Saturday, 28 December 2019

"A Jug Of Love" by MIGHTY BABY - October 1971 UK LP on Blue Horizon Records – Inside "At A Point Between Fate And Destiny: The Complete Recordings" – Also Including The Album "Mighty Baby" (November 1969 on Head Records) Plus Four Discs Of Extra Material Including Previously Unreleased (9 November 2019 UK Grapefruit Records 6CD Mini Clamshell Box Set – Oli Hemmingway Remasters) - A Review by Mark Barry...









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Featuring Their "A Jug Of Love" LP From October 1971 
On Blue Horizon Records (UK) 

"...House Without Windows..."

Grapefruit Records of the UK (part of Cherry Red's roster of labels) has been feeding the voracious needs of crusty old music-types like me for some years now. But even by their lofty/cult label standards - this November 2019 six-disc box set "At A Point Between Fate And Destiny" by MIGHTY BABY has to be 'another' feather in their very fluffy reissue bonnet (even if the second LP leaves a lot to be desired – its bolstered up with a huge amount of worthy alternate material).

MIGHTY BABY arose out of the ashes of those Motown-blasting Mod darlings of the 60ts THE ACTION. After discovering mind-expanding LSD (not an abbreviation of London Sizeable Doughnuts I assure you), they then promptly did the big time Psychedelic (sort of England’s answer to the Grateful Dead) followed quickly by a bit of mellow navel-gazing acoustic-electric Americana meets mountain streams. Given those freeform hallucinogenic reference points, it's hardly surprising that their commune-a-go-go underground debut and lesser-valued stoned Country Rock follow-up have become sought-after albums (they were all but ignored on release and have always had serious rarity status and collectability ever since).

First up is the self-titled UK debut "Mighty Baby" on Head Records from November 1969 (a smart move has been to reproduce the gatefold sleeve with that iconic Martin Sharp artwork on the outside and Keith Morris photos of the band on the inside) and then their final studio slab of America/Eagles type Country-Rock, "A Jug Full Of Love" from October 1971 on Mike Vernon's revered label Blue Horizon.

This November 2019 multiple-disc CD box set adds on swathes of extras – a Previously Unreleased Acetate Mix of the 1969 debut album, an entire CD of 1971 Rehearsals for the second, an aborted album in-between from 1970 (bootlegs of "Day Of The Soup" have been available for years but in lesser sound quality), US and Euro issued Singles and LPs and even lengthy live material unheard for nearly five decades – six CDs worth in fact. You even get involvement by hero-worship inducing blokes like DAVID WELLS and JOHN REED with quality Remastering from OLI HEMMINGWAY at The Wax Works (I've slept with all three, but that's another set of litigation circumstances). There is a huge amount of mighty baby-ness to wade through – so onwards and upwards my soother-sucking devotees...

UK released Friday, 9 November 2019 - "At A Point Between Fate And Destiny: The Complete Recordings" by MIGHTY BABY on Grapefruit Records CRSEGBOX062 (Barcode 5013929186200) is a 6CD Clamshell Box Set including two studio albums from 1969 and 1971 and a huge amount of Bonus Material. It plays out as follows:

CD1 "Mighty Baby" (79:55 minutes):
1. Egyptian Tomb [Side 1]
2. A Friend You Know But Never See
3. I've Been Down So Long
4. Same Way From The Sun
5. House Without Windows [Side 2]
6. Trails Of A City
7. I'm From The Country
8. At A Point Between Fate And Destiny
Tracks 1 to 8 are their debut album "Mighty Baby" - released 7 November 1969 in the UK on Head Records HDLS 6002 and February 1970 in the USA on Head Records LPS 025 (both in Stereo). Produced by GUY STEVENS and MIGHTY BABY - it didn't chart in either country.

