"...The Blind Man Stood On
The Road And He Cried..."
Fronted by not one but two
stunning Vocalists in Maggie Bell and James Dewar – Scotland's STONE THE CROWS
also boasted the guitar talents of Leslie "Les" Harvey (younger
brother of Alex Harvey) and the songwriting genius of Keyboardist John
McGinnis. I’ve been after their wicked run of four albums on Polydor between
1970 and 1972 on affordable decent CDs for years now – and at long last Angel Air
of the UK (and in conjunction with the band) have acquired the tapes and
remastered all four back into digital form – and even found space to chuck on
four bonus tracks.
This first 2CD reissue gives
you their "Stone The Crows" debut and 2nd LP "Ode To John
Law" – the 3rd and 4th albums "Teenage Licks" and
"'Ontinuous Performance" arrive in October 2015 on another expanded
2CD set (Angel Air SJPCD468). Here are the pious birds of good omen (they’re
stoned and all)...
UK released Friday 4
September 2015 – "Stone The Crows/Ode To John Law" on Angel Air SJPCD463
(Barcode 5055011704633) gives us their first two studio albums onto a 2CD set
with four bonus tracks and plays out as follows:
Disc 1 (61:31 minutes):
1. The Touch Of Your Loving
Hand
2. Raining In Your Heart
3. Blind Man
4. A Fool On The Hill
5. I Saw America [Side 2]
Tracks 1 to 5 are their
debut LP "Stone The Crows" – released July 1970 in the UK on Polydor
Super 2425 017 and in the USA on Polydor 24-4019
BONUS TRACKS:
6. Freedom Road (Live)
7. Hollis Brown (Live)
Tracks 6 and 7 are from the
"Radio Sessions: 1969-72" – released May 2009 as a 2CD Stone The
Crows set on Angel Air SJPCD272
Disc 2 (52:03 minutes):
1. Sad Mary
2. Friend
3. Love 74
4. Mads Dogs And Englishmen
[Side 2]
5. Things Are Getting Better
6. Ode To John Law
7. Danger Zone
Tracks 1 to 7 are their 2nd
studio album "Ode To John Law" – released February 1971 in the UK on
Polydor Super 2425 042 (no USA release)
BONUS TRACKS:
8. The Touch Of Your Loving
Hand (Live)
9. Raining in Your Heart
(Live)
Tracks 6 and 7 are from the
"Radio Sessions: 1969-72" – released May 2009 as a 2CD Stone The
Crows set on Angel Air SJPCD272
STONE THE CROWS was:
MAGGIE BELL – Lead Vocals
JAMES DEWAR – Lead Vocals
and Bass
LESLEY HARVEY – Guitars
JOHN McGINNIS – Keyboards
COLIN ALLEN – Drums and
Percussion
Although the 8-page inlay
has new liner notes from Malcolm Dome and includes interviews with Maggie Bell
and Colin Allen as well as a few photos – it's a disappointingly slight affair
that doesn’t even bother to provide catalogue numbers for the LPs. What you do
get is a potted history of the Scottish band arising out of the ashes of The
Power who were managed by Zeppelin's Peter Grant. Grant had them change their
name because an American group had already nabbed it – and it was he who
suggested the much cooler moniker of STONE THE CROWS. A nice touch is that each
CD is a picture disc of the album front covers - but the inner gatefold artwork
in both cases is missing. There is no mention of who remastered the albums but
there is a credit that the material is licenced from Maggie Bell and Colin
Allen. The audio is a mixed bag of brilliant clarity one moment followed by
awful hiss the next (thankfully the later is more in ascendancy).
The bluesy opening track
"The Touch Of Your Loving Hand" (written by Bell and Dewar) is
covered in dreadful hiss - which is devastating because it's a stunning
six-minute keyboard-lead Soulful Blues song highlighting the magnificent set of
pipes on both Dewar and Bell. It even features a sweet guitar solo from Harvey.
The Fusion of the Harvey/Dewar composition "Raining In Your Heart"
comes at you like Brian Auger meets the Latin rhythms of Santana – it’s
brilliant and sounds a lot better than the opener. But then you're hit with an
absolute stunner – the 5:12 minutes of "Blind Man" – a Josh White
cover version doing entirely in Acoustic Blues. Les Harvey rattles those steel
strings while zipping up and down the fretboard in impressive runs. But then
Maggie Bells comes at you with 'that voice' – and its Janis Joplin look out
baby – there's a new queen in town. It's a stunning Bluesy vocal – the kind of
thing that makes the hairs on the back on your neck stand up. They finish Side
1 with a sort of Joe Cocker version of "A Fool On The Hill" – giving
The Beatles classic a piano-lead rendition that brings out a sweet Soul in the
song.
