Showing posts with label Ginger Baker. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ginger Baker. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 27, 2018

The Graham Bond Organisation - Live At Klook's Kleek

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 41:14
Size: 94.4 MB
Styles: R&B, Blues
Year: 1986/1997
Art: Front

[2:45] 1. Wade In The Water
[5:00] 2. Big Boss Man
[4:16] 3. Early In The Morning
[5:15] 4. Person To Person Blues
[3:02] 5. Spanish Blues
[2:05] 6. Introduction (By Dick Jordan)
[5:12] 7. The First Time I Met The Blues
[4:17] 8. Stormy Monday
[3:54] 9. Train Time
[5:25] 10. What'd I Say

Bass Guitar, Harmonica, Vocals – Jack Bruce; Drums – Ginger Baker; Organ [Hammond], Saxophone [Alto Sax], Vocals – Graham Bond; Saxophone [Tenor Sax] – Dick Heckstall-Smith. Recorded live at Klook's Kleek Club in London, 15th October 1964.

This concert gig has appeared in various guises and through various labels (most notoriously Springboard International in the U.S. in the late '70s), and it has a dubious reputation on vinyl. In 1988, however, it appeared on CD under this title, and it finally seemed to justify the trouble it took to record. The Graham Bond Organization's studio recordings were admirable, sometimes impressive, but never essential parts of the British blues boom, leading one to wonder precisely what -- apart from the presence of two future members of Cream -- the group's reputation was based on. The answer is on these sides, recorded by Giorgio Gomelsky "under extreme difficulty." Listening to the band rumble and surge through standards like "Wade in the Water," "Big Boss Man," "Stormy Monday," and "Early In the Morning," it's easy to understand how they got signed and what the record companies were looking for, and also why they didn't get it -- this is gritty stuff, loud R&B with some jazz elements, Dick Heckstall-Smith blowing up a storm on sax, and more than a little stretching out (especially by Baker, whose solos here (check out "Early In the Morning") are more enjoyable than most of what he did with Cream), all of it pretty intense and none of it easy to capture in the studio. The audience and the urgency of concert work were both essential to the group's functioning. On the technical side, there's some distortion, even some overload, and Jack Bruce's bass isn't captured in its more resonant form (and what electric bass on any live recording before about 1968 ever was?), but the electricity is here, along with the immediacy, and this CD may be the way to best appreciate this band. ~Bruce Eder

Live At Klook's Kleek mc
Live At Klook's Kleek zippy

Sunday, January 1, 2017

BBM (Baker, Bruce & Moore) - Around The Next Dream (Expanded)

Size: 178,9 MB
Time: 77:36
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 1994
Styles: Blues Rock
Art: Full

01. Waiting In The Wings (3:46)
02. City Of Gold (3:57)
03. Where In The World (5:22)
04. Can't Fool The Blues (5:18)
05. High Cost Of Loving (5:43)
06. Glory Days (4:23)
07. Why Does Love (Have To Go Wrong) (8:27)
08. Naked Flame (6:12)
09. I Wonder Why (Are You So Mean To Me) (4:59)
10. Wrong Side Of Town (4:04)
11. Danger Zone (Bonus) (5:59)
12. The World Keeps On Turnin' (Bonus) (7:52)
13. Sitting On Top Of The World (Live) (Bonus) (6:21)
14. I Wonder Why (Are You So Mean To Me) (Live) (Bonus) (5:08)

Any time Ginger Baker and Jack Bruce work together, comparisons to Cream are inevitable. Given that this album's opener, "Waiting in the Wings," bears a passing resemblance to "White Room," and that this is then followed by a "Crossroads" knockoff, perhaps the comparisons are justifiable. Unfortunately, BBM doesn't benefit from such self-plagiarism. The weak link is, surprisingly, not with the Clapton stand-in, Gary Moore -- it's in the underwhelming drumming and bass playing by the two bona fide Creamsters. Bruce's voice is as pleasing as ever, but his and Baker's merely competent English blues instrumental work will fall short of the expectations of fans who know what they're capable of. ~Review by Paul Collins

Around The Next Dream