Sunday 9 April 2017

Nick Drake



(Wyrk in progryss.....)

Nick Drake didn't get much of an audience during his lifetime, though his work attracted critical attention and acclaim and a dedicated, though still small, fan base when the title track of Pink Moon was used in Volkswagen commercial "Milky Way" in 1999.  I was aware of him in the early Seventies, as that was the peak of the singer-songwriters, and I was into them, but his sound didn't grab me - it was just a little too soft, a little too melancholy, a little lacking in bite or energy. There simply wasn't much there to grab the attention of a teenager.  But as his albums these days keep appearing in lists of the best albums ever made, I thought it was time I paid closer attention to him.

Drake had major depression, which caused him to withdraw from performance and recording, retreating to his parents' home in rural Warwickshire. His reluctance to perform live, or be interviewed, contributed to his lack of commercial success. In 1974, at the age of 26,  Drake killed himself with an overdose of antidepressant pills.

Drake signed to Island Records when he was 20 years old and was a student at the University of Cambridge, and released his debut album, Five Leaves Left, in 1969. By 1972, he had recorded two more albums—Bryter Layter and Pink Moon. Neither sold more than 5,000 copies on initial release. Some home recordings (made before his first album) was released as Family Tree in 2007. Recordings made by his mother, Molly Drake, during the 1950s was released in 2013 as Molly Drake.

Drake's music remained available through the mid-1970s, but the 1979 release of the retrospective album Fruit Tree allowed his back catalogue to be reassessed. By the mid-1980s Drake was being credited as an influence by such artists as Robert Smith, David Sylvian and Peter Buck. In 1985, The Dream Academy reached the UK and US charts with "Life in a Northern Town", a song dedicated to Drake (but not about him as a number of people erroneously think). By the early 1990s, he had come to represent a certain type of  "doomed romantic" musician in the UK music press. His first biography was published in 1997, followed in 1998 by the documentary film A Stranger Among Us.

Contemporaries and influences

Each time I listen to Nick Drake I hear John Martyn and Bert Jansch. Martyn's most famous album is Solid Air (1973),  the lead track of which, "Solid Air", was written about Drake.  Martyn was signed to Island, the same label as Drake, and released his first, folk focused, album London Conversation in 1967, with its echoes of the Incredible String Band. His second album, The Tumbler, released in 1968, just after Drake's debut, was more jazz influenced, and closer in style to Drake.  Bert Jansch is regarded as the most significant and influential of the British folk musicians. His style was distinct from Bob Dylan with a strong emphasis on the guitar, and dealing in British folk traditions rather than American, and bringing in jazz ideas rather than pop and rock. His first album was Bert Jansch in 1965. He formed the group Pentangle in 1967, releasing their first album The Pentangle in 1968. Their most successful album was Basket of Light (1968) which contained the hit single "Light Flight".  I suppose there's also a similarity with Jackson C. Frank in the melancholy tone. Jackson, like Drake, had mental health issues. He only made one album, Jackson C. Frank in 1965. And, talking of melancholy, of course there has to be a comparison with Leonard Cohen, especially his first album Pass The Razorblades (sorry)  Songs of Leonard Cohen (1967).  And while we're on the comparisons, a nod toward Syd Barrett whose first solo album after leaving Pink Floyd, The Madcap Laughs, was released in 1970.  I also think of Al Stewart's Love Chronicles  (1969) and Van Morrison's Astral Weeks (1968).  Reflecting on these artists I get a sense of the world in which he belongs, and the artists whom he resembles.


Albyms


Five Leaves Left (1969)

This is clearly folk in the Bert Jansch style but with some strings added that will be to individual taste.  I assume the strings were added to catch some of the feel that Van Morrison got on Astral Weeks. Perhaps I am more familiar with Astral Weeks, but the strings and flute that inform that album seem more in tune with the feel and tone of what Morrison was doing, and underscore it rather than simply accompany it. On this Drake album, the strings seem a chintzy ornamentation with more than a hint of commercial exploitation - though, tellingly when someone tries to deliberately make something appeal to the masses, it often misses. "Way To Blue" is an example of overdone sentimental strings, like something from a Seventies romantic drama.  "River Man", however, has a more subtle and expressive use of strings that genuinely adds to the song.

BBC music blog
The Music Aficionado 
ClassicAlbumSunday


Bryter Layter (1971)

Well, this middle album is certainly not his best. It's OK, but it doesn't have the charm of Five, nor the stark strength of Pink.  It's a quiet, attractive, but ultimately simply pleasant album. "Northern Sky" is a good song with good production. Stands out somewhat.


The Quietus
Rolling Stone


Pink Moon (1972)

His final album. This is more telling, as it's just Drake and his guitar - no distracting strings, or other attempts to gloss and dress up the music. So the sound is good.


Soundblab score 10
Esquire
Sputnik
Pop Matters
Rolling Stone


Other albyms

Family Tree (2007)


Molly Drake  (2013)

Lynks

* AllMusic
* BryterMusic
* NickDrake
* Telegraph
* BestEverAlbums
* 10 Of The Best 
* Guardian
* Stranger To The World
* The Atlantic
* Joe Boyd interview
* Short documentary
* A Skin Too Many - documentary
* A Stranger Among Us - documentary
* Under Review six part docu mentary
* Kaleidoscope two part documentary
* Adrian's Album Reviews
* John Peel Archives - article on influences on Nick Drake
* Telegraph biography
* George Starosin  Honest appraisal.



