Wednesday, 24 May 2017

The Chi-lites (1976) I Turned Away - LOST 70s GEMS


A soaring cinematic soul number full of bluesy electric sitar notes and battling lead vocals barrel away. Lyrically one of their best even if still in the shadow of their talisman and recently departed singer Eugene Record. But the way the strings announce the refrain of I Turned Away along with high delivery of the words dramatic. The duelling vocals plus the punctuation of the rhythm section all work to give the song a strong beat but the dive bombing violas and funky scratching accentuating the propulsive of every line is what makes this stand out in the sleepy, smooth days of the early to mid 70s where country rock and philly soul ruled with mild, laidback ballads.


Tuesday, 23 May 2017

England Dan and JF Colley (1976) It's Not the Same - LOST 70s GEMS

A delicate soft rocker with a nice acoustic backing and the duo's trademark placid 'old timey' close harmony singin full of latent feelings and conflicting emotions about father time and the trajectory of relationships.


Saturday, 20 May 2017

Ian Matthews (1976) Lonely Hunter - LOST 70S GEMS


 This startling track produced by Dan Fogelberg's Producer Nortbert Puttman, on an album full of covers and sonic experimentation.
 A funky track with Lap steel harmonics, trickling piano vamps, kalamazoo sounding harmonicas before the lonesome harmonies lead by Matthews enter in, the backing piano and rhythm section give a lite jazz beat to the proceedings. It has a mix of Dan Fogelberg and Kenny Loggins, with it's odd choice of instruments with a dissonant melody is all keeping with the frankly ridiculous album picture of a airbrushed, handsome box car racer with flaxen hair and raised cheekbones, hardly resembling Matthews's less photogenic face and shaggier look. Also on the Go For Broke album is a haunting Kraut rock inspired version of Darkness, Darkness with ethereal synthesizers sounding like glassy organs with ARP melodies that ping out in a thick, eastern lines that mimic pan's flute. There is also a dreadfully analogue sounding, Caribbean version of Hall and Oates's When The Morning Comes that plain don't work. However the arpeggio drenched, New Wave song Rhythm of the West, features Matthews on more folk driven malaise type of material plus a layered Moog part, though Lonely Hunter remains the sterling piece from a colourful misstep.


Though you can't argue that the use of AfroCarribean rhythms, synthesizers and electric pianos make his arrangements stand out a bit more and mirror what Richie Furay was doing with more soul and success in his solo career. As singer songwriters of the confessional folk rock of the early 70s beefed up their songs with more instruments and orchestras, the 'Less is More' School was now out in the second half of the 70s.

Friday, 19 May 2017

Eagles (1972) Nightingale - LOST 70S GEMS

 This rocker was best described as the 'sleeper' of the band's country rock debut with its heavy backbeat, guitar hooks including use of delicate harmonics interweave withe layers of doo wop backing vocals. It was the Eagles reworking a Jackson Browne tune into a showcase for their vocal and guitar talents but taken to the absolute extreme. Though Henley sung it well I  can't help shake this feeling that this would've suited his old musical partner Glenn Frey's voice better with it's dark lyrics contrasting well with the laidback melody; a combination that was served Frey's swaggering vocals well. Also as Take It Easy had proved Frey was particularly adept at delivering Browne's songs to the fullest, while the fact it was a song named after a bird kept the loose avian concept around, the 'free as bird' theme was in keeping with this album's iconic blue sky cover; it's depiction of the vistas of the South West particularly LA.


Thursday, 18 May 2017

Ian Matthews (1978) King Of The Night-LOST 70S GEMS

From his smooth AOR album Stealin Home, Ian Matthews use his supple vocals to deliver some fairly standard pop rock material, but King of the Night stands out with its Elton John sound, a late night piano track with his nice, 'worn down' vocal style. There many nice moments, the harmonies of Let There Be Blues, the rhythm guitar on Don't Hang Up on Your Dancing Shoes, the phased strings of Stealin Home and Carefully Taught. It all creates an airy Twilight scene that was quite nice if like James Taylor's material for the same period lacked their early 70s bite, the lyrics and emotions remain vague and on the surface unlike their unvarnished singer songwriter work that faded in favour of late 70s yacht rock arrangements.


Wednesday, 17 May 2017

Rick Springfield (1971) Speak To The Sky- LOST 70S GEMS

A bouncy pop song with standard country blues format, replacing where a violin would come in with a thick electric guitar tone common in sunny 70s pop. Rick Springfield's early solo song has a slightly dark edge with the final refrain 'The world will look better if I'm up there' referring to the sky he allegedly speaks to, or possibly its an upbeat message about seeing the whole picture.




Tuesday, 16 May 2017

Zoot (1970) Hey Pinky - LOST 70s GEMS

Rick Springfield's early group that once donned all pink outfits said goodbye to their teeny bopper image with this groovy, hard rocker full of sitar backing and tactile slide licks, atmospheric harmonies and interesting lead vocals. The rhythm section ramps up by the time the end comes along with a scream but it's Springfield's' guitar tone sliding up and down the neck that is the biggest draw of the song.