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Showing posts with label The Herd. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Herd. Show all posts

Sunday, June 17, 2018

The Herd - "The Fontana Years" 2 x Vinyl, LP, Compilation, 2009 (Vinyl Lovers)


For this past month, I have been obsessing over the British 60s band The Herd.  Due to my shopping mood at the time I purchased an original U.S. compilation album of ten Herd songs.  Mostly due to the fact that The Herd seemed to be under the spell of the songwriting talents Howard Blaikley (Alan Blaikley & Ken Howard).   Dave Dee, Dozy Beaky, Mick & Tich used their services as well as The Honeycombs.  All brilliant.  So how can the Herd fail?  What surprises me is how much I love The Herd's music.  Listening to this double-album of 32-songs, it strikes me that The Herd was very much part of the 1967/1968 British world at the time.  "The Fontana Years" is like a See's Candy sample box of chocolate, but set in a specific era and place.  

The Herd sound is not original, but the way they mix it up is fascinating.  They would sound like The Small Faces if they had The Walker Brothers as vocalists, and with a touch of Procol Harum's love of classical melodies.  Gary Taylor only sings lead on a few songs by the band, but he has a rich baritone voice that yells out Scott Walker.  And when he sings the chorus or a bridge of a song, it brings out a 'wow' moment for the listener.   The Herd is very much a band that used and performed the songs by Howard Blaikley, but they also wrote their own material.   There is this duality in their vision, but their eye on the prize was a massive sound.  They can be a cool Mod-orientated Booker T, jazz band, to an obtuse baroque pop band.  And when you hear all their music on this two-disc collection (most of their work was released as singles), it doesn't seem odd that they made strange directional moves, in the context of their pop leanings. 

Peter Frampton (yes that Peter) and Andy Bown wrote half of their material, and they never settled for one sound or aesthetic.   I don't know if there is a Herd "sound," because they pretty much compile all their influences/sounds from their era.   What's surprising is that their technique, either planned or by fault, works.  All four had contributed to the package.  Andrew Steele, their drummer, even sings lead and wrote a song, and it's good.  For anyone who has even the slightest interest in the British music scene of the late 60s I heartily recommend The Herd.  Although they don't sound like The Move, I think they are equally as important as that band.  No foolin'. 

Thursday, May 31, 2018

The Herd - "Lookin Thru You" Vinyl, Album, U.S., 1968 (Fontana)




The Herd is a very typical band of their era, as well as unusual.   The truth is, the 1960s were an extraordinary decade when it came to a lot of things, but for me, the music defined its eccentricity, and there is nothing ordinary about The Herd, in that sense.   Peter Frampton, a pin-up rock god of the 1970s, was also the pin-up teen pop star of the late 1960s.  Still, I was surprised to hear The Herd, and hearing not only Frampton's voice, but also The Walker Brothers, a touch of Procol Harum, very early David Bowie, and a pinch of ska, with respect to its rhythms.  Baroque in style, but the closest thing I can also think of is Dave Dee, Dozy, Beaky, Mick & Tich in its ridiculous manner of over-the-top pop.   They also share the songwriting talents of Alan Blaikley and Ken Howard, better to known to us record label readers as "Howard Blaikley."  I first discovered the duo through Joe Meeks' 1964 band The Honeycombs, who had the enormous hit "Have I The Right."

I know very little about the history of The Herd, except that all of them were teenagers when they were in the band.   They had three hit songs in England and Europe, and they made one album in the U.K. and this album, "Lookin' Thru You" is their only American release.  Basically a bastard version of their British album "Paradise Lost" and a load of other singles.   When I was a young boy in the 1960s, I remember having a mass paperback of the upcoming bands from the UK, and among many, The Herd was in that pile.   They stood out because of their photo.  Their perfect haircuts seduced me. It took almost 50 years until I purchase their album.  Time waits for no one.  Except hearing The Herd.  It doesn't take me back to my youth, or the love of their haircuts, but the fact that they made pop music that is insane and beautifully accurate for their time. Listening to it in 2018 I'm struck by the imaginative use of orchestration and horns.  And the voices are entirely from the Scott Walker method of attacking and embracing a melody.  

