Jack Bruce Band - How's Tricks (Reissue, Remastered) (1976/2003)
BAND/ARTIST: Jack Bruce Band
- Title: How's Tricks
- Year Of Release: 1976/2003
- Label: Polydor
- Genre: Art Rock, Psychedelic Rock, Jazz-Rock, Prog Rock
- Quality: Flac (image, .cue, log)
- Total Time: 52:07
- Total Size: 318 Mb (scans)
- WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:
01. Without A Word
02. Johnny B '77
03. Times
04. Baby Jane
05. Lost Inside A Song
06. How's Tricks
07. Madhouse
08. Waiting For The Call
09. Outsiders
10. Something To Live For
Bonus Tracks - Both Previously Unreleased:
11. Without A Word
12. Something To Live For
Line-up:
Bass Guitar, Harmonica, Lead Vocals – Jack Bruce
Drums, Glockenspiel, Vocals – Simon Phillips
Guitar, Vocals – Hughie Burns
Keyboards, Vibraphone, Vocals – Tony Hymas
A wonderfully tortured Jack Bruce vocal on the song "Without a Word" opens up How's Tricks, the second LP for RSO records by the journeyman bassist/vocalist. Produced by Bill Halverson, who engineered Cream as well as solo Eric Clapton recordings, the material further fuses the all out jazz of Things We Like with the pop found on "Songs for a Taylor." "Johnny B'77" has the quartet driving the melody onto the fringes of rock, while "Time" bares elements Bruce brought to Disraeli Gears, defining his third of the Cream saga. As former bandmate Leslie West had his Leslie West Band out and about in the mid-70s, this quartet is listed as the Jack Bruce Band. It is yet another about-face for Bruce, singing nine more sets of lyrics by Peter Brown, with guitarist Hughie Burns and keyboardist Tony Hymas getting their chance to participate in the songwriting; it's basically well-performed pop with jazz overtones that has the voice of Jack Bruce adding the blues. The reggae of the title track, and the accompanying album art, may have made for some marketing confusion. There's a magician with cards and old-world glitz permeating this show, the band holding a crystal ball on the back-cover photograph. Having left Atlantic for Robert Stigwood's imprint, a bit more direction could have been in store for this important artist. The packaging doesn't have the elegance of Harmony Row, nor does it show respect for the music inside the package. Hughie Burns takes the lead vocal on "Baby Jane," his own composition, and it sounds out of place, disrupting the flow which returns on the exquisite "Lost Inside a Song," where Jack Bruce picks up where he left off. The Steely Dan comparisons are harder to make here, songs like "Madhouse" more hardcore jazz-rock than Fagen and Becker would care to indulge in. "Waiting for the Call" is perhaps the album's blusiest track, with magnificent harmonica-playing by the vocalist/rock legend. "Outsiders" sounds like Roxy Music gone jazz, while the final track, written by keyboardist Tony Hymas and lyricist Peter Brown, is a nice melodic vehicle for Jack Bruce's voice to conclude the album with. Simon Phillips provides solid drumming throughout, and the well-crafted lyrics are included on the inner sleeve. A strange but highly musical and important outing in the Jack Bruce catalog.
Oldies | Rock | FLAC / APE
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