Side 2 is taken up with one
piece – the 17:21 minutes of "I Saw America" - written by Leslie
Harvey, Colin Allen and the album's Producer Mark London. It opens with almost
Buddy Holly acoustic guitars and then builds Yes-like into a keyboard flourish
which is brilliant. At about three minutes it calms down into a slow melody
with soft guitars, Maggie's vocals and organ – then back into Genesis territory
circa "Nursery Cryme" – back into Blues Rock - onto more Jazz -
returns to Prog. And then James "Jimmy" Dewar sails in as Vocalist -
what a blast it is...
Maggie Bell's "Freedom
Road" (10:32 minutes) and Dylan's "Hollis Brown" (13:05 minutes)
are the lengthy 'Live' bonus tracks. Although it doesn't advise where they were
recorded – there's no audience response so I'm presuming their BBC recordings.
The audio is good – the playing great – and both feel like smartly chosen sonic
companions to the album cuts. The dynamic vocal duo of Bell and Dewar rock it
out on "Freedom Road" with Harvey tearing up the guitar – but the
unwieldy "Hollis Brown" overstays it rumbling welcome.
The second LP opens with a
Rocker – "Sad Mary" penned by Keyboardist John McGinnis. It was used
as a B-side to the band's first UK 7" single with "Mad Dogs And
Englishmen" on the A (Polydor 2066 060, released early 1971). It riffs
along in fine form (couple of Zeppelin I touches in there) – but at about 5:25
there's terrible surface noise. That same worn tape background afflicts the
beginning of "Friend" until the brilliant keyboard funk kicks in –
thereafter the audio is wonderful (bass, drums and vocals). Another keyboard
bum-wiggling winner from the pen of John McGinnis is "Love 74" (wrongly
credited on the CD sleeve as just "Love"). It ends Side 1 – again the
band sounding like a Funk-Rock outfit with American Soulfulness at its AWB
core.
Written by Colin Allen and
Leslie Harvey – the upbeat "Mad Dogs And Englishmen" is an obvious single
– structurally sounding not unlike Dave Mason's “Feeling Alright” as done by
Joe Cocker on his "Joe Cocker!" album from early 1970 (see separate
review). And again Maggie's vocals are so damn good (I’d forgotten how cool
this little song is). The John McGinnis tune "Things Are Getting
Better" was chosen as 45 in Germany and Sweden by Polydor with "Mad
Dogs And Englishmen" relegated to the flipside – and with its Joe Cocker
commercialism you can understand why. Based on the events of 4 May 1970 in the
USA - the title track "Ode To John Law" chronicles how the Ohio State
Police fired guns into a crowd of longhaired protesting students in Kent State
University injuring many but killing four of them. The cops became known as
'pigs' in the USA or in the mind of Colin Allen - 'John Law'. As Maggie Bell
sings, "You're a pig...spread your mace in my face..." to a
threatening keyboard barrage – the whole song feels deeply uncomfortable
throughout (still does). The album ends on the high of "Danger Zone"
- a Curtis Mayfield cover version and probably the best song on the album
(certainly the most Soulful – huge keyboard chords and tasteful guitar licks).
Although it's a set of hugely soulful and accomplished performances from Dewar
and Bell – the bonus track BBC Live sessions for "The Touch Of Your Loving
Hand" is inflicted with a lot of background noise that dampens this winner
(what a shame). But thankfully "Raining In Your Heart" fares a lot
better – the band on fire and clearly enjoying boogieing out.
So there you have it – a
mixed bag audiowise for sure - but I'm still thrilled these criminally
forgotten albums are back on my shelves. Maggie Bell of course went on to a
great solo career with Zeppelin's Swan Song label in the mid Seventies and
tours to this day while Lead Vocalist James Dewar gave every Robin Trower
Chrysalis album a vocal soul they would have been remiss without. After years
of genetic medical illness and declining health - he sadly passed away in 2002
aged only 53. I miss him...check out his Rock-Soulful legacy on YouTube.
Stone The Crows – a great band and a wicked legacy. Can't wait for batch Number 2. Even the name makes me tingle...
This review and hundreds more like it can be found in my SOUNDS GOOD Music Book Series - CLASSIC 1970's ROCK - Exceptional CD Remasters is available to buy/download at Amazon at the following link...
Stone The Crows – a great band and a wicked legacy. Can't wait for batch Number 2. Even the name makes me tingle...
This review and hundreds more like it can be found in my SOUNDS GOOD Music Book Series - CLASSIC 1970's ROCK - Exceptional CD Remasters is available to buy/download at Amazon at the following link...
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