CAPTAIN BEYOND: SUFFICIENTLY BREATHLESS (1973)
1) Sufficiently Breathless; 2)
Bright Blue Tango; 3) Drifting In Space; 4) Evil Men; 5) Starglow Energy; 6)
Distant Sun; 7) Voyages Of Past Travellers; 8) Everything's A Circle.
Although the band's second album was recorded
less than a year after the debut, it already reflected some serious changes in
the lineup: keyboard player Reese Wynans was brought in, along with Guille
Garcia on various (mostly Latin/African) percussion, and original drummer Bobby
Caldwell was replaced by the much less known Marty Rodriguez. Additionally, Lee
Dorman emerged as the only active songwriter
, pretty much responsible for the entire structure and sound of the record. The
result is fairly obvious: they drift farther away into the direction of
symphonic-progressive rock, «cosmic conscience» and stuff, leaving much of the
hard rock baggage behind, so there's just no way one could call Sufficiently Breathless a balanced mix
of hard-rock and art-rock, and this is probably why the album usually tends to
get a bad rap compared to its predecessor (even if there's still plenty of
heaviness drifting about).
As somebody who likes the heavy-prog sound of Captain
Beyond without being floored by it, I must say that from such a standpoint,
the two records, although sounding quite different, are just about equal in
overall quality. This here is pleasantly melodic, modestly catchy, adequately
vocalized, intelligently composed rock music, already a little outdated even
for 1973 (but perhaps more easily appreciated in retrospect, as our perspective
of time becomes more and more flattened and distorted), but totally
inoffensive and occasionally charming in its hippie idealism. Its only real problem
is contextual — everything that you hear here, you can hear done a little (or a
lot) better by other acts (some of them already defunct by the year 1973).
Thus, the title track is an acoustic anthem in
the vein of Crosby, Stills & Nash (except for the distorted psychedelic
guitar solo that combines real nice with the acoustic rhythm track), a clever enough
opener to pour some sunshine into your living room, but neither the
instrumental exuberance nor the chirpy vocal harmonies are on the required
level to push the whole thing off the ground. ʽDrifting In Spaceʼ is a
potentially great Latin rocker with a cool «exploding fireworks» lead guitar
riff introducing each sung verse, but none of the verses is even resolved
properly — they build up the tension all right, but they never explode it! And
what's up with the quiet jazzy electric piano solo? It's nice, but in a song
like this, it could only serve as a taster for a kick-ass guitar extravaganza,
which never comes — it's like this whole song was thought of as a
counter-example for aspiring songwriters: «here's what happens if you have some
cool ideas but fail to bring them up to logical conclusions».
Pretty much every song offers something, but
the something is never enough. Kick-ass guitar extravangzas finally arrive on
ʽEvil Menʼ, a slow funk-rocker with Rhino milking the wah-wah for all it's
worth, but the song's potentially fabulous heavy riff is inexplicably kept in
the faraway background most of the time (maybe they thought that if they put it
up front, they'd be sued by Deep Purple for ripping off ʽSpace Truckin'ʼ which
it somehow resembles, but come on). ʽStarglow Energyʼ has a great moody start,
with probably Rod Evans' finest vocal performance on the album, but despite all
the soulfulness that they try to muster, the song still never finds a proper
climactic peak — the guitar solos are too quiet, the mix is too muddy and
preoccupied with psychedelic sound effects, the fadeout arrives unexpectedly
and again leaves the impression of something unaccomplished and unsatisfactory.
And yet, I am still surprised at how every song here sounds organic, warm,
and tasteful — few things are easier than being embarrassed and angered at the
unimaginative, derivative, inadequate pretense of a second-/third-generation
art-prog outfit, but maybe it is precisely because Captain Beyond take so few
risks that they consistently deliver this very decent vibe, almost free of corniness
even when they tackle formulaic lyrical subjects (maybe it's just that Rod
Evans, whose voice is not strong enough for operatic behavior, sounds like an
honestly concerned human rather than a cocky showman even when he asks you
"what is wrong with this world of mine, falling in a spiral?"). This
way, although I'm pretty sure that in a week from now, I will not be able to remember
a single note from this album, the overall impression will still remain as a
vague cloud of positive vibrations, and so, here is a thumbs up rating while that cloud is
still holding together, nice, juicy, and thick.
I'm struck by how much they sound like pre-Perry Journey on this and especially their last album. And the title track is still in my head after four days, so that counts for something.
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