Showing posts with label 1974. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 1974. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 1, 2025

Charles J. Foley (Charlie) - Witches Ogres and Mint / Overture (To the Sabbath). 1974 USA-Nebraska


Wow - this one is completely extinct from the modern historical record. Nowhere to be found - at all! And it's good folk too - a bit of Dylan and some dark themes. I would expect this to be a big hitter if it ever gets discovered.


Own. Found at a record store in Denver (2022).

7/27/22 (first listen / review); 1/1/25 (new entry)

Friday, August 2, 2024

R.E.M.! - I Don't Know / Linda. 1974 USA

Another complete unknown and no idea where it's from. I bet the band didn't realize they owned one of the most popular monikers of the 80s! The exclamation mark distinguishes it a little bit. In this case, it's an acronym for the band members Roberts, Eaton, and McCurdy. The music has an odd piano, synthesizer thing going on. It's mostly pop rock. The A side recalls Gary Wright somewhat. B) side is a silly pop ditty with some decent guitar though. Strange 45. I'd for sure keep it if I found it, but I wouldn't pay more than a buck for it.

I didn't capture the image of the label and now I can't find it. Not even in Discogs. On Dreamer Records.

2.5 / 2.5

8/2/24 

Sunday, March 31, 2024

Wayne Hurst – Galaxies Of Love / Back Again. 1974 USA-North Carolina


From the Chapel Hill area. A delicious sounding hard guitar riff opens the A) side. Nice mid song break with a good solo. Only drawback is it fades out too soon! B) side recalls Lynyrd Skynyrd in song format. 'Sweet Home Alabama' comes to mind here. Southern rock at its most basic but with a nice solo. 'Galaxies of Love' sounds a few years ahead of its time, and 'Back Again' a few years before haha.


3/31/24

Saturday, February 5, 2022

Happy - When and How / Letting Easy Take Me. 1974 USA-Virginia


The a) side is a complete stunner. Starts off beautiful enough with acoustic guitar and keys, which leads to a goose bump inducing mellotron strings chord progression. This track is absolutely loaded with mellotron strings, and is particularly gorgeous when the guitarist plays an equally beautiful lightly amplified jazzy solo on top. What an absolute monster of a track, the pinnacle of psychedelic folk. The flip is completely different and is southern rock, though despite the jarring contrast, is pretty good actually. There's some unusual drumming up front, and the latter half has the guitarist back out front with another great solo! Love his style, expressive but subdued.


Ownership: SP: 1974 Studio 1. Online acquisition (2022). Since I added this to Discogs, it's really taken off.

5.0 / 3.5

2/5/22

Thursday, January 27, 2022

Starfire - Islands / Slippery. 1974 USA-Los Angeles


Interesting one here. I knew both of these tracks from their sole album, which is also extremely obscure. Somewhere along the line I ended up with the bootleg CD, so that's how I heard them in the first place. Never expected to find the original 45 though, and not expensive either! For 1974, the progressive rock presented is a bit out of date, but there's not a whole lot from the States that played in this genre back then either. Heavy on the Hammond organ, sounds more like a 1970 transitional album out of psych. Maybe like SRC's Traveler's Tale.


Ownership: SP: 1974 Crimson. Online acquisition (2021).

4.0 / 4.0

11/2/21 (first listen); 1/27/22 (review / new entry)

B.W. Cat - You Can Make It Anyway / Cry. 1974 USA-Kentucky


The A) side mixes funk and horn rock seamlessly. Features a great hard driving bass heavy rhythm. Picks right back up on the b) with a stronger Hammond organ presence and a great ripping guitar solo. Excellent two sider. Label is from Kentucky so it's a guess that's where they're from.


Ownership: SP: 1974 Lemco. Online acquisition (2021).

4.0 / 4.0

5/30/21 (first listen); 1/27/22 (review / new entry)

Thursday, August 6, 2020

Fat Bruce - Got to Get It / Nest in a Fallen Tree. 1974 USA-Milwaukee


My initial scratch off notes say: Solid hard rock with a hint of prog from Milwaukee, Wisconsin.

As for the music, I think I undersold it a bit there. The hard rock aspect of this is excellent with well written guitar riffs, and both guitar and organ solos. Good melodies too. A whole album of this would be considered a classic in today's world. This is exactly the kind of music I love to hear in American hard rock.

