Tuesday, January 21, 2025

Right before my eyes (Ian Matthews) (LP 3110 - 3112)

Matthews' Southern Comfort  Matthews' Southern Comfort (Vinyl, Decca Records, 1970) ***  

Ian Matthews  Tigers Will Survive (Vinyl, Vertigo Records, 1972) **** 

Ian Matthews  Some Days You Eat The Bear...Some Days The Bear Eats You (Vinyl, Elektra Records, 1974) **** 

Genre: Country rock, folk rock

Places I remember: Real Groovy Records

Fab, and all the other pimply hyperboles: The Only Dancer (Tigers Will Survive)

Gear costume: Please Be My Friend (Matthews' Southern Comfort). A second version appears on Tigers Will Survive.

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

Active compensatory factors
: I have been after a vinyl copy of the first album by Ian Matthews/ Matthews' Southern Comfort for a loooong time. It joins their second and third album in my collection. 

Both of those are four star efforts. I'm a big fan of Ian's peculiar English take on country rock.

Matthew's Southern Comfort was his first solo album and it's more folk rock than country, even though Gordon Huntley's pedal steel makes a welcome appearance on a few tracks (he and Matthews were the only carry over when Matthews' Southern Comfort became a band for the next albums). 

That's to be expected, given Ian had just left Fairport Convention. Some of his colleagues from that band appear here, namely Ashley Hutchings, Simon Nicol and Richard Thompson.

The first thing you notice with this album is the rich vocal from Ian Matthews. He has an amazing voice! Please Be My Friend, a Matthews' song, provides a clue about where he was heading next. That pedal steel sound is glorious.

Tigers Will Survive was one of two albums he recorded in 1971 (I don't have the first - If You Saw Thro' My Eyes) and before he formed Plainsong with Andy Roberts (I'll come to their album In Search of Amelia Earhart in due course). He was a busy boy! 

Tigers Will Survive is an excellent album - full of superb country rock songs played well. As is Some Days You Eat The Bear. Those warm acoustic guitars and his honeyed voice are a winning combination.

Some Days is more commercial sounding with some big names helping out - Jeff 'Skunk' Baxter and David Lindley among them. There are quite a few covers too - Tom Waits, Crazy Horse, Steely Dan. Like that first solo album it's a bit of a transition album from the country rock to a more pop/ rock approach.

Where do they all belong? Okay, I'm up to date with Ian Matthews. I've written about a couple of his other albums, Valley Hi and Stealin' Home already - I'm always keen to collect more of those earlier albums.

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