Hammond Gamble Hammond Gamble (Vinyl, WEA Records, 1981) ***
Hammond Gamble Every Whisper Shouts (Vinyl, CSM Records, 1983) **
Hammond Gamble Recollection (CD, Liberation Music, 2006) ***
Genre: NZ music, blues, rock
Places I remember: Peter Gillbanks collection; Secondhand shop
Fab, and all the other pimply hyperboles: Gamblers Blues (Hammond Gamble)
Gear costume: Leaving the Country (Recollection)
Active compensatory factors: It's kind of appropriate that Hammond Gamble follows Rory Gallagher, because he's as close as NZ music ever got to a Rory of their own.
Fab, and all the other pimply hyperboles: Gamblers Blues (Hammond Gamble)
Gear costume: Leaving the Country (Recollection)
Active compensatory factors: It's kind of appropriate that Hammond Gamble follows Rory Gallagher, because he's as close as NZ music ever got to a Rory of their own.
Hammond can play some great bluesy guitar and he sings well, plus he writes his own songs. His version of Crossroads live with Streettalk is awesome (I taped it off the radio back in the day).
Unfortunately, he doesn't appear inclined to play incendiary guitar riffs as a solo artist. Also unfortunately, these solo albums came in the eighties - not the best time for Hammond as he tries to write commercial songs of the time.
First solo album has the minor hit Should I Be Good Or Should I be Evil and some good musicians - various Streettalkers, Suzanne and her husband Bruce Lynch (he produces as well as plays bass), and Midge Marsden all appear.
It takes until the third song on side two before he unleashes his guitar on Gambler's Blues. More of that would have been good.
Every Whisper Shouts from 1983 is more of the same (style, musicians) but he's even less inclined to play guitar on this one. Instead, strings, synths, and slow-paced ballads are the order of the day.
Recollection is aiming to do what Clapton's Unplugged did but on a smaller scale (obviously) - an acoustic redo of the back catalogue. Hammond succeeds. There are some tasteful recollections of past glories on offer. But it's all a bit...polite.
Where do they all belong? I'd recommend a return to Streettalk, rather than the solo albums, but Recollection is a good place to start for an overview.
Where do they all belong? I'd recommend a return to Streettalk, rather than the solo albums, but Recollection is a good place to start for an overview.
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