And then there's Bowie's Soul Love (a wonderful version), Dwight Twilley's Chance Of A Lifetime, Elvis Costello's Just A Memory, Paul Rogers' Soon I Will Be Gone, Marshall Crenshaw's Whenever You're On My Mind, Liam Sternberg's Crusher, John David's It's Too Late, Reed Nelson's We're Doing Alright, and Robert Barone's Foolish Lies. The record is a study in great songcraft.

And then there's the guest list of musicians: Mitch Easter, Ricky Bird, Darlene Love, Vinnie Zummo, Treva Spontaine, Marshall Crenshaw, Robert Crenshaw, Paul Carrack, T-Bone Burnett, Micky Curry, Rick Ford, and of course Don Dixon. Every note is in place perfectly. And Dixon's production captures it all in vivid, analog glory.

Lest we forget, there's Marti's clear, beautiful alto voice and inspired use of said instrument to illuminate every lyric. More forceful (yet still somehow casual) on many of these songs than on much of her material, it brings out the best in her.

There is not another record quite like it. Not just in Marti's oeuvre, but anywhere really. I didn't remember it when I made a list of perfect records, but that was my omission, and a terrible mistake. One of my favorite artists in a singular moment early in her career.