Like the authorities catching up to the protagonist in a
biker exploitation film, time had caught up to Sky Saxon in 1970. Between
Altamont, harder drugs and the frowning faces of war protestation, there was no
room for the Seeds’ idealism and –
if analogies are in order – the times had indeed spoiled Sky’s fun. Rock was
now serious, like really serious, man
– discovering all kinds of wimpy folk, phony roots, long solos and (thanks to
Woodstock) corporate influences. Sky was Davy Crockett at the Alamo – or
rather, a rocker past him prime getting laid a lot at his Malibu home. But it
didn’t mean he didn’t have one last charge in him.
Calling on old keyboard sidekick Darryl Hooper, plus three
new members, the re-sprouted Seeds departed GNP Crescendo for MGM and recorded
two killer singles that sadly never made it past the promo stage, falling into
permanent rarity status and never getting a legit reissue – until now, thanks
to Sundazed and Record Store Day.
In spite of its title, “Love In a Summer Basket” isn’t so
much a floral excursion as it is a tidal wave of loud fuzz guitar squalls
crashing the shores of idealism as keyboards and flute weave in and out.
Perfection. And if that trip isn’t bad enough, then the war-torn flip of “Did
He Die” – rumbling bass, screeching guitar distortion and all -- blurs visions
even more, as Sky lets the Vietnam anxiety out by screaming “He shot him in the
head! He killed his bro-ther-ah-ah-ah-ah” without fear of pushing too hard.
But when MGM President Mike Curb purged his label of acts
with drug influences (like the Seeds) just two days before its release, he
denied the world what would undoubtedly have been the finest Seeds album yet.
(The Seeds would go on to make one more great indie single the next year,
“Shuckin’ and Jiving” b/w “You Took Me By Surprise,” two barnstorming rockers
that up the heavy ante even more.)
This Sundazed gatefold double-single set not only replicates
the sound of the originals thanks to use of master tapes, but also offers a
great essay by Seeds scholar Jeff Jarema that finally reveals the names of the
other musicians (outside of Saxon and Hooper) on the MGM sessions, plus some
really cool vintage photos. File under “must have.”
Speaking of screaming punks, Sundazed has unleashed another
punk killer among its RSD releases, the lasciviously lustful “Lorna” by Adrian Lloyd. Busting and burning the
surfboards he brandished in the Rumblers and the Sunsets, Lloyd unloads a
torrent of tribal drums, snotty vocals and screams (“approximately 25,” sez
Jarema in the liners) for a rightly regarded classic getting its first reissue
on a seven-inch. Possibly (and if so, justifiably) winded, Lloyd is a little
more restrained on the B-side, “Got a Little Woman,” a groovy rocker with “woah
yeah” call-and-answer vocals that’s pretty cool in its own right.
No discussion of screaming rock ’n’ roll would be complete
without the Trashmen, who rode it
into the Top 10 with the infamous Rivingstoned rant “Surfin’ Bird” in 1963. By
1966, the hits had dried up, the British had come, and a trip was about to be
taken, but the Bird men defiantly stuck to rock ’n’ roll -- as evidenced by the
live versions of “Mean Woman Blues” and “Big Boss Man” on this RSD single on
Sundazed, which has done more than perhaps anyone else in spreading the
Trashmen gospel.
SONY LEGACY
Sundazed head Bob Irwin’s other employer, Legacy, also did
some great releases for Record Store Day – the best unquestionably being the
180-gram vinyl reissues of the mono mixes of three vintage Miles Davis albums: ’Round About Midnight, Milestones and Someday My Prince Will Come. Housed in sharp reproductions of the
original covers, the sound emanating from the grooves is nothing short of
stunning – presenting the material with a clarity that almost feels like being
in the studio with Miles, John Coltrane, Philly Joe Jones and (on Milestones) Cannonball Adderly.
Much has already been written about Miles’ first and third
Columbia offerings, ’Round About Midnight
and Milestones, respectively, what
with the all-star lineup and groundbreaking evolution of hard bop into modal
jazz – not to mention classics like the rearranged version of Monk’s “ ’Round
Midnight” on the former and the swinging title track of the latter. So that
leaves the mono vs. stereo question and, to these ears, much as I enjoyed the
stereo CD remasters, the more intimate sound of the mono mix is preferable.
Released on the heels of two landmarks, Kind of Blue and Sketches of
Spain, Someday My Prince Will Come
was bound to suffer in comparison. But it’s a fine album in its own right,
thanks to all of the Kind of Blue
lineup save Adderly and Bill Evans -- although here the mono mix is more of an
alternative for collectors.
Legacy has also given us 10 inches of previously unreleased Sly and the Family Stone at their peak,
including “Music Lover/I Want to Take You Higher/Music Lover” from the Isle of
Wight Festival in 1970, the rare promo-only single version of “Higher,” and a
TV medley of “Sing a Simple Song/Hot Fun in the Summertime/Sex Machine/I Want
to Take You Higher” from 1969. Nice to have, but the best news is the insert in
this I Want to Take You Higher EP
noting the upcoming release of a four-CD Sly box set with rarities and 18
previously unreleased tracks.
BELATED BLACK FRIDAY
Also worthy of investigation is Secret Stash’s single by the Prophets of Peace, “P.O.P” b/w
“46th Street Bump Time.” From the same 1974 session that produced one side of their
lone single (included on Twin Cities Funk
& Soul, reviewed in the upcoming issue) comes this previously
unreleased pairing of two fine Tower of Power-styled horn soul groovers: a
vocal number on the top side and an instrumental on the flip. Limited to 500
copies.
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