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Showing posts with label Isao Kikuchi Remasters. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Isao Kikuchi Remasters. Show all posts

Thursday 21 August 2014

"A Nod's As Good As A Wink To A Blind Horse" by FACES - A Review Of Their 1971 Album - Now remastered In Japan-Only Onto A 2010 SHM-CD...





This review is part of my Series "SOUNDS GOOD: Exceptional CD Remasters 1970s Rock And Pop" Download Book available to buy on Amazon to either your PC or Mac (it will download the Kindle software to read the book for free to your toolbar). Click on the link below to go my Author's Page for this and other related publications:

                       http://www.amazon.co.uk/-/e/B00LQKMC6I

"...My Mum She Likes You...Thinks You're Swell..." - A Nod's As Good As A Wink To A Blind Horse by FACES (2010 Japan-Only SHM-CD Remaster)

There are some albums you genuinely can't be rational about. You only have to see the LP artwork and you're a pile of dribbling mush in need of a chair. People will ask you to be reasonable and rational as you rant and rave about their aural merits - but it won't work. In our humble abode the 3rd platter by the Godlike Faces "A Nod's As Good As A Wink...To A Blind Horse..." is one such record. I've loved it for over 40 years and this stunning new remaster of it has only made matters worse...

Released in Japan June 2010 as part of a 5-album SHM-CD reissue campaign - Warner Brothers WPCR-13841 (Barcode 4943674098200) is a 5" card repro of the UK artwork (36:25 minutes) complete with the rare fold-out colour poster that came with original November 1971 LPs. There's an Obi band, an inner booklet that reproduces the lyrics and little else (no photos) and a re-sealable plastic outer that needs to be handled with care because its so easy to catch the sleeve or CD when replacing it.

The format used here is the SHM-CD (Super High Materials) - it doesn't require a special CD player to play it on (it's just a better form of the CD format itself). The disc (which is in a protective plastic inner) is heavier in weight that the standard CD and picks up the nuances from the transfer better. But the big news for fans is the exclusive ISAO KIKUCHI remaster - which trumps everything that's gone before. I've had the standard WEA CD from the 1990s and the Audio Fidelity supposed remaster - both are good but never great - and like so many of their lack-lustre releases - the AF issue lacks any real muscle and sounds dead. No such problem with this monster - the detail is fabulous and it rocks like a mother.

"Miss Judy's Farm" opens proceedings with naughty-boy riffage in the left speaker and then bursts into your room - it feels like The Stones on a really good "Sticky Fingers" day. But the remaster and clarity really ups a notch on the rocker "You're So Rude" and the sweet ballad "Love Lives Here" where Rod's vocals are superb and Ronnie Wood's guitar to the fore. There is a small amount of hiss on each of the tracks but that only gives the 'live-in-the-studio' Glyn Johns production a warmth and natural swagger that serves it well. Side 1 finishes on the mighty "Stay With Me" - issued as 7" single with my favourite Faces track ever on the flipside - Ronnie Lane's gorgeous "Debris". What a song - and it sounds huge. Side 2 gives us a raucous cover of Chuck Berry's "Memphis, Tennessee" in that ramshackle Faces fashion - while "Too Bad" is the hidden boogie nugget on the album - a brilliant slice of Seventies Rock if ever there was one. It ends with Ronnie Wood's slide guitar on "That's All You Need" which is astonishing.

There's talk from the people who brought us the Small Faces DELUXE EDITION 2CD sets of 2014 CD reissues for the FACES - Deluxe Editions that will include outtakes and alternates - but we will have to wait and see... In the meantime - there's this superlative remaster and the others in this series to be getting on with.

At their Rock 'n' Rolling champagne-guzzling best - the FACES were probably the only band in the world to rival The Rolling Stones - who let's face it - were in their prime also in 1971 and 1972. A fabulous reissue and I love owning this equine wonder...

Saturday 14 December 2013

"Gorilla" by JAMES TAYLOR - May 1975 LP on Warner Brothers Records (2010 JAPAN-Only Warner Brothers SHM-CD Reissue (Isao Kikuchi Remaster) in 5" Mini LP Repro Artwork) - A Review by Mark Barry...


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This Review and 204 More Like It Are Available In My
Amazon e-Book 

CAPT. FANTASTIC - 1975

Your All-Genres Guide To
Exceptional CD Reissues & Remasters 
All Reviews From The Discs Themselves 
(No Cut And Paste Crap) 

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"…It Don't Look Like I'll Ever Stop My Wandering…"

Fans of JT will know that only 2-tracks from "Gorilla" are available as remasters – "Mexico" and the cover of Marvin Gaye's 1964 Motown hit "How Sweet It Is (To Be Loved By You)" (done by Taylor as a duet with Carly Simon) – both of them on the Warners Brothers/Rhino 'Best Of' compilation "You've Got A Friend" from 2003. And sweet they sound too…

But this Japan-only SHM-CD released 7 April 2010 on Warner Brothers WPCD-13823 (Barcode 4943674097364) is the first time the entire "Gorilla" album has been remastered since its release on a dull-sounding US/European CD in the mid Eighties - and the audio quality on this CD reissue is TRULY BEAUTIFUL.

