Joy Of Cooking - Closer To The Ground (1971)
BAND/ARTIST: Joy Of Cooking
- Title: Closer To The Ground
- Year Of Release: 1971
- Label: Capitol Records
- Genre: Folk Rock, Psychedelic Rock
- Quality: flac lossless (tracks)
- Total Time: 00:37:01
- Total Size: 227 mb
- WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist
01. Closer To The Ground
02. Blues For A Friend
03. New Colorado Blues
04. Humpty Dumpty
05. A Thousand Miles
06. Sometimes Like A River (Loving You)
07. Pilot
08. The War You Left
09. First Time, Last Time
10. Laugh, Don't Laugh
“Closer to the Ground” is Joy of Cooking’s second album released in 1971 following their self titled debut album released the previous year. As a band Joy of Cooking featured the closer to the groundbeautifully intertwined vocals of Toni Brown and Terry Garthwaite combined with an emphasis on percussion heavy dance-oriented jams and more typical for the period country-rock tunes.
“Closer to the Ground” pretty much picks up where “Joy of Cooking” left off. The album opens promisingly with the title tune which takes off into a terrific piano lead by Brown out of an extended bass and percussion break. Good tune. The band immediately changes up the pace with following track “Blues for a Friend” which is carried by a vaguely Caribbean rhythm before shifting to an uptempo sax break by drummer Fritz Kasten. Track three, “New Colorado Blues” is another change of style with Garthwaite and Brown in a vocal duet over Brown’s steel guitar and Garthwaite’s acoustic (I assume it’s Garthwaite, it could be Brown over dubbed) country-rock guitar. One of the album’s highlights is Brown’s piano ballad “Sometimes Like a River (Loving You)”. Joy of Cooking was an uncommonly flexible band who were comfortable playing a variety of different types of music and “Closer to the Ground” showcases their diversity.
Although “Closer to the Ground” sounds like a straighforward continuation of the band’s previous “Joy of Cooking” to me it seems to lack some of the excitement and energy that powered the first album. It’s a competant album with some good tracks by a very good band but the spark isn’t there like it was on “Joy of Cooking”. Listeners who know and like the band will probably enjoy “Closer to the Ground”; “Joy of Cooking” is recommended for new listeners who might like to check the band out. And they’re worth checking out especially if you like beautifully melded singing voices. Although they never received the same level of recognition, Brown and Garthwaite’s voices work together at the same level of perfection as Phil and Don Everly’s or Simon and Garfunkel’s.
01. Closer To The Ground
02. Blues For A Friend
03. New Colorado Blues
04. Humpty Dumpty
05. A Thousand Miles
06. Sometimes Like A River (Loving You)
07. Pilot
08. The War You Left
09. First Time, Last Time
10. Laugh, Don't Laugh
“Closer to the Ground” is Joy of Cooking’s second album released in 1971 following their self titled debut album released the previous year. As a band Joy of Cooking featured the closer to the groundbeautifully intertwined vocals of Toni Brown and Terry Garthwaite combined with an emphasis on percussion heavy dance-oriented jams and more typical for the period country-rock tunes.
“Closer to the Ground” pretty much picks up where “Joy of Cooking” left off. The album opens promisingly with the title tune which takes off into a terrific piano lead by Brown out of an extended bass and percussion break. Good tune. The band immediately changes up the pace with following track “Blues for a Friend” which is carried by a vaguely Caribbean rhythm before shifting to an uptempo sax break by drummer Fritz Kasten. Track three, “New Colorado Blues” is another change of style with Garthwaite and Brown in a vocal duet over Brown’s steel guitar and Garthwaite’s acoustic (I assume it’s Garthwaite, it could be Brown over dubbed) country-rock guitar. One of the album’s highlights is Brown’s piano ballad “Sometimes Like a River (Loving You)”. Joy of Cooking was an uncommonly flexible band who were comfortable playing a variety of different types of music and “Closer to the Ground” showcases their diversity.
Although “Closer to the Ground” sounds like a straighforward continuation of the band’s previous “Joy of Cooking” to me it seems to lack some of the excitement and energy that powered the first album. It’s a competant album with some good tracks by a very good band but the spark isn’t there like it was on “Joy of Cooking”. Listeners who know and like the band will probably enjoy “Closer to the Ground”; “Joy of Cooking” is recommended for new listeners who might like to check the band out. And they’re worth checking out especially if you like beautifully melded singing voices. Although they never received the same level of recognition, Brown and Garthwaite’s voices work together at the same level of perfection as Phil and Don Everly’s or Simon and Garfunkel’s.
Folk | Rock | FLAC / APE
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