BONUS TRACKS
9. I've Been Down So Long (Early Version)
10. Trials Of A City (Early Version)
11. House Without Windows (Early Version)
12. A Friend You Know But Never See (Early Version)
13. Messages
14. Ancient Traveller
15. Same Way From The Sun (Early Version)
Tracks 9 to 12 and 15 are a PREVIOUSLY UNISSUED Stereo Acetate Version of the First Album, recorded February 1969. Tracks 13 and 14 (recorded 1969 by Guy Stevens) first appeared as a Bonus 45 Single in the 2015 album "Slipstreams: In Rehearsal Summer 1971" by MIGHTY BABY on Flashback FBLP1002.

CD2 "A Jug Of Love" (72:34 minutes):
1. Jug Of Love [Side 1]
2. The Happiest Man In The Carnival
3. Keep On Juggin'
4. Virgin Spring [Side 2]
5. Tasting The Life
6. Slipstreams
Tracks 1 to 6 are their second and final studio album "A Jug Of Love" - released 6 October 1971 in the UK on Blue Horizon Records 2931 001 (no US release) - Produced by MIKE VERNON and MIGHTY BABY (didn't chart).

BONUS TRACKS
7. Devil's Whisper
8. Virgin Spring
Tracks 7 and 8 are the A&B-sides of a 27 August 1971 UK 7" single on Blue Horizon Records 2096 003. The A-side is non-album while the 7:02 minute B-side "Virgin Spring" is an edited 'Alternative Version' and different to the full LP cut at 9:20 minutes
9. Only Dreaming
10. Dustbin Full Of Rubbish
11. An Understanding Love
12. My Favourite Day
13. A Saying For Today
Tracks 9 to 13 are Demo Recordings recorded in the summer of 1968. Released as The Action - they first appeared on the 1985 UK 5-Track Mini Album "Action Speak Louder Than..." on Dojo Records DOJOLP 3. 

CD3 "A Jug Of Love Rehearsals" (44:44 minutes):
1. Jug Of Love
2. The Happiest Man In The Carnival I
3. The Happiest Man In The Carnival II
4. Virgin Spring I
5. Virgin Spring II
6. Tasting The Life
7. Lazy Days
Tracks 1 to 7 are rehearsals for the "Jug Of Love" album, recorded June 1971
BONUS TRACKS:
8. Christmas Jam
Track 8 is a band jam recorded June 1969 during the making of the Keith Christmas debut album "Stimulus" (RCA Victor Records SF 8059)
9. Egyptian Tomb (Single Version, Mono)
10. I'm From The Country (Single Version, Mono)
Tracks 9 and 10 are non-album versions issued as a German and French 7" single in 1970 on Phillips 6073 900 each in different picture sleeves (both of these rarities are repro'd on Page 37 of the booklet) 

CD4 "Day Of The Soup" - Abandoned Album from 1970 (67:19 minutes):
1. Winter Passes
2. Now You Don't (Part 1)
3. Now You Don't (Part 2)
4. Now You Don't (Part 3)
5. Now You Don't (Part 4)
Tracks 1 to 5 are Olympic Studio demos recorded June 1970 for the potential but abandoned second LP "Day Of The Soup"
BONUS TRACKS:
6. Keep On Juggin' (from "Disco 2" show, 25 July 1970)
7. Now You See It
8. Stone Unhenged
9. Sweet Mandarin (tracks 7 to 9 Live At Lanchester University, March 1970)
Tracks 1 to 5 and 7 to 9 first appeared in 2009 on the 8-track compilation "Live In The Attic" on Sunbeam Records
Track 6 first appeared 2010 on the 8-track compilation "Tasting The Life: Live 1971" on Sunbeam Records

CD5 "Live At Malvern" (66:34 minutes):
1. Egyptian Tomb
2. Trials Of A City
3. Keep On Juggin'
4. Woe Is Me
5. India
6. Goin' Down To Mongoli
Tracks 1 to 6 recorded Live At The Winter Gardens, Great Malvern, Worcestershire, 20 February 1971 - first appeared on the 2010 compilation "Tasting The Life: Live 1971" on Sunbeam Records
BONUS TRACK:
7. Keep On Juggin' (recorded Live at Glastonbury Festival, June 1971) - 2019 PREVIOUSLY UNRELEASED

