The Hollies Russian Roulette (Vinyl, Polydor Records, 1976) *** The Moody Blues December (CD, Universal Records, 2003) ***
Herb Alpert's Tijuana Brass Whipped Cream & Other Delights (Vinyl, Festival Records, 1965) ***
John Sebastian Cheapo-Cheapo Productions Presents Real Live John Sebastian (Vinyl, Warner Bros. Records, 1971) ***
Argent Argent (Vinyl, Epic Records, 1970) ****
Argent In Deep (Vinyl, Epic Records, 1973) ***
Argent Nexus (Vinyl, Epic Records, 1974) ****
Brian Auger The Best of Brian Auger (Vinyl, RCA Records, 1977) *****
Jackie DeShannon Lonely Girl (Vinyl, Sunset Records, 1974) ***
Genres: Pop, Prog rock, Easy listening, Folk-rock
They loom large in his legend (The Album Collection playlists): Part 1; Part 2; Part 3; Part 4; Part 5; Part 6; Part 7
Active compensatory factors: Recently, I had a trip to Auckland for a couple of days which included my usual pilgrimage to Real Groovy Records in the CBD. All of the vinyl in the list above comes from their sale bins, which always reveals some treasures.
Doing this blog a while ago, I was surprised I didn't have a copy of The Hollies 1976 album, Russian Roulette, so I found a copy for $10. It's a pretty spirited affair with some electric guitar-based rock - the title track and Louise are good songs but they are no competition for the final song on side 2 - Daddy Don't Mind. It's superb and if the rest of the album was as good as that one it would have been a five-star effort.
The Moodies Christmas album, December, only has three members appearing on it - Graeme Edge, Justin Hayward and John Lodge. It's also their final studio album. I've been after it for a few years so I was delighted to find a CD copy of it.
It's very typically The Moody Blues - some lovely orchestral backing, Lodge and Hayward's distinctive vocals, and a theme - Christmas! Most of the songs are by Hayward and/or Lodge but there are some telling covers - John and Yoko's Happy Xmas (War is Over) delivers a nice message, while White Christmas and A Winter's Tale are also fab.
As the AllMusic critic wrote: There is no new age drivel here; its topics and themes are indeed Christian, but weigh on the side of those that are universally held: brotherhood, compassion, hope, goodwill, and generosity. In addition, it's beautifully orchestrated and produced. Its sound is pristine, and Hayward and Lodge with their trademark elegance sound as if they mean every word they write and sing.
As I've indicated previously here, my parents were big fans of Herb Alpert's Tijuana Brass, but for some strange reason they didn't buy his most popular one, his fourth album - Whipped Cream & Other Delights, so I've bought a copy for them.
I doubt it was because the cover image was a bit racey. Although pretty conservative, my parents weren't prudes. So, they bought three Herb Alpert albums but decided against Whipped Cream.
The live John Sebastian album came quickly after an unauthorised live album was issued and quickly withdrawn in 1970. That one is pretty impossible to find as it's never been re-released and so it's ultra-rare. The Cheapo-Cheapo alternative lives up to its name - just John and a guitarist friend to flesh out the sound, plus a quick succession of songs.
He plays with spirit and a certain level of commitment and while he hasn't got the warmth and humour of Arlo Guthrie or the political focus of Country Joe, it's still an interesting live document. A curio, if you will.
Argent was Rod Argent's creation after exiting The Zombies (they are coming in the countdown). I've already written about their live album and their third album - All Together Now. The new band spent six months workshopping ideas and jelling as an entity - the result was Argent.
The band lineup for their 1970 debut album, Argent, was Russ Ballard – guitar, lead vocals, Rod Argent – organ, piano, vocals, Jim Rodford – bass (later on he played bass in The Kinks), Robert Henrit – drums (also a Kink later on).
It's a strong album with a rockier approach to things than The Zombies more orchestrated pop ways. Rod contributes some excellent organ to the album and Russ Ballard shows his commercial abilities to good effect. For example, Lies is a standout pop song.
In Deep is the band's fourth studio album. It includes their big hit God Gave Rock and Roll to You, another Russ Ballad effort. The rest of the album is a succession of heavier prog songs like It's Only Money.
The vocals are also more layered on this album. The album liner notes by Rod indicate that it was a focus to improve the vocal sounds and this was job done, I believe.
Nexus is my third Argent album coming from this visit to Real Groovy. All three were fairly dusty with fingerprint marks but a good clean with some warm water has improved all of them dramatically.
Nexus sounds HUGE. Try Infinite Wanderer and marvel at Rod's keyboards! They are brilliantly to the fore, and the band is wailing behind his lead. It helps if you turn this album up really loud too. Just sayin'.
The Brian Auger compilation is absolutely superb. Every track is a wonderful example of his genius, whether than be on piano (Listen Here) or organ (Inner City Blues). The man is a true master!
Jackie DeShannon (a.k.a. De Shannon) is someone I admire a lot and I continue to buy her albums whenever they cross my path. Lonely Girl is a compilation from 1968. Weirdly it avoids two of her big hits - When You Walk in the Room and What the World Needs Now Is Love.
However, it does include her version of Needles and Pins, and her own terrific songs like Lonely Girl and I Remember the Boy. It also has some of the bombastic pop of the sixties which hasn't aged that well.
Where do they all belong? I'm keen to eventually find the three albums that I'm missing from the Argent catalogue - their second album - Ring of Hands and their two post Russ Ballard albums from 1975 - Circus and Counterpoints.