Saturday, December 13, 2025

Sunshine through a prism (Suzanne) (LP 4021 - 4025)

Suzanne  Walk a Little Closer (Vinyl, Philips Records, 1971) ***  

Suzanne  Oh Suzanne (Vinyl, Philips Records, 1971) ***

Suzanne  Stand By Your Man (Vinyl, Philips Records, 1973) ****

Suzanne  Just Suzanne (Vinyl, Karussell Records, 1973) ****

Suzanne  Everything I Want To Do (Vinyl, Karussell Records, 1974) ****

GenreNZ Music, pop 

Places I remember: Spellbound Wax Company, Vinyl Countdown, Little Red Bookshop.

Fab, and all the other pimply hyperboles: Let It Be (Oh Suzanne)

Gear costume: It's Too Late  (Walk a Little Closer)

They loom large in his legend 
(The Album Collection playlists): Part 1Part 2Part 3Part 4Part 5Part 6

Active compensatory factors: Cat Stevens fans or Ladykillers fans who know the name Suzanne Lynch, may be unaware of her considerable career in the sixties (in The Chicks) or seventies (as Suzanne). She has been around since the dawn of time and always part of my musical history. The Chicks on C'Mon and Suzanne on The Loxene Golden Disc record with Sunshine Through a Prism are seminal moments.

Alphabetically, Suzanne comes before The Chicks in my countdown, so we start in 1971 with Suzanne's solo career away from her sister Judy.

She was busy in 1971 - three albums in total* - Walk a Little Closer is her second and Oh Suzanne her third. She is hit and miss over these two albums, thanks to a lack of control over the choice of material. The hits on Walk a Little Closer: It's Too Late (she suits Carole King, and Joni songs); and maybe surprisingly - I Don't Know How To Love Him. I'm not crazy over things like Husband Hunting though.

Maybe I'm doing them a disservice, but the backing musicians don't appear to be heavily invested throughout Walk a Little Closer. The brass and strings date this record and fix it in place as well (NZ was not a hot recording destination).

Things improve a lot on Oh Suzanne. Her vocals are recorded better, and the backings are more sympathetic. Let It Be is given a folky approach with some lovely strummed guitar, bass and judicious drums. Suzanne sings it well, doing justice to McCartney's best ever song (IMHO).

There are an inordinate number of budget compilations out there for a relatively few years and studio albums. I have three, and need to find two more.

Stand By Your Man and Just Suzanne are both from 1973, Everything I want To Do came a year later. All three come with el cheapo covers - which is fine - budget is budget. Karussell don't pretend to be anything other than completely mercenary in their approach to marketing.

Where do they all belong? Still looking for her other albums: *Suzanne (1971); Friends with You (1973); further compilations I Don't Know How to Love Him (1972), Sunshine Thru a Prism - The Best of Suzanne (1972), and her last studio album - Colour of Summer (2006). She is well deserving of a comprehensive career retrospective CD. Karussell? Are you listening?

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