CD6 "Live At Glastonbury" (73:42 minutes):
1. Virgin Spring
2. Goin' Down To Mongoli
3. Woe Is Me
4. Lazy Days
5. A Blanket In My Muesli (aka India) (Full Version)
6. Devil's Whisper
Tracks 1 to 6 recorded Live at Glastonbury Festival, Pilton, Somerset, 25 June 1971. A 16-minute edit of "A Blanket In My Muesli" first appeared on the triple-album live set "Glastonbury Fayre - The Electric Store" (Revelation Enterprises REV 3) in April 1972 - here it is presented as a 'Full Version' of 36:25 minutes. Track 4 "Lazy Days" first appeared on the compilation "Tasting The Life: Live 1971" on Sunbeam Records in 2010 - Tracks 1 to 3 and 5 and 6 are 2019 PREVIOUSLY UNRELEASED

MIGHTY BABY was:
IAN WHITEMAN - Vocals, Flute, Saxophone, Organ, Piano, Harmonium and Percussion
MARTIN STONE - Lead and Slide Guitar, Acoustic Guitars and Mandolin
ALAN 'Bam' KING - Guitar and Vocals
MICHAEL EVANS - Bass
ROGER POWELL - Drums and Congas
Guest:
ZAHARA (Susan Archuletta) - Flute on "The Happiest Man In The Carnival" on the "A Jug Of Love" album 

The 40-page booklet with liner notes from DAVID WELLS is a feast even for diehard fans benefitting enormously with hugely detailed extracts from band–member IAN WHITEMAN and his forthcoming biography The Average Whiteman. You get a potted history of THE ACTION and their Mod beginnings through to their discovery of Religion and Drugs and the late Sixties formation of MIGHTY BABY. Page 12 features May 1969 trade adverts for Covent Garden’s Middle Earth venue sporting no-marks like The Byrds, Family, Tyrannosaurus Rex, Pink Floyd, Spider John Koerner, Eric Burdon & The Animals, Zoot Money and of course The Action (can't say I'd want to pay five schillings as a member's fee for any of these hairy men acts let alone the guest fee of seven schillings and six pence – an outrageous amount). Page 16 for instance has a promo card from Head Records, London of their grass-lounging five-piece looking suitably in tune with the elements man - whilst the album Acetate and rare Euro Pic Sleeves bring up the final credits pages (the Box Set is dedicated to the memory of Mike Evans and Martin Stone who passed in 2010 and 2016).

The AUDIO is a mixed bag to my ears of fabulous to ordinary in a matter of seconds. The exciting but crudely recorded debut LP was pretty much a live affair – so we're not talking Dark Side Of The Moon here – but the Remaster is ballsy and revelatory. I love the way the guitar-playing feels so hurried and even off-key at times and I'd argue it only adds to the charm and that feeling that MB could go all Hawkwind or Grateful Dead at any moment and goof off into a thirty-minute plus guitar barrage that someone might have to stop by jamming a copy of the I-Ching into the plug-banks. The Acetate and Live Tracks reflect their sources – good without ever being great – but make no mistake - that doesn't stop the non-album outtakes like "Messages" and "Ancient Traveller" being anything other than amazing finds very much in the spirit of the debut LP's sound and class.

