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August 1971 US-Only 8-Track LP "Nick Drake" on Island SMAS-9307
August 1971 US-Only 8-Track LP "Nick Drake" on Island SMAS-9307
"...You're A Very Rare Find..."
A bloody rare find indeed!
The first mention of this staggeringly hard-to-find
album is the 31 July 1971 publication of Billboard in the USA – amazingly give
a whole page to herald the immanent coming of Nick Drake's debut American LP on
Island Records SMAS-9307 (Island was then distributed by Capitol Records in
America – hence the SMAS prefix on the catalogue number). Even now in 2017 – it
seems amazing - nestled amongst the sizeable adverts for Humble Pie's
"Rock On", AMPEX Tape Machines and how many Rock Bands had used SHURE
microphones to get down their shtick – sits a stark full-page advert for Island
SMAS-9307. But who outside of industry insiders noticed?
Using the rear cover photo of September 1969's
"Five Leaves Left" as its front aspect (the blurred man running past
Nick who is stood up against a wall) – that snap is centred on a gatefold cover
that bears no title on the front. The advert advises that he’s had two albums
in Blighty and that this is a compilation of songs from both. It also tells us
that punters have called in – asking for such a release (oh yeah).
However, the commercial truth is probably a lot less
grass roots. In the same 31 July 1971 Billboard publication is another
full-page advert without any words at all – just a photo of a beaming James
Taylor standing beside an equally elated Carole King. Carole’s magisterial
"Tapestry" had been released in February on Ode 70 Records and
Taylor's second LP "Mud Slide Slim And The Blue Horizon" on Warner
Brothers in June of 1971. With both albums slaughtering all in their
Grammy-winning singer-songwriter path (LPs and 45s) – someone at Island USA was
more likely trying to tap into that same burgeoning market when they compiled
the 8-song "Nick Drake".
They even went as far as giving the LP a rather lovely
inner gatefold with a smiling carefree Nick reclining in green English grass -
the track credits printed tastefully over to the right of the double-spread
photo. Technically - the 1971 American LP "Nick Drake" featured 3
tracks from "Five Leaves Left" (1 on Side 1 and 1 and 2 on Side 2)
with the five remaining being from "Bryter Layter". It can be
sequenced as follows:
Side 1:
1. 'Cello Song
2. Poor Boy
3. At The Chime Of A City Clock
4. Northern Star
Side 2:
1. River Man
2. Three Hours
3. One Of These Things First
4. Fly
The following week – 8 August 1971 – it gets a single
line entry in the New Releases section and is never heard of again. In a final
act of superstar cult recognition – it was repressed using John Wood Remasters
onto a vinyl LP with a poster for Record Store Day 2013 – which I believe is in
itself a bit of a rarity too. Poor Boy indeed - on to the music...
You can digitally sequence this 8-track LP by buying
the two stand-alone CD Remasters from June 2000 – his September 1969 debut
"Five Leaves Left" and his second LP – November 1970’s "Bryter
Layter". But you can absolutely never have enough of ND – so I’d advise
taking the immersive plunge and plum for the 5CD "Tuck Box" from December
2013 - a treasure trove of beautiful music presented in a really lovely way.
"Tuck Box" by NICK
DRAKE is a 5CD Box Set on Universal/Island 0602537538546 (Barcode 602537538546) that consists of 5CDs in repro card digipaks with 5 accompanying foldout colour
posters - the press-released full-page adverts for each album. As you can see
from the photo – Universal have used his N. R. Drake '69 schoolroom Tuck Box as
the Box set’s artwork.
The first 3 CDs in this Box Set are his officially released catalogue
before his tragic loss in 1974 – the 28 June 2000 CD remasters done by SIMON HEYWORTH and JOHN WOOD (the albums original engineer). The sound quality on
all three sets is absolutely exceptional - carefully and beautifully transferred. And of course
his music is magical Singer-Songwriter Folk-Rock of the highest quality – songs imbibed with joy, sadness and a rare pathos that reaches out across the decades even
now.
To sequence the American LP - the two CDs you'll need are...
Disc 1 "Five Leaves Left" (41:45 minutes):
1. Time Has Told Me [Side 1]
2. River Man
3. Three Hours
4. Way To Blue
5. Day Is Done
6. ‘Cello Song [Side 2]
7. The Thoughts Of Mary Jane
8. Man In A Shed
9. Fruit Tree
10. Saturday Sun
Tracks 1 to 10 are his debut UK album "Five
Leaves Left" - released 1 November 1969 in the UK on Island Records ILPS
9105 - reissued on Remaster CD in June 2000.
Disc 2 "Bryter Layter" (39:26 minutes):
1. Introduction [Side 1]
2. Hazey Jane II
3. At The Chime Of A City Clock
4. One Of These Things First
5. Hazey Jane I
6. Bryter Layter [Side 2]
7. Fly
8. Poor Boy
9. Northern Sky
10. Sunday
Tracks 1 to 10 are his 2nd UK studio album
"Bryter Layter" - released 1 November 1970 in the UK on Island
Records ILPS 9134 - reissued on Remaster CD in June 2000.
The compilers of the 8-track American LP clearly saw
the pattern across his first two British albums - acoustic based tunes with the
double-bass acting as a rhythm section - providing each with that lovely shuffle
his best music has.
The irrepressible "'Cello Song" opens
proceedings – a stunner that gets me every time. The hiss levels increase a tad
unfortunately on "At The Chime Of A City Clock" but not enough to
detract - while "Northern Sky" still exudes romantic 'magic' every
time I hear it and has been used in movies for just such a purpose (that
ice-rink scene with Kate Beckinsale and John Cusack at the end of
"Serendipity"). Another huge favourite is the gorgeous "One Of
These Things First" and the jazzy "Poor Boy" – both sounding
like a male-fronted Fairground Attraction decades before their time.
In a 'starry, starry night' kind of way - you just
can't help thinking that someone as beautiful as Nick Drake deserved glory –
but received so little of it on either side of the pond. And when you sequence
these eight songs together – you wonder how so many simply didn’t get it back
then.
A gorgeous reminder and perhaps the coolest vinyl
rarity you can now have in your digital home for a CD pittance.
"...Please give me a second grace..." – he
sang on the "Bryter Layter" ballad "Fly".
I couldn’t agree more...
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