CD Wisselaar IN > Love - Forever Changes
Artiest : Love
One of the best West Coast folk-rock/psychedelic bands, Love may have also been the first widely acclaimed cult/underground group. During their brief heyday -- lasting all of three albums -- they drew from Byrds-ish folk-rock, Stones-ish hard rock, blues, jazz, flamenco, and even light orchestral pop to create a heady stew of their own. They were also one of the first integrated rock groups, led by genius singer/songwriter Arthur Lee, one of the most idiosyncratic and enigmatic talents of the 1960s. Stars in their native Los Angeles, and an early inspiration to the Doors, they perversely refused to tour until well past their peak. This ensured their failure to land a hit single or album, though in truth the band's vision may have been too elusive to attract mass success anyway.
Love was formed by Lee in the mid-'60s in Los Angeles. Although only 20 at the time, Lee had already scuffled around the fringes of the rock and soul business for a couple of years. In addition to recording some flop singles with his own bands, he wrote and produced a single for Rosa Lee Brooks that Jimi Hendrix played on as session guitarist. Originally calling his outfit the Grass Roots, Lee changed the name to Love after another Los Angeles group called the Grass Roots began recording for Dunhill. Love's repertoire would be largely penned by Lee, with a few contributions by guitarist Bryan Maclean.
Inspired by British Invasion bands and local peers the Byrds, Love built up a strong following in hip L.A. clubs. Soon they were signed by Elektra, the noted folk label that was just starting to get its feet wet in rock (it had recorded material by early versions of the Byrds and the Lovin' Spoonful, and had just released the first LP by Paul Butterfield). Their self-titled debut album (1966) introduced their marriage of the Byrds and the Stones on a set of mostly original material, and contained a small hit, their punk-ish adaptation of Bacharach-David's "My Little Red Book."
Love briefly expanded to a seven-piece for their second album, Da Capo (1967), which included their only Top 40 hit, the corkscrew-tempoed "7 and 7 Is." The first side was psychedelia at its best, with an eclectic palette encompassing furious jazz structures, gentle Spanish guitar interludes, and beautiful Baroque pop with dream-like images ("She Comes in Colors"). It was also psychedelia at its most reckless, with the whole of side two taken up by a meandering 19-minute jam. It was still a great step forward, but by mid-'67, the band was threatening to disintegrate due to drugs and general disorganization.
The group was in such sad shape, apparently, that Elektra planned to record their third album with session men backing Lee (on his compositions) or Maclean (on his compositions). Work on two tracks actually commenced in this fashion, but the shocked band pulled itself together to play their own material again, resulting in one of the finest rock albums of all time, Forever Changes. An exceptionally strong set of material graced by captivating lyrics and glistening, unobtrusive horn and string arrangements, it was not a commercial hit in the U.S. (though it did pretty well in Britain), but remains an all-time favorite of many critics.
Just at the point where they seemed poised to assert themselves as a top band, Love's first and best lineup was broken up in early 1968, at Arthur Lee's instigation. Several albums followed in the late '60s and early '70s which, though credited to Love, are in reality Arthur Lee and backup musicians -- none of whom had skills on the level of Bryan Maclean or the other original Love men. Lee largely forsook folk-rock for hard rock, with unimpressive results, even when he was able to get Jimi Hendrix to play on one track. The problems ran deeper than unsympathetic accompaniment: Lee's songwriting muse had largely deserted him as well, and nothing on the post-Forever Changes albums competes with the early Elektra records.
Lee released a solo album in the early '70s, and then put another Love together for one last effort in 1974, but basically Love/Lee (the two had in effect become synonymous) ground to a halt in the mid-'70s. Lee has sporadically recorded and performed since then without coming up with anything resembling a unified full-length studio statement, though some scattered live and studio recordings have appeared, including a 1994 single on the tiny Distortions label.
Album : Forever Changes
It wasn't a hit, but Forever Changes continues to regularly appear on critics' lists of the top ten rock albums of all time, and it had an enormously far-reaching and durable influence that went way beyond chart listings. The best fusion of folk-rock and psychedelia, it features Lee's trembling vocals, beautiful melodies, haunting orchestral arrangements, and inscrutable but poetic lyrics, all of which sound nearly as fresh and intriguing upon repeated plays. One of rock's most organic, flowing masterpieces, every song has a lingering, shimmering beauty, including the two penned by the band's other talented songwriter/guitarist/singer, Bryan MacLean. [A 2001 expanded CD reissue on Rhino/Elektra adds lengthy historical liner notes and seven bonus tracks: the 1968 single "Your Mind and We Belong Together"/"Laughing Stock," the genuine Forever Changes outtake "Wonder People (I Do Wonder)," the demo "Hummingbirds" (essentially an instrumental version of "The Good Humor Man He Sees Everything Like This"), and alternate mixes of "Alone Again Or" and "You Set the Scene."]
FritZ mening :
Het kostte even wat tijd. De eerste keer dacht Fritz: is dit het? En was de CD bijna de wisselaar uitgevlogen, maar Fury Noir hield vol. En FritZ ook. Met succes, want pas met wat meer rust in je hoofd kan je goed van deze CD genieten. De tracks blinken allemaal uit in originaliteit, ook al zag FritZ dat de eerste keer over het hoofd. Plaats de CD echter in de tijd en alles valt wel op zijn plek. FritZ zet deze CD nog graag op.
1 opmerking:
Fury Noir is trots op FritZ' doorzettingsvermogen. En verheugd dat-ie eindelijk, na al die jaren, iemand heeft ontmoet die net zoals ij kan genieten van deze fabeltastische muziek.
Nog even wat wetenswaardigheden: we hebben weinig van Arthur Lee vernomen tussen 1974 en 1994 omdat-ie in die tijd ergens in de VS in de gevangenis zat (niemand weet waarvoor hij is veroordeeld, 'maar het zal niet voor zweetvoeten zijn geweest' zegt Belladonna altijd).
In 2002 heeft Arthur Lee een succesvolle wereldtoernee gemaakt met "Forever Changes". begeleid door de band Baby Lemonade, en met een voltallig symfonie-orkest. Van een avond in Londen is een indrukwekkende dvd uitgebracht. Heel bijzonder.
FritZ, welkom bij de Love-believers!
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