Thursday, September 28, 2023

Back to schooldays (Rick Nelson) (LP 2066 - 2073)

Gary Brooker  Echoes In The Night (Vinyl, Mercury Records, 1985) ***  

Rick Nelson  Playing To Win (Vinyl, Capitol Records, 1981) ***  

Donovan  Barabajagal (Vinyl, Epic Records, 1969) *** 

Donovan  Open Road (Vinyl, Epic Records, 1970) *****  

Arlo Guthrie  Running Down The Road (Vinyl, Reprise Records, 1969) *** 

Harpers Bizarre  Feelin' Groovy (Vinyl, Warner Bros. Records, 1967) *** 

Various  Individual (Vinyl, CBS Records, 1979) *** 

XTC  English Settlement (Vinyl, Virgin Records, 1982) ***** 


GenreProg/ pop rock/ folk rock/ baroque pop/ jazz fusion/ pop rock to finish.

Places I remember: Brooker - Passionate About Vinyl (Waipawa)/Harper's Bizarre - Southbound Records/ rest are all  Real Groovy (Auckland). Didn't buy anything at the new Flying Nun shop on K Rd but it was great to visit. It's opposite St Kevin's Arcade - lots of memories centre on that place!

Fab, and all the other pimply hyperbolesBarabajagal (Donovan)

Gear costume: Senses Working Overtime (XTC)

Active compensatory factors
: While on our way to see Tim Finn play in Auckland last weekend, I was able to stop off at a few record shops. These nine albums* have come from that journey up north and, in a nod to schooldays with GK, a trek down Symonds St., K. Road, and Queen St. with Kevy.

Gary Brooker's third solo album has been on my want list for a while. While Gary's voice is in fine form, it's a typical eighties production with these pesky synths all over most of the tracks. Grrrr. 

Eric Clapton and Rory Gallagher appear (on different tracks) but I'm blowed if I can hear them. Rory apparently plays slide guitar. I'll need to put headphones on and really listen for him.


Despite the terrible cover, Rick Nelson had a mini-revival in 1981 with this Jack Nitzsche produced rock album. Sounds like he means it too. Tragically he would die four years later in a plane crash. A phenomenal talent, gone far too soon. 

Highlights: Almost Saturday Night (yes, the John Fogerty song); Do The Best You Can (yes, the Ry Cooder song) - this one in particular suits his laid back vocal style.

Donovan in 1969 was trying to have another commercial breakthrough with Mickie Most again at the producer's desk. The title song - Barabajagal, with the Jeff Beck Group, is pop perfection and a real highlight. 

Unfortunately, the rest of the album is quite uneven, unlike his next album.

Briefly, like Bowie with Tin Machine,
Donovan next tried to operate in a band setting - Open Road is the name of the band and the name of this record (my copy has no name on the cover as in the image next door - instead there are tiny, hard to find, names on the photos).

Unlike Tin Machine, I think Open Roads works brilliantly. It's a full band sound, very 1970 in its production - that's a good thing! Donovan sounds great (as normal) and the arrangements are thoughtful, inventive and lovely! 


Staying in the folk rock genre (although it could also be fairly judged as country rock at times) is the next one - Arlo Guthrie's second album (after Alice's Restaurant). Ever since that enthusiastic gush at Woodstock, I have a soft spot for Arlo and I now have more of his albums than I do Woody Guthrie ones!

This one has involvement from various Byrds, Ry Cooder and Van Dyke Parks (co-producing). As well as the instrumental Living In The Country, a Pete Seeger song, it has Coming In To Los Angeles - as clear highlights

Harpers Bizarre (no apostrophe) hold a strange hold over my imagination. They seem utterly unique to me - out of time almost.

Just look at that cover for a second. See what I mean. This was 1967. The summer of love. Sgt Pepper. LSD. Satanic Majesties Request. And these guys look and sound like they have stepped off a Disney soundstage, or out of a lecture at a fifties ivy league preppy college to pose for a yearbook photo.

That Van Dyke Parks is involved is no surprise, he plays piano on his California soft pop composition - Come To The Sunshine (along with Paul Simon's Feelin' Groovy, a true highlight), but I'm sure he was also listening closely to these arrangements by Leon Russell, Randy Newman, Perry Botkin.

The various artists Individual double set is basically a jazz fusion sampler from CBS. I figured $10, it was worth a punt.

It's damn fine! There is this Nu Yerk type salesman huckster type doing the introductions to the rikids and he's unintentionally hilarious.

It features big hitters like John McLaughlin, George Duke, Herbie Hancock, Chick Corea, Richard Tee, Hubert laws and more. Love it!

Highlights: Tony Williams' Hip Skip.

My recollecting of XTC albums continues with a new copy of English Settlement being the latest addition.

This one was lost in my house move and it's taken me a while to realise it. 

I love this album - along with White Music it is my favourite XTC album. They had come a long way in only a few years and this more pastoral pop version of XTC was music to my ears. 

Too many highlights to list - each track is wonderfully fresh and inventive so it gets the five star rating from me.

Where do they all belong? *Only one double up from my trip - the John Lodge solo album (Natural Avenue). It cost $10 from Real Groovy - so not the end of the world. The one I have already has a better cover and is a UK pressing (as opposed to American so I'll keep that one and store the other). 

The Rick Nelson is a tricky one to locate - he could go in the rock'n'roll section but most of the albums I have are in the country rock genre (the Stone Canyon Band) so I've slotted this one in there.

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