80 April 2019 

Monday 3 April 2017

Classic albums: Spirit - Twelve Dreams of Dr. Sardonicus


Twelve Dreams of Dr. Sardonicus  (1970)

Right on the cusp of the Seventies if you were into underground or progressive music (the term then was used for any music that was attempting to progress on from basic electric blues, so would embrace Cream, Led Zeppelin, as well as the early "Progressive" bands such as Genesis) you'd have been aware of Spirit. They were a band that were respected rather more than enjoyed. They seemed to have potential to do good, though their music lacked identity or energy or fun or well just whatever it was that made music exciting. In essence Spirit were Worthy but Dull.

My first knowledge of them was from the sampler album The Rock Machine Turns You On, which contained "Fresh Garbage". To this day I retain a fondness for that song., and that sampler album - and I'm not alone in that. The track shows the band's West Coast origins with a laid back jazz and blues and country feel. combined with echoes of Love, Grateful Dead, and the Doors.  Mentioning those bands indicates why Spirit didn't become better known - they were playing on a very crowded stage, and they never really produced songs that captured the hearts and minds of critics or the general public. The band are probably better known these days for the court case over the similarities between "Taurus" and "Stairway to Heaven".

* Wikipedia article on Spirit 



Twelve Dreams of Dr. Sardonicus is the band's most acclaimed album. It is seen as their highpoint - the band fell apart shortly after recording it, and though they did release other albums, they are not highly regarded, even among Spirit fans.  It was their fourth album.

Their debut album Spirit (1968) contains "Fresh Garbage". "Uncle Jack" is a piece of blues based psychedelia with some jazz drumming and trippy electric guitar, "Girl In Your Eye" has some Beatles sitar sounds - other than "Fresh Garbage", there's nothing distinctive or memorable. Most tracks were written by the singer and keyboard player Jay Ferguson.

The follow up was The Family That Plays Together (1968), which was a little tighter and rockier.  Song-writing was split between Ferguson and the lead guitarist Randy California. They rarely wrote together - preferring to write their own songs.  "I Got A Line On You" was a modest hit single - it's a modest late 60's rock song with nothing original about it. The lead guitar is particularly full of cliches.

The next released album was "Clear" (1969), though the band recorded the soundtrack to the film Model Shop. The soundtrack was released in 2005.

None of these albums is particularly interesting. They sound like the albums of a B-List band. They are on the whole competent, but there's nothing really to get your teeth into. They sound like a band that's perpetually caught up in the leaf swirl of a vehicle moving fast in a positive direction. They are not rocky enough or jazzy enough or psychedelic enough. They don't have flashy or interesting musicians or lead singer. They plod along in a quiet and worthy and unimaginative way.

So we come to their acclaimed album, Twelve Dreams of Dr. Sardonicus. Over the years people have made mention of this album. I've read the name several times. I can't say for certain if I heard it back in the early 70s. I may even have owned it - I got through a lot of albums back then. Acquiring them and swapping them at speed. Always willing to try out new stuff, and always willing to swap out the crap for something potentially better. But if I did hear it or even own it, I don't recall it, and playing it now doesn't bring back any memories. Anyway....

The first track reminds me of Traffic - it has a good driving mix of jazz and rock, and the song has a more developed structure than heard previously from them.  But the comparison with Traffic is not right - Traffic had more accomplished musicians, so the sound is richer, lighter, more skilled and complex. Spirit are tighter and more direct. Though, tighter and more direct is more suited to straight rock. It doesn't quite work when the intention is to be musically varied and interesting, especially when dealing with jazz. Spirit's drummer is good, and can bring in interesting drum rhythms, but the rest of the band can't quite match him, so that is where Spirit are let down. They are, on the whole, not able to match their musical ambitions.

Jazz rock albums released in the 12 months before Twelve Dreams include  Traffic's John Barleycorn Must Die,  Blood Sweat & Tears 3.  Frank Zappa's Hot Rats, Soft Machine's Third, Colosseum's Those About To Die Salute You,  and Chicago III.  Those albums are rather more obviously jazz than Spirit. Perhaps Caravan's If I Could It Again, I'd Do It All Over You is a nearer match.

Tracks like "Animal Zoo" reveal the country influence, so comparisons with Kinks, Grateful Dead, CSN&Y, the Byrds, the Flying Burrito Brothers, Poco, and the Band may be more revealing. Country rock albums released in the 12 months before Twelve Dreams include the Band's The Band, the Kinks' Arthur (Or the Decline and Fall of the British Empire), the Grateful Dead's Workingman's Dead, CSN&Y's Deja Vu,  the Flying Burrito Bros' The Gilded Palace Of Sin, and Poco's Poco.  But those albums are more clear in their country or folk aspects, and don't have any near the jazz feel of Twelve Dreams, though often the lead guitar is pretty much the same.  I think the Doors with their combination of styles, pop, rock, jazz and country are a closer match - Soft Parade has a similar feel to Spirit.



* Wikipedia
* Head Heritage
* 53and3
* ProgArchives
* SuperSeventies
* Christgau
* AllMusic
* Mojo
* The Independent obituary for Randy California
* Spirit fanpage
* Randy California fanpage




Tracklist

Side One
Prelude - Nothin' To Hide3:41
Nature's Way2:30
Animal Zoo3:20
Love Has Found A Way2:42
Why Can't I Be Free1:03
Mr. Skin3:50


Side Two
Space Child3:26
When I Touch You5:35
Street Worm3:40
Life Has Just Begun3:22
Morning Will Come2:58
Soldier

Bonus tracks on 1996 remaster:
13. Rougher Road (3:17) *
14. Animal Zoo (Single version) (3:10)
15. Morning Will Come (Alternate mix) (2:50) *
16. Red Light Roll On (B-side) (5:41)

* Previously unreleased




67 April 2019