While The Kinks' "Arthur..." or The Pretty Things' "S.F. Sorrow" grab all the 50th anniversary plaudits - I'd shout out that Mighty Baby's debut is arguably a better lost classic (heresy ahoy I know). So it's hardly surprising too that the opening number "Egyptian Tomb" has been used on so-many cool compilations - an Eastern influenced message song about the world possibly letting you down. Even now 50 years on, it feels like a fantastic slice of forgotten chugger brilliance - a groove that Kula Shaker or even The Stone Roses would genuflect in front of (we get the stereo album cut at 5:28 minutes and the rare mono single mix too). Their conversion to Islam and the Muslim religion falls out of the lyrics but more in a search for peace and understanding than dictatorial indoctrination. Groovy tunes like "I've Been Down So Long", "Same Way From The Sun" and "House Without Windows" are filled with references to ancient travellers, rain purifying the spirit and anticipating light - while guitars trip over themselves to express Nirvana in a recording studio. "Trials Of The City" is the only nod towards Rock and Roll with its almost early Quo-like boogie whilst the box set title song "At A Point Between Fate And Destiny" is as musically plaintive as its deep-thoughts moniker suggests. Wild guitars, crude recording maybe, but what a fab little album their 1969 debut really is...and that "Egyptian Tomb" b/w "I'm From The Country" Euro 45 combo is going into my forthcoming e-book "Love Me Two Times" with a bullet (singles where both sides are great)...

Two years is a long time in the life of a band in flux and by the time MB reached their second platter in the summer of 1971 – the genre-fusing excitement of the debut was gone with a harsh thud. Unfortunately and despite the playing and production values going up through the roof (a great sounding Remaster) - the change-of-musical-direction to insipid Country Rock for the second album "A Jug Of Love" (produced by a bewildered Mike Vernon) was not well received by the British music press on release 6 October 1971 – and for good reason. One went as far as describing the increasingly stoned hippy adventures of Mighty Baby as 'mighty dull' and frankly he was so on the money. With only six tracks and most of them feeling like sub-Band noodles as the boys stare in wonder at nature and snow and thawing streams (but not awed enough to produce an actual tune) – stuff like "Tasting The Life" and the title track are almost stupefying in their ordinariness. Also whilst the first LP could hide the weakness of the lead vocalists behind grooving rhythms – the acoustic sub-Cochise/Brinsley Schwarz of the second platter exposes them as not being able to carry a tune. Only the slightly trippy tinkering bells and jazz flutes of "The Happiest Man In The Carnival" livens proceedings up on an album that comes as a crushing disappointment after the debut.

Of the extra stuff I love the Grateful Dead excess of "A Blanket In My Muesli" – stretching the live at Glastonbury edit from its Fayre 3LP 16-minute edit to a whopping 36-minute monster. The Acetate album stuff is audio compromised for sure but its still more than acceptable and the four parts of "Now You Don't" suggest that the abandoned Hawkwind-esque second LP "Soup Of The Day" would have been a better move than the anaemic "A Jug Of Love" LP we did end up with. There appears to be no footage of their one and only TV performance on "Disco 2" (a precursor to "The Old Grey Whistle Test") - but at least the 25 July 1970 audio track survived - presented here for the first time.

Alan 'Bam' King joined Paul Carrack, Fran Byrne, Phil Harris and Terry Comer in ACE contributing songs to three albums on Anchor Records in 1974, 1975 and 1977 - Martin Stone and Phil Lithman joined CHILLI WILLI & THE RED HOT PEPPERS for their lone LP "Bongos Over Balham" on Mooncrest Records in 1974 - whilst Ian Whiteman, Roger Powell and Mike Evans joined forces with Jazzers Conrad and Susan Archuletta to form the wildly unsellable Acoustic-Religious Folk-Jazz group THE HABIBIYYA. That cacophonous coven made a lone and truly eccentric album called "If Man But Knew" on Island Records HELP 7 in 1972 - not something you are going to see in Sainsbury’s Top 20 LP racks or hear on Radio 1's Drive Time any day soon (Sunbeam Records put out a 2007 CD Remaster of the album if you're interested).

"At A Point Between Fate And Destiny: The Complete Recordings" by MIGHTY BABY is very much one for the collectors (fans will be thrilled) - whilst newcomers may indeed wonder why all the fuss man. But you have to hand it to Grapefruit Records of the UK who seem to know what us punters want. A classy anthology then of a band many revere to this day and despite the wimpy second album – a clear 'reissue of the year' for me...

