CAMEL: CAMEL (1973)
1) Slow Yourself Down; 2)
Mystic Queen; 3) Six Ate; 4) Separation; 5) Never Let Go; 6) Curiosity; 7)
Arubaluba.
There is, and would always be, a lot of Pink
Floyd influence in the music of Camel — but it is still instructive that their
first album was recorded in August '72, that is, well before the release of Dark Side Of The Moon, so at least you
couldn't accuse them of merely jumping on the nearest and most obvious
bandwagon. Besides, minor keys and gloomy moods are not all it takes to count
as a Pink Floyd rip-off.
Stemming from Surrey (every once in a while,
you may see Camel listed as representatives of the «Canterbury school» of rock,
which couldn't be farther from the truth — at least, not until Dave Sinclair
joined the band, but that would be much later), Camel was largely the
brainchild of guitarist Andy Latimer and keyboardist Peter Bardens, who are
responsible for most of the songwriting and singing (although bassist Doug
Ferguson takes a couple lead vocals, and drummer Andy Ward is co-credited for
writing the first song).
Although all four members were honing their
musical talents already circa 1969-70, they only gelled together in late 1971
and got a recording contract with MCA in 1972, so they have to count as
«second generation prog», a tough fate for all those who followed in the
footsteps of Floyd, Jethro Tull, King Crimson, Yes, and ELP. As much as Latimer
and Bardens loved all that music, they would never truly be capable of forging
their own unmistakable and unmimickable personality — while both of them are
excellent musicians, and Latimer has a very nice singing voice, their styles
are simply too derivative of earlier heroes.
That said, as long as the band hits the energy
pedal, all of Camel music is eminently likeable. Although the seven
compositions on this album present no real breakthroughs, they are amazingly
adequate — not too complex, not too simplistic, not too pretentious, not too
humble, a sort of middle-of-the-road combination that manages to please rather
than bore. They share the overall humanistic-but-pessimistic musical
philosophy/vibe of Floyd — most of the songs are mournful or melancholic — but
they have plenty of chops and musical ideas to make you believe that they are
not here just to rip off a vibe or two. Above everything else, they have style, which is the one thing, probably,
that makes them so attractive for me where bands like Kansas or Styx sound so
irritating most of the time.
If you are not new to progressive rock, but new
to Camel, I would suggest beginning with the last track here — the instrumental
ʻArubalubaʼ is the easiest one to swallow, featuring the record's most
instantly memorable doubled guitar-organ riff as the main theme, and rocking
all the way to the bank, faster, tighter, and sweatier than anything in the
Floyd catalog. The guitar and keyboard solos of Latimer and Bardens are not
exceptional, but they succeed in maintaining tension all the way without
resorting to excessive gimmicks, and last just enough to make you long for the
return of the main theme, which dutifully kicks back in with a vengeance.
Note, though, that this is rather an atypical composition for Camel (the album) and Camel the band in
general — typically, their instrumentals tend to be softer and subtler, like
ʻSix Ateʼ, which begins in waltz tempo, then slows down even further before
becoming a quieter version of King Crimson's ʻMirrorsʼ for a few bars and then
finally settling down into a steady mid-tempo guitar/keyboard jam. Again, no
great shakes, but a little bit of magical mystery atmosphere is still present.
One reason why Camel, provided they were spotted by prog-hating critics in
the first place, still largely avoided their venomous spit, is that they kept
the «lost in fantasy land» thing to a minimum — like everybody else, they
loved their Tolkien and shit, but were cool-headed enough not to try and make
their albums sound like bona fide Lord Of
The Rings soundtracks. Here, for instance, there's only one suspicious
track (ʻMystic Queenʼ), and they immediately shoot the fantasy interpretation
in the back by singing "have you seen the Mystic Queen / riding in her
limousine", although if you don't
pay sufficient attention to the lyrics, the song may still come across as a
hymn to the Lady of the Lake or any such character — no matter, really, because
it is made by carefully constructed Latimer and Bardens solos (the lyrics are
minimal), slow, dreamy, a little bit psychedelic, and humbly restrained.
The best known songs from the album are
arguably the opening number ʻSlow Yourself Downʼ and the single ʻNever Let Goʼ.
The former is a grim blues-rocker that establishes Camel's vibe from the start
— quiet, compact, concise music made by
loners for loners, sung by Latimer in
his lowest range and including a fast mid-section that, too, seems strangely
intro- rather than extravert: if there is at all such a thing as «Anti-Arena
Rock», this song, and Camel in general, is it.