As for the date, there's quite a bit of dialog on one of the YouTube videos (so yes, this one you can easily hear). Based on that, 1971 seems to prevail. 1970 looked to the first date thrown out there. However, I think Discogs has it right due to the Nashville Record Productions catalog number, which is pretty reliable for 45s. It's possible it was recorded earlier and released a few years later, but 1974 is very believable from a sound standpoint as well.

Ownership: SP: 1974 Brewtown. Online acquisition. 

8/6/20 (first listen / review / new entry)


Buffoon - Lisa / Greetings. 1974 USA-Pittsburgh


Another week, another unknown prog rock single. Buffoon were from Pittsburgh and this appears to be their only output. Nothing is known about them. They're a bit early for the classic Midwest prog sound, and it becomes obvious the UK prog bands of the early 70s are the primary influence. One can hear Tony Kaye era Yes as well. Great organ, psychedelic guitar, and rough-hewn vocals define these two great tracks. 'Lisa' is the better of the two songs, but 'Greetings' is great too (and you can hear it on YouTube).


Ownership: SP: 1974 Asterik. Online acquisition.

5/4/20 (first listen); 8/6/20 (review / new entry)

Saturday, February 8, 2020

Conjunto Cacique - Cacique / You Don't Need to Lose Her. 1974 Dominican Republic


Conjunto Cacique were an obscure group from the Dominican Republic (colloquially known as DR - at least in the States). To the best of my knowledge all that exists from them is this one 45 released in Colombia. The title track is an instrumental groovy Latin rock number with excellent electric keyboards, some fine lead guitar, a funky rhythm section, and additional percussion. 'You Don't Need to Lose Her' is similar, though recorded live and has English vocals. So... the elephant in the room is shall I address 1969 to 1971 era Santana here? Absolutely. Very much in the spirit of bands like Bwana, Antique, and Sapo. I'm a fan of the style, so this goes straight to the win column. Hopefully there's more where this came from and an archival release appears.

2/8/20

Sunday, September 8, 2019

Harlequin - Trees / What's Your Pleasure. 1974 USA-New York


Harlequin is that rare breed - a progressive rock band that released only a 45 single. As I stated on the Christian Friday (Indiana) review: "Progressive rock and the 45 single are somewhat mutually exclusive anyway." Prog rock is the ultimate long form rock music and 45s are... not. Long form that is.

In any case, this Long Island based Harlequin is often confused with another New York based Harlequin that once featured Eric Adams on vocals (yea, the Manowar guy). 

The two tracks here are excellent. 'Trees' recalls early King Crimson and Genesis, whereas 'What's Your Pleasure' brings to mind - yet another Long Island band - Cathedral. Bucket loads of mellotron on both songs here for fans of the instrument.

9/8/19 

These two tracks are not on any comps that I'm aware of. It would be great to have an all-American non-LP, non-reissued comp of progressive rock 45s or unreleased tracks released on CD (or LP is you insist). I can think of a few off the top: Xebec, Christian Friday, PBX, Graced Lightning (it's only half an album so why not?), Vesuvius, Traum, Apocalypse, Quorum, Guardian, and now Harlequin. Shoot, maybe even throw in the proggy tracks from otherwise not-very-good obscure albums like Luna Sea and Skyeros. OK, I had my fun.

Friday, May 10, 2019

Hazard - Le Chemin de L'Oubli. 1974 France


Hazard were a very obscure band who played many concerts throughout France in the early 70s, but only left behind this one single in 1974. For my tastes, Hazard are the exact type of band one hopes (begs?) for a quality archival release to emerge. That mythical album which was recorded and well preserved, but never released. We can dream right?

The music here belongs to the French theatrical progressive rock genre of Ange and Mona Lisa, but really it's much more than that. There's a space rock element that permeates, with synthesizers and mellotron providing the backdrop. In this manner I'm most reminded of Pulsar, especially at the time of Pollen. A full album of this could prove to be at the highest rating levels.


Ownership: SP: 1974 private. With very nice picture sleeve. Recent online acquisition (2022).

5/10/19 (first listen / review / new entry); 5/29/22 (update)

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