BLUES MAGOOS: NEVER GOIN' BACK TO GEORGIA (1969)
1) Heartbreak Hotel; 2) Heart
Attack; 3) The Hunter; 4) Feelin' Time; 5) Gettin' Off; 6) Never Goin' Back To
Georgia; 7) Brokedown Piece Of Man; 8) Nobody Knows You When You're Down And
Out; 9) Georgia Breakdown.
Oh yeah, as if these Bronx fellas had ever been to Georgia. This and the following
album usually get a very bad rap
compared to the earlier stuff — for the simple, objective, and respectable reason
that this is a «phony» version of the Blues Magoos. The real Blues Magoos, fed up with lack of success, split in late '68:
the only original member of the band to have renewed the contract with ABC
Records is Peppy Castro, a.k.a. Emil Thielhelm, and the rest are all new —
including keyboardist and songwriter Eric Kaz, who would later earn a living by
getting his songs covered by the likes of Linda Ronstadt and Bonnie Raitt. The
others are even darker horses.
The «revamped» Blues Magoos, sniffin' the
whiffin' of the times, were no longer a psychedelic or a garage rock band —
they were «rootsy» artists now, dabbling in blues-rock, jazz-rock, and folk-rock
with such a serious face on that the album is stuffed with five-, six-, and
seven-minute-long explorations of this suddenly discovered «earthy» component
of their spirits. The shift — if it is at all possible to speak in terms of «shifts»,
considering that what we have here is an entirely different band — anyway,
«the shift» is quite expectable, given the times, but the ability of Peppy
Castro to make his new band rival The Byrds or The Band?..
Still, this is an interesting album. It does
feature an unusual gimmick — in the keyboards department, huge emphasis is
placed on chimes (xylophones?) as a lead instrument, which gives the record a nifty
«cool jazz» flavor; and many of its pieces are either purely instrumental or
feature lengthy instrumental sections, which is quite alright considering that the
band still lacks a good singer — Thielhelm's voice is weak and stiff, completely
beyond competition in an era of Van Morrisons, Joe Cockers, and Rod Stewarts (and
these are only the white guys). On ʽGettin' Offʼ, they go as far as trying to
play some dissonant jazz piano solo passages à la Thelonious, and you know what? I couldn't really state with
certainty that they're «bad» solo passages.
The album really falls flat on its face on the
«tough» numbers — ʽThe Hunterʼ, due to the weak singing and the unimaginative,
harmonica-based arrangement, is virtually nothing compared to, for instance,
the Free version from that very same year. ʽHeartbreak Hotelʼ is a brave
choice, but a suicidal one: the chosen arrangement, with its waltz tempos and
xylophone solos, could be quirky and fun if the base song were different, but
as it is, they drain the tune from all of its original darkness, and end up
looking like clowns. Many a critic must have shot the needle off his stereo
system in disgust before that first track was over.
Which is too bad, since the instrumental tunes
on Side B are fairly moody — particularly the title track, with its quasi-Santana
Latin beat; ʽGeorgia Breakdownʼ, added later on as a counterpoint, is slower
and breezier, with lots of woodwinds spilled over the rhythm section, and it
brings the record to a smooth, quiet end. Again, both are certainly more
worthwhile than a flat, pedestrian rendition of ʽNobody Knows Youʼ — at this
time, the new-look Blues Magoos are actually better as a «voiceless» lite jazz combo
than as a rock band, and this is the biggest surprise of the album, one that
prevents me from rating it with a thumbs down. Who knows, maybe this kind of
sound might even have had a bigger future, had these guys themselves managed to
properly understand what it was they were really on to here.
Jehovah only knows what caused "Peppy" to go all cool jazz on us, instead of taking the more expected heavy route, but it sure cost him his career. Same thing happened to Blue Cheer. Stay off the acid when you're visiting the farm, boys!
ReplyDelete