As for ʻNever Let Goʼ, which went on to become a permanent stage favorite, this
is probably the album's most pretentious moment ("crazy preachers of our
doom / telling us there is no room" — hmm, isn't that a kind of line that
Ozzy would be supposed to sing?), but, again, leave it to Camel to deliver a
pretentious message to humanity as if they were all standing with their noses
in a corner. Do not, however, forget to turn the volume up really loud for the last minute — Latimer plays a killer solo, but
with such a thin tone and buried so deeply in the mix that you really have to
make yourself notice it. Didn't Mark Knopfler take a few hints from that guy?
On the whole, although Camel never achieved
proper critical/commercial success until their third album, this debut is by no
means «tentative» or «formative» — if you do not like it (and it is theoretically
quite easy to perceive it as too cold, too sterile, or too limp), you will
probably not get easily warmed up to the band in general... granted, «warmed
up» is probably not the right word, seeing as how their music is always so
cold. It is definitely lacking in flashiness, but it is moody and tasteful, even if it hardly sounds like anything a
truly intelligent camel would have written. Well, maybe only a very Sufi camel.
Thumbs up.
Hooray, you are reviewing Camel now! They were always derivative of bands like Pink Floyd, but also always a pleasant listen thanks to their strong melodies and solid songwriting. They also remain one of the 70's progressive rock acts to write albums through the 80's and 90's with relatively good taste, and not completely succumbing to generic 80's power-pop or 90's alternative like their fellow prog bands did.
ReplyDeleteLooking forward to the next two album reviews.
I like Camel a lot, I always think of it as prog rock mixed with video game sound tracks.
ReplyDeleteSlow yourself down is probably my favorite Camel song, too. The sort of not too loud and demanding music I can listen to in the background forever if I wanted to.
"a sort of middle-of-the-road combination "
ReplyDeleteWhich I think very boring. Yes, I started with Arubaluba.
A really nice set of mid to late 70's albums by a really nice and really English bunch of guys. The upcoming Mirage is probably where they peaked, but Snow Goose, Moonmadness, and Breathless are worth a listen. Sure, it's all genre-specific and distinctly 2nd shelf, but they were genuine products of their era and thus have the edge of authenticity over the latest batch of Mellotron sampling Johnny-come-lately tribute acts.
ReplyDelete" Although the seven compositions on this album present no real breakthroughs, they are amazingly adequate — not too complex, not too simplistic, not too pretentious, not too humble, a sort of middle-of-the-road combination that manages to please rather than bore." That's exactly what I was thinking while listening this morning. It seems you are in my head once again, a dark, rather muddled place that I pity you for visiting. The thing I really like is they're the rare prog band that actually can play fast, sweaty and keep you engaged on multiple levels; they kind of sound like a humorless version of Focus. And they don't overstay their welcome either, at least on this one, and no noodling about like Gentle Giant or Soft Machine. Very economical stuff.
ReplyDelete"Above everything else, they have style, which is the one thing, probably, that makes them so attractive for me where bands like Kansas or Styx sound so irritating most of the time."
Geez, didn't see THAT one coming (Eyeroll). The thing is, you have to get into the Kansas universe (Wide-open fields of funkified Copland-esque Americana) or the Styx world (Dinner theatre love songs dressed in spacesuits and tritones) in order to get their style. And you must lose any prog conceits in spite of their attempts to mimic their muses in seriousness and classicality. Of course, none of that applies to Camel, who just play that fast Englishman's boogie with a jazzy tempo.
Please do not mention Copland within a hundred words of that band.
DeleteGreat review. God knows, I tried to like Camel, but I failed. Their music always seemed unremarkable to me, and, yes, I absolutely agree with your 'very cold' assessement. Still Snow Goose is my favourite. I even read the short story it's based on)). But, again, their 70's catalogue is boring. And I am not familiar with their later output.
ReplyDeleteInteresting comparison with Pink Floyd. Somewhat I guess, at least in mood and that blues foundation, but I'd say these fellas are a good deal more instrumentally versatile than the Floydsters, save maybe Gilmore. Camel in general are also a wee more classical and jazzy in a pedigree sort of way with their compositions. There's less of a focus on spaciness, sound effects, studio embellishments and lyricism, and more on instrumental attention-grabbing. JT, KC, and Focus seem more appropriate analogues in general, but I think I get where you're coming from. It is true that Camel don't bring much to the table musically that wasn't tried earlier one way or another, but I'd definitely say they have a personality, however humble. Style yes, but also personality--a voice. The guys are there to supply their hearts through music, and not just copy and blend the work of their progenitors. Perhaps the late 1970s Caramel period was where the band did manage a degree of acute distinctness in sound--Richard Sinclair will do that for you. I like the video game music remark someone here made--quite true at times.
ReplyDelete