Saturday, 6 April 2019

"Strangers In The Room: A Journey Through The British Folk-Rock Scene 1967-73" by VARIOUS (March 2019 Grapefruit Records 3CD Clamshell Box Set) - A Review by Mark Barry...








This Review and 259 more like it are available 
In my e-Book "There's Something About 1970..."
Your All-Genres Guide To The Best CD Remasters 
(No Cut and Paste Crap - All Reviews from the Actual Discs) 


Featuring 7" Single and Album tracks from 1971 by 
Steeleye Span, Trees, Alan James Eastwood, The Woods Band, Unicorn, C.O.B. 
Dando Shaft, Daylight, Shirley Collins and The Albion Country Band, 
Jude and Gerry Rafferty 

"...Gathering Wild Roses..."

Grapefruit Records have been slowly winning the pickled hearts of collectors these last few years with a steady stream of these 3CD clamshell-type Box Sets - and I suspect they'll be avalanched with quite a few saucy Valentine Cards (even in late March) for this wee buxom beauty.

Sixty genre-bending Folk and Folk-Rock tracks from 1967 to 1973 across three CDs (four Previously Unreleased with many others not stated as being Alternate or Rare Versions) and a Billy Bunter sized 40-page booklet to scoff it all down with. It's off to the Tuck Shop my wassailing lads and lassies of England, Scotland, Wales, Ireland and any other shire we may drag our non-European musical ruin stones and shillelaghs through. Put your finger-in-the-ear people and hope for the best. Here goes...

UK released Friday, 29 March 2019 (5 April 2019 in the USA) - "Strangers In The Room: A Journey Through The British Folk-Rock Scene 1967-1973" by VARIOUS ARTISTS on Grapefruit CRSEGBOX054 (Barcode 5013929185401) is a 60-Track 3CD Clamshell Box Set of Remasters that plays out as follows:

Disc 1 "Raise Your Voice And Sing Sweetly" (79:15 minutes):
1. Stranger In The Room - MICHAEL CHAPMAN (from the March 1970 UK LP "Fully Qualified Survivor" on Harvest SHVL 764)
2. The Blacksmith - STEELEYE SPAN (from the March 1971 UK LP "Please To See The King" on B&amp;C Records CAS 1029)
3. Dangerous Dave (Alternative Version) - SPIROGYRA (PREVIOUSLY UNRELEASED, Recorded February 1972) *
4. Murdoch - TREES (from the February 1971 UK LP "On The Shore" on CBS Records S 64168)
5. Sad Song For Winter - CHIMERA (Recorded November 1970 with a Wil Malone arrangement, not originally issued) +
6. Shoeshine Boy - THE HUMBLEBUMS (March 1970 UK 7" single on Big T Records BIG 130, A-side. Featured the comedian Billy Connolly and singer-songwriter Gerry Rafferty later with Stealer's Wheel and a solo career)
7. Martha - HARVEY ANDREWS (from the May 1972 UK LP "Writer Of Songs" on Cube Records HIFLY 10)
8. Hanging Tree - OO BANG JIGGLY JANG (November 1971 UK 7" single on President PT 356, A-side - featuring Peter Bramall and James Roper of The Motors)
9. She's Getting Married In August - ALAN JAMES EASTWOOD [of The Exception] (from the February 1971 UK LP "Seeds" on President PTLS 1037)
10. Amongst Anemones - JADE (from the July 1970 UK LP "Fly On Strangewings" on DJM Records DJLPS 407)
11. I Don't Know Why - KNOCKER JUNGLE (November 1970 UK 7" single on Ember EMBS 293, A-side. Were Tony Coup and Keith Jones of Mandragon)
12. The Sailor - ROBIN SCOTT (August 1969 UK 7" single on Head HDS 4003, A-side - members of Mighty Baby featuring as the backing band)
13. Here Comes The Rain - TRADER HORNE (February 1970 UK 7" single on Dawn DNS 1003, A-side. Featured Judy Dyble of Fairport Convention and Jackie McAuley of Them)
14. My Delicate Skin - DAVE CARTWRIGHT (May 1973 UK 7" single on Transatlantic BIG 510, A-side and the May 1973 UK LP "Back To The Garden")
15. Almost Liverpool 8 - MIKE HART (from the February 1970 UK LP "Mike Hart Bleeds" on Dandelion S 63756)
16. Candy Dora - RICHMOND (January 1973 UK 7" single on D'Art ART 2008, A-side - featuring Chas Seward and Steve Hall)
17. Don't Know Why You Bother Child - GARY FARR (from the December 1969 UK LP "Take Something With You" on Marmalade 608 013)
18. 1917 Revolution - BEAU (August 1969 UK 7" single on Dandelion 4403, A-side)
19. Jesus Was A Carpenter - THE JOHNSTONS (from the November 1969 UK LP "Bitter Green" on Transatlantic Records TRA 211 featuring Paul Brady and Paddy Maloney - Ewan MacColl song)
20. We Can Swing Together - ALAN HULL (December 1969 UK 7" single on Big T Records BIG 129, A-side - later lead singer and songwriter in Lindisfarne)