Without a doubt their masterpiece is "From The Underworld" is mythical as well as a teenage pop narrative.  It's fascinating that pop songwriters like Blaikley and Howard can slip in something magnificent in the lyrics and sell it as teenage angst.  That's the brilliance of pop, in the hands of crafty and brilliant songwriters.   The other classic is "Paradise Lost" which starts off as a stripper's theme song, and then goes into this dark classical mode, which is similar to "From The Underworld." The transition from one place to another is breathtakingly beautiful.  


Besides the two veteran songwriters, Frampton and Andy Bown co-wrote a lot of songs as well, which sounds a lot like The Small Faces.  Which ironically (or not) enough, Frampton went off with Steve Marriott to form Humble Pie.  The secret weapon in The Herd is their bassist who can sing like Scott Walker.  Gary Taylor also writes for The Herd as well, and his voice is just magnificent.  The Herd has a lot of strength, and why they didn't make it in a huge way is a mystery to me.  Sometimes the cards are not in favor of its players, and The Herd left us some incredible music.  


Wednesday, May 30, 2018

Small Faces - "Ogdens' Nut Gone Flake" Vinyl, LP, Album, Reissue, Limited Edition, 1996/1968 (Castle Communications)


Small Faces may or may not be geniuses, but they strike me as moments of perfection.  To this day, I'm confused what makes a Small Faces album.  I think most of their records are a collection of 45 rpm singles and their b-sides.  Their aesthetic is the 45 single, and therefore most of their albums are greatest hits collections.  Yet, in 1968, after Sgt. Pepper (1967), and before "Tommy" (1969), The Small Faces made their conceptual or narrative album.   "Ogdens' Nut Gone Flake" is not only that but also a highly designed album package, that is tricky to fold up or put the disc away in its packaging.   I have to imagine it made a significant hit on the present and future graphic artists.  And in fashion, just as important as the music inside the designed package. 

Usually, when a recording artist decides to make a concept album, it has a huge theme of some sort.  Sgt. Pepper is a made-up group, and the album's theme follows that method of narration, and of course, "Tommy" is a major statement from Pete Townshend with respect to his spirituality and perhaps a severe sexual relationship/abuse.   On the other hand, Small Faces made a concept album about a fellow following or trying to locate a disappearing moon.   And this is only on side two with a narrative spoken by British comedian who invented his own humorous language, "Unwinese."  A language that has a few words in standard English, but the listener picks up or imagines that there is a consistency in what he's saying.  Totally eccentric, and that is also the appeal of the Small Faces.   A band that was driven by its love for Rhythm n' Blues, but on the other hand, they do have this secure connection to British music halls and the Cockney culture.  It is this relationship between the two worlds that makes the Small Faces a great band.  

"Ogdens' Nut Gone Flake" is not really a masterpiece, but it's an enjoyable and unique album from 1968.  I don't think the album could have been made outside of that era or year.   It captures a certain innocence as well as the enjoyment of getting high and letting your mind wander into a recording studio.  It is also interesting to note that this album was the work from the Small Faces.  Steve Marriott left the band to form Humble Pie, with fellow pop star Peter Frampton of The Herd, who both wanted to investigate a heavier sound in their music and approach to that aesthetic.  Still, "Ogden's" is an incredible combination of charm and classic Small Faces pop.  "Afterglow," "Song of a Baker," "Lazy Sunday," (a song that Small Faces had mixed feelings about when it was released as a single by Immediate Records, but to me a classic work), and the more obscure "Happy Days Toy Town."  One often thinks of the Small Faces being the flip of the coin with The Who on the other side.  On some days, I think the Small Faces were a better band, but the truth is, both on a very street, but smart level, took their music to another platform or level.   I only know a few people who "like" the Small Faces, but I know a lot more who "love" the Small Faces.  It's a love that is richly accepted.