CARAVAN: THE SHOW OF OUR LIVES: LIVE AT THE BBC (1968-1975;
2007)
1) Place Of My Own; 2) Ride;
3) If I Could Do It All Over Again I'd Do It All Over You; 4) Hello Hello; 5)
As I Feel I Die; 6) Love To Love You; 7) Love Song Without Flute; 8) In The
Land Of Grey And Pink; 9) Nine Feet Underground; 10) Feelin', Reelin',
Squealin'; 11) A-Hunting We Shall Go; 12) Waffle (Be Alright / Chance Of A
Lifetime); 13) Memory Lain Hugh; 14) Headloss; 15) The Love In Your Eye; 16)
Mirror For The Day; 17) Virgin On The Ridiculous; 18) For Richard; 19) The
Dabsong Conshirtoe; 20) Stuck In A Hole; 21) The Show Of Our Lives.
It makes perfect sense to round out the Caravan
retrospective with this huge 2-CD package that spans their entire «prog years»
career. Prior to this, there have been several rather chaotic releases of BBC
material recorded by the band at various occasions; the only one I'd previously
heard was BBC Radio 1 In Concert,
recorded March 21, 1975 at the Paris Theatre, and it has been almost completely
integrated here (strangely, though, without a complete overlap — the original
release had ʽHoedownʼ, which is not included here, while the new package adds
ʽMirror For The Dayʼ and ʽVirgin On The Ridiculousʼ that were omitted from the
1991 album, so go figure).
Anyway, this here is a solid and well-balanced
mix of performances from various John Peel and BBC In Concert sessions that,
among other things, allows you to get a peek at live interpretations of some of
the early material that never survived the transition into the «golden age» —
songs from the self-titled debut (including ʽLove Song With Fluteʼ, which is
transformed here into ʽLove Song Without Fluteʼ because they could not get
brother Jimmy to appear with them, so Dave has to fill his shoes with an organ
equivalent of the flute part) and «filler tracks» from the second album, like
ʽAs I Feel I Dieʼ. Once we get to the Grey
And Pink period, performances start to become more familiar and
predictable, but there is still at least one super-curious rarity: ʽFeelin',
Reelin', Squealin'ʼ, a 10-minute epic that starts out in inconspicuously
default soft-rock mode, but then quickly becomes an improvised psychedelic extravaganza
— a free-form freakout that alternately reminds one of The Grateful Dead, Pink
Floyd, and The Soft Machine. I would not call it particularly mind-blowing or
anything, but it's a bold side of Caravan that had blipped for a few seconds
around 1970, then was wiped out completely with the emergence of the Grey And Pink style, and it is
interesting to learn that they could occasionally allow themselves to go crazy
like this as late as May 1971, by which time ʽGolf Girlʼ had already become
their trademark song (ironically, there is no ʽGolf Girlʼ on this package).
The second disc, covering 1973-75, is clearly
less exciting for those who have already heard all the regular live albums — I
mean, there's only so many live versions of ʽThe Love In Your Eyeʼ and ʽFor
Richardʼ that I'd care to have in my collection — but it does include a rare
occasion of the complete live performance of ʽThe Dabsong Conshirtoeʼ and other
songs from Cunning Stunts that might
help rekindle your interest in that transitional album. They could have gone
further: if you are genuinely curious about continuing this experience, the
earlier package Ether Way: BBC Sessions
1975-77, overlapping with this one in regard to the Cunning Stunts tracks, also adds some live renditions of material
from Blind Dog At St. Dunstan's
(could be entertaining) and Better By
Far (probably couldn't) — but on the whole, I understand the decision of
the compilers to stop at 1975 and have ʽThe Show Of Our Livesʼ round out the
album in gloriously anthemic mode.
Feelin Reelin Squealin was an early Soft Machine single or B Side as it happens, originally featuring Daevid Allen in fact! It can be found tacked on to CD versions of their debut.
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