Disc 2 "Back To The Garden" (78:31 minutes):
1. Woodstock - MATTHEWS SOUTHERN COMFORT (original 8-Track mix but not finally issued version, recorded July 1970) +
2. The Man Who Called Himself Jesus - THE STRAWBS (not originally issued alternative mix, Recorded July 1968) +
3. As I Roved Out - THE WOODS BAND (from the December 1971 UK LP "The Woods Band" on Greenwich Records GSLP 1004 - featuring Gay and Terry Woods - Terry later with The Pogues, Gay with Auto Da Fe)
4. Sir Patrick Spens - FAIRPORT CONVENTION (not originally issued, recorded October 1969 during "Liege &amp; Lief" sessions) +
5. Be Not So Fearful (Demo Version) - BILL FAY (not originally issued demo version, recorded early 1969) +
6. I Loved Her So Long - UNICORN (from the June 1971 UK LP "Uphill All The Way" on Transatlantic TRA 238)
7. Sarah In The Isle Of Wight - AL JONES (from the September 1969 UK LP "Alun Ashworth-Jones" on Parlophone PCS 7081 in Stereo)
8. Song For A Dead Mole - LEA NICHOLSON and STAN ELLISON (from the June 1972 UK LP "God Bless The Unemployed" on Transatlantic TRA 254)
9. There's A Place I Know - BRIDGET ST. JOHN (February 1972 UK 3-Track 7" single on Dandelion 2001, Track 1 of 2 on the B-side of "Fly Away")
10. People Smile With Ghosts In The Land Of Make-Believe - JEREMY HARMER (from the privately pressed 1968 UK LP "Idiosyncratics And Swallow's Wings" on JH Records JH 001 - features David Costa of Trees and Celia Humphris sister Sue) +
11. Pucka-Ri - URBAN CLEARWAY (not originally issued, recorded circa August 1972) +
12. Scranky Black Farmer - C.O.B. [Clive's Own Band - Clive Palmer of The Incredible String Band] (from the November 1971 UK LP "Spirit Of Love" on CBS Records 69010)
13. Lady Of St. Clare - DAYLIGHT (August 1971 UK 7" single on RCA Victor RCA 2106, A-side)
14. Love Has Gone - MARY-ANNE [Mary-Anne Patterson] (from the April 1970 UK LP "Me" on Joy Records JOYS 162)
15. Time Machine - MICK SOFTLEY (August 1970 UK 7" single on CBS Records S 5130, B-side of "Can You Hear Me Now" - features Mike Vickers of Manfred Mann on Keyboards)
16. Fleance - THIRD EAR BAND (from the March 1972 UK LP "Music From Macbeth" on Harvest Records SHSP 4019)
17. Morning Glow - STORYTELLER (from the May 1970 UK LP "Storyteller" on Transatlantic Records TRA 220)
18. Riverboat - DANDO SHAFT (from the May 1971 UK LP "Dando Shaft" on RCA/Neon NE 5)
19. What I Am - FRESH MAGGOTS (PREVIOUSLY UNRELEASED, recorded circa October 1970) *
20. Like A Rolling Stone - CANTICLE (November 1970 USA 7" single on Century Records 36685, A-side)

