
The only album by
the Steve Baron Quartet was a fitfully interesting but uneven effort, jumping between Baroque folk-rock, moody early singer/songwriter rock, and jazz-tinged psychedelia, sometimes shifting between genres within the same track, sometimes embellished with light orchestration. At times, it's similar in some ways to other slightly precious folk-rock recordings of the mid- to late '60s by the likes of
Donovan,
Tim Buckley,
Tim Hardin,
the Blues Project at their most folk-rock-oriented, and
Jake Holmes, though it's far less distinguished than
Donovan,
Buckley, or
Hardin. At its furthest out, it employs sustained and extended blues-jazz-raga-rock guitar soloing slightly reminiscent of
the Paul Butterfield Blues Band on "East-West," particularly on "Don't You Hate the Feeling" and (to a lesser extent) "Shadow Man." Yet other cuts could almost be the work of a different artist (or at least a different record), with "Goodbye Road" being the kind of piano-anchored
Beatles-cum-
Bacharach midtempo ballad that would do
Harry Nilsson proud, "In the Middle" a breezy happy-go-lucky number with bubblegummy organ, and "Mr. Green" a dated critique of the life of the straight man. It's too eclectic and individual in approach to dismiss out of hand, but the songs aren't outstanding enough to make it a top-rank psychedelic obscurity. AM
listen here
2 comentários:
It looks great I try it
THX from Paris
MFP
Salut MFP
oui oui ça vaut le coup. abraço!
Enviar um comentário