H.P. Lovecraft
Genre: psych
Rating: **** (4 stars)
Title: H.P. Lovecraft
Company: Phillips
Catalog: PHS 600 252
Country/State: Chicago, Illinois
Year: 1967
Reasonable price: $60.00
An exceptionally talented band, it's hard to
understand how Chicago's H.P. Lovecraft (the name came from their manager's
dog who was in turn named after the famed 1920s' horror/fantasy writer
Howard Phillips Lovecraft), didn't become a major mid-1960s' act. These guys had it all, except for luck.
Having tried his hand as a New York-based folk singer, touring and recording
an album as a member of The Village Singers, and supporting the folk duo Len
and Judy, by 1965 singer/guitarist George Edwards was back in his native
Chicago. He started playing on the city's club circuit, finding
a mentor in the former of manager George Badonsky who brought the singer to
the attention of his partner Bill Traut and helped him record a couple of sides for their Chicago-based Dunwich
label (itself named after an H.P. Lovecraft story). Pulled from those
sessions, in 1966 Dunwich released an Edwards solo 45:
- 1966's
'Norwegian Wood' b/w 'Never Mind, I'm Freezing (Dunwich catalog number
45-117)
Paying his bills
working for Dunwich as a sessions vocalist, Edwards somehow managed to convince
company executives to let him form a band and take
another stab at recording material.
Teaming up with singer/keyboardist Dave Michaels, the duo
"borrowed" bassist Frank Bartoli, guitarist Kal David and drummer
Fred Pappalardo (all members of The Rovin Kind), to record their debut
single 'Anyway That You Want Me' b/w 'It's All Over For
You' (Philips catalog number 40464). While the single failed to chart it generated considerable
media interest allowing Edwards and Michaels to recruit a full time band, consisting
of guitarist Tony Cavallari, bassist Tom Skidmore (quickly replaced by
former Shadows of the Knight alumnus Jerry McGeorge) and drummer Michael
Tegza.
While their debut single failed to chart it attracted enough attention for Philips
to finance an LP. The band's self-titled 1967 debut showcased an
impressive mixture of originals and well chosen cover tunes. Crediting their
inspiration to novelist H.P. Lovecraft's "macabre tales and poems of
Earth populated by another race" "H.P.
Lovecraft" found the band taking folk-rock structures
and adding a series of psychedelic
touches (stabbing organs, woodwinds, feedback guitar) to a set full of great
vocals, strong melodies and killer harmonies. The results were nothing short of inspired. Gifted
vocalists on their own,
Edwards and Michaels also had the ability to knit their voices together,
turning in some of the era's tightest
harmonies. On tracks such as 'That's the Bag I'm
In' and 'White Ship' (the later inspired by the H.P. Lovecraft novella) the results made for a dynamite presentation.
Epitomized by dark swirling
arrangements, material such as their cover of 'Let's Get Together'
(recorded a full year before The Youngblood's version), 'The Drifter'
and 'Wayfaring Stranger' managed to be dark and depressing but still retain
a highly commercial edge. Elsewhere, their Jefferson Airplane-styled cover of
'I've
Been Wrong Before' made them one of the first band's to cover Randy
Newman's eclectic catalog. Philips tapped the album for a pair of singles:
- 1967's 'Wayfaring Stranger' b/w 'Time Machine' (Philips catalog number 40491)
- 1967's 'White Ship Part 1' b/w 'White Ship Part 2' (Philips catalog number 40506)
There second LP is almost as good.
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The Human Beinz
Genre: pop-psych
Rating: *** (3 stars)
Genre: psych
Title: Nobody But Me
Company: Capital
Catalog: ST 2906
Year: 1968
Reasonable price: $25.00
Produced by Lex de Azevedo
(who was also credited with contributed four songs to the collection),1968's "Nobody But Me"
found The Human Beinz finally making it to the big time via a contract with
Capital. Musically the set offered up a standard mix of popular covers
with the band allowed to record a couple of originals. Admittedly it
was inconsistent, but given their youth and inexperience, I've always found
this set to be charming. On YouTube, rhythm guitarist Markulin
described the band as "We were four self
taught musicians that really didn't have much studio experience before
Capitol signed us. We just listened to the way the Beatles recorded
and realized most of the fullness of their sound came from the piano and
acoustic guitar." I'd argue that was somewhat of
an understatement since the overall sound was quite diverse and technically
impressive. While their cover of
Hendrix's "Foxey Lady" wasn't anything special, elsewhere 'The Shaman',
'' and 'Turn On Your Love Light' were all strong garage rockers. Blessed with a suitably
taunt and raw voice, Belley proved well suited for the material, while the
rest of the band displayed more competence than expected from your average
bar band. Elsewhere 'Flower Grave', a cover of the traditional ballad
'Black Is the Color of My True Love's Hair'
and the bizarro Beach Boys-collide-with-The-Beatles 'It's Fun
To Be Clean' were interesting in that they found the band taking tentative
steps towards a more psychedelic-oriented sound. At least to my
ears the album's most atypical performance was also the standout - 'Dance
On Through'. With a distinctive pop edge, the combination of strumming guitars and tinkling organ made the song irresistible.
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ROBERT SAVAGE
Rating: **** (4 stars)
Title: The Adventures of Robert Savage, Volume 1
Company: Paramount
Catalog: PAS-6016
Year: 1971
Country/State: California, USA
Reasonable price: $25.00
Anyone got a clue on this short-lived early 1970s trio? The fact that their sole album was recorded in California with Keith Olsen engineering leads me to believe they were American, but who knows.
Released by Paramount Records, 1971's "The Adventures of Robert Savage, Volume 1" is one of those albums that initially doesn't seem to have a great deal going for it. Based on the sci-fi cover I bought it expecting something vaguely progressive. Not even close. LOL. The first time I spun it the Hendrix-styled rockers quickly faded into background noise. It wasn't bad by any stretch of the imagination, rather just wasn't very imaginative. Luckily I dumped it into an 'also ran' pile that I came back to a couple of months later. Mind you, this set won't change your life in any way, but namesake guitarist Savage (aka Bobby Arlin or The Hook and The Leaves fame), singer/ bassist Don Parish and drummer Tommy Richards turned in what is a pretty impressive set of Hendrix-inspired hard rock and white boy blues. With Savage/Arlin and Parish responsible for most of the nine compositions, tracks like 'Amy (The Insane)' and the instrumental 'Road Apples' demonstrated that Savage was a more than competent guitarist. That said, the band's secret weapon was singer/bassist Parish. Parish had a killer growl of a voice that bore a mild resemblance to a more versatile Tony Joe White, or perhaps James Dewar (of Robin Trower fame). Virtually everything he sang was worth hearing. On the other hand lyrically tracks such as 'Beaver Baby', ' A Hard One' and 'Seven Days Drunk' weren't exactly Pulitzer Prize noteworthy, though they were goofy enough to be worth hearing. Be sure to check out 'Amy (The Insane)'). It all came together in the form of the bizarre 'Save Us from the Cyclops'.
Definitely derivative, but it's one of those albums that I find gets better every time I spin it.