Disc 3 "Down Into The Moonlight World" (77:21 minutes):
1. Queen Of The Moonlight World - ANDY ROBERTS (from the March 1970 UK LP "Home Grown" on RCA Victor SF 8086 - ex Liverpool Scene, later with Everyone, also with Iain Matthews in Plainsong)
2. The Cuckoo - THE PENTANGLE (from the October 1969 UK LP "Basket Of Light" on Transatlantic TRA 205)
3. Little Woman (Single Version) - MR.FOX (November 1970 UK 7" single on Big T Records BIG 135, A-side - featuring Bob and Caroline Pegg - different mix from the LP, first appearance on CD since release) +
4. Father Forgive Them - RALPH McTELL (from the November 1970 UK LP "Ralph McTell Revisited" on Transatlantic TRA 227)
5. Just As The Tide Was A Flowing - SHIRLEY COLLINS and THE ALBION COUNTRY BAND (from the November 1971 UK LP "No Roses" on Pegasus PEG 7)
6. Oh Did I Love A Dream - THE INCREDIBLE STRING BAND (not originally issued, recorded circa mid-1972) +
7. Strange Days - PAPER BUBBLE (not originally issued, recorded October 1970) +
8. Dahlia - PAULK BRETT'S SAGE (March 1973 UK 7" single on Dawn Records DNS 1021, A-side – possibly withdrawn and never released) +
9. Your Lovely Ways (Part One) - MIKE COOPER (May 1970 UK 7" single on Dawn Records DNX 2501, A-side) +
10. River Of Fortune – HERON (not originally issued, recorded July 1970) +
11. Beverley Market Meeting – JUDE (not originally issued, recorded February 1971 – Judith Willie) +
12. All In A Dream - STEVE TILSTON (from the May 1972 UK LP "The Collection" on Transatlantic Records TRA 252)
13. Carry Me – PRELUDE (from the October 1973 UK LP "How Long Is Forever" on Dawn Records DNLS 3052 – Irene Hume on Lead Vocals)
14. City Girl - JOAN ARMATRADING (from the November 1972 UK LP "Whatever’s For Us" on Cube Records HIFLY 12)
15. Furniture – HORSLIPS (from the January 1973 Ireland and UK debut album "Happy To Meet, Sorry To Part" on Oats Records MOO 3)
16. Who Cares - GERRY RAFFERTY (PREVIOUSLY UNRELEASED, recorded mid 1971) *
17. Young Waters - JSD BAND (from the June 1973 UK LP "Travelling Days" on Cube Records HIFLY 14)
18. September - 9.30 FLY (from the June 1972 UK LP "9:30 Fly" on Ember NR 5062)
19. Waxing Of The Moon - LIFEBLUD (PREVIOUSLY UNRELEASED, recorded circa January 1970) *
20. Who Knows Where The Time Goes - SANDY DENNY (not originally issued, recorded July 1967) +
* PREVIOUSLY UNRELEASED
+ ALTERNATE or RARE VERSION

Put together by the uber-knowledgeable and Baby Driver with-it JOHN REED – his equally sexy co-compiler DAVID WELLS pours on the facts in the multitudinous 40-page booklet – each artist and song given a full appraisal usually sided by period photos, ticket stubs, flyers, trade adverts and those impossibly rare single and LPs pictured throughout. Take the Steve Tilston entry for his "All In A Dream" song on Disc 3. It advises that in late 1972 after the album's release in May, Steve did an interview with Zig Zag magazine ruminating on how fame and fortune might affect his songwriting. None other than John Lennon replied in writing (to his worries) and that was the basis for the rather insipid Al Pacino film vehicle "Danny Collins" – or that Prelude who had a huge hit with their truly gorgeous Acapella version of Neil Young's "After The Gold Rush" sang backing vocals on another huge Folk-ish hit - "Streets Of London" by Ralph McTell. I didn’t know either of those things and I dare say, neither did you. Each entry is full of great name-checks like that. Beautifully laid out and aimed at collectors and novices alike – when I think of the recent miserable 8-page inlay given to Fleetwood Mac and their supposed '50 Years – Don’t Stop' 3CD celebration, it really does show how independents light the way, when the majors seem content with what they can get away with.