1. Mexico
2. Music
3. How Sweet It Is (To Be Loved By You)
4. Wandering
5. Gorilla
6. You Make It Easy
7. I Was A Fool To Care [Side 2]
8. Lighthouse
9. Angry Blues
10. Love Songs
11. Sarah Maria

Part of a 6-album campaign (see list below) - this 2010 remaster was done by ISAO KIKUCHI in Japan - a non-numbered limited edition on the SHM-CD format (11 tracks, 39:02 minutes). Super High Materials CDs do not require a specific machine to play them on – they’re simply a better form of disc created by JVC in 2008 to improve on the original format (unchanged since it was first put out 30 years ago). The general idea is that the sound on the SHM-CD is more defined as they play - they seem to extract more nuances from the transfer - and of the 10 or so that I own – I've found this to be true.

The 5” mini repro packaging here apes the May 1975 USA vinyl LP release on Warner Brothers BS 2866 (it was K 56137 in the UK) with its single card sleeve (lyrics and recording details on the rear). The outer resealable bag it has to be said is very flimsy, so extracting and replacing the sleeve has to be done carefully lest you rip it. The 12-page plain white booklet is very ho-hum too – just the lyrics and an essay in Japanese that you can’t read. No pictures – nothing new. At least the rounded white paper inner bag has one of those protective poly-slips inside it to protect the CD. The disc itself repro’s the Warner Brothers Burbank Trees label of the original vinyl album too – a nice touch. It’s tastefully done as always with these releases. But it’s all about the sound here…

Right from the opening bars of "Mexico” the clarity is incredible - you can suddenly hear all the instruments. But then you get hit with a gem - his second cover on the album - the traditional “Wandering” - a lovely acoustic ditty with plaintive accordion and doubled vocals backing it up. It sounds incredible and for me has always been a highlight on this forgotten album. A song like “Wandering” is one of the reasons why Taylor is so admired - when he gets a melody down - its almost feels effortless and is peaceful on the mind (lyrics from the song title this review).

The album featured a huge array of talented musicians - Lowell George of Little Feat, Randy Newman on Keyboards and David Sanborn on Saxophone with quality backing vocals from David Crosby, Graham Nash, Linda Ronstadt and Carly Simon. Among the self-penned songs are the lovely “You Make It Easy” and the Stephen Bishop “Careless” feel of “I Was A Fool To Care”. I love the slightly funky “Angry Blues” (with Lowell George’s trademark slide guitar so cleverly used) and the flute opening of “Love Songs” now sounds wonderful. It’s back again to simplicity and romance for the album finisher “Sarah Maria” - again sounding just fab. 

Downsides – it's Japanese only, a limited edition and a little expensive. And the booklet could have done with some more pizzazz instead of the rather safe presentation it did get.

Even with punk and new wave quite rightly snapping at Rock’s bloated ass and ego - the November 2013 issue of Britain’s RECORD COLLECTOR magazine ran an article arguing that albums from 1975 were among the best ever released in the Rock genre. Not surprisingly there was Led Zep’s “Physical Graffiti”, Dylan’s “Blood On The Tracks”, Joni’s “The Hissing of Summer Lawns”. Dr. Feelgood’s “Down By The Jetty”, Jeff Beck’s “Blow By Blow” and Elton’s “Captain Fantastic” and so on. But no mention of James Taylor’s soppily romantic “Gorilla”?

Well I’d argue that its time to add this lovely album to that list...and if you’ve any love for the record and Seventies singer-songwriters in general - get "Gorilla" on this fabulous SHM-CD format if you can.

PS: the albums remastered in Japan in this April 2010 series are:
1. Sweet Baby James (March 1970) on Warner Brothers WPCR-13819
2. Mud Slide Slim And The Blue Horizon (July 1971) on Warner Brothers WPCR-13820
3. One Man Dog (November 1972) on Warner Brothers WPCR-13821
4. Walking Man (July 1974) on Warner Brothers WPCR-13822
5. Gorilla (May 1975) on Warner Brothers WPCR-13823
6. In The Pocket (June 1976) on Warner Brothers WPCR-13824

See also my review for 1971's "Mud Slide Slim And The Blue Horizon" and the Audio Fidelity 24-KT Audiophile Reissue of "One Man Dog" - Remaster by Steve Hoffman...

INDEX - Entries and Artist Posts in Alphabetical Order