Audio is by ALAN WILSON and with so many sources is a mixed bag of the astonishing vs. the muffled with most being way better than that. For sure the audio dips on each of the CDs when it comes to those fast and loose demos and alternate mixes, but the rest of it is impressively presented and in some cases (as I say) will blow your socks off for recordings that are mostly 50+ years old. To the garden of delights...

Across 60 tracks there are those fabulous discoveries - the debut Unicorn LP on Transatlantic Records where the chosen debut album song "I Loved Her So Long" is the link between Matthews Southern Comfort and Plainsong (much of their better material in the mid 70ts on Harvest Records had the same hooky gorgeous melodies) - the beautiful ethereal harmony vocals of Fairport Convention's Judy Dyble and Them's Jackie McAuley in their Trader Horne incarnation for "Here Comes The Rain" (see my separate review of that album reissued by Earth Records on CD). Some of it (as already mentioned) is unfortunately ropey Audio wise - the hissy Billy Fay demo and The Woods Band is disappointingly muddied but on the other hand Dave Cartwright's McGuinness Flint-sounding "My Delicate Skin", Michael Chapman's box-set title song "Stranger In A Room" (see my review for Light In The Attic's stunning reissue of his second album "Fully Qualified Survivor" and Storyteller's early Genesis-like "Morning Glow" all sound superlative - huge acoustic guitars, voices and clever string arrangements.

Only winners are the fabulous Folk-meets-Pastoral union in Dando Shaft's flute-and-acoustic shuffle "Riverboat" - the jolly acoustic jostle of my "Lady Of St. Clair" by the staggeringly collectable Daylight - and even if Jeremy Harmer's self-recorded "People Smile With Ghosts In The Land Of Make-Believe" gives us some 'ships in squalls that change to gurgling laughter' might be a hippy lyric too far - the 99-only copies LP contained David Costa from Trees with their singer Celia Humphris' sister Sue doing harmony vocals (just about as cultish and collectable as it can get). Paul Brady and Paddy Maloney newly attached to The Johnstons transform the Ewan MacColl song "Jesus Was A Carpenter" into a "Woodstock" beautiful moment while Mick Softley gets fully-fledged Audio quality on his impressive "Time Machine" where he sings 'who will they be in 5000 AD' - indeed – a star tripper maybe. Speaking of that famous Joni song, I love the 8-Track Tape Version of the Matthews Southern Comfort UK No. 1 - it's a version that unlike the single has the acoustic and pedal steel guitars much more to the fore. And although it doesn't say it anywhere in the box, I think it's the version that turned up on the "Three's A Charm" privately-pressed CD from Iain Matthews in 1999 for his fans – the mix that was remastered by Bradley Kopp in Boulder, Colorado and is featured in his forthcoming "Orphans And Outcasts" 4CD Box Set. Anyway – it's a keeper, much like this fabulously inventive little box set...

A companion piece to Grapefruit's much praised duo of threesomes - "Milk Of The Tree: An Anthology Of Female Vocal Folk &amp; Singer-Songwriters 1966-73" from June 2017 (see review) and "Gathered From Coincidence: The British Folk-Pop Sound Of 1965-1966" from June 2018 (review to follow) – March 2019’s "Strangers In The Room: A Journey Through The British Folk-Rock Scene 1967-1973" is a deserved Amazon No 1 in the Folk-Rock genre section.

Cadburys Easter Eggs on every desk and big-time kudos to the compilers and everyone else involved...