|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
7 Reviews
|
Average Customer Review
Share your thoughts with other customers
Create your own review
|
|
Most Helpful First | Newest First
|
|
9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
One of my best from that era.,
By Pierre from Colorado (United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: 1st//Somebody's Watching (Audio CD)
I found the 1st album on an 8-tracks cassette back in the early 70s. I paid just a couple of bucks in a sale and didn't know anything about that group. Just wanted to buy some tape to play in the car. But man, what I discover when I listen to it was one of the best album in that genre. So I started to look for it on LP. Couldn't find it. No store could order it for me. They couldn't find it in their catalogs. Ever since CD came along I try my best to find it, without any success. Of course by now the 8-track tape was gone (they didn't last very long). Recently I finally found 19 cuts on Napster and have been living on that until I found those import on Amazon. I wish I would have tought of coming here earlier. My favorite song is "Beautiful Scarlett". It remind me a lot of Cream, Blind Faith, Yes, ELP, Triumvirat and, at a later time, Asia. This is a keeper for the age. I have yet to hear any recent group that come anywhere close to that quality of musical talent. I have a feeling that today's musician are more after money than the pleasure of the Art.
10 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Two different lineups & a double gem of a CD,
By A Customer
This review is from: 1st//Somebody's Watching (Audio CD)
This import CD is a great value as it combines legendary Rare Bird's eponymous album from late 1969 and the group's fourth album from 1973, Somebody's Watching. By 1973, Rare Bird had gone through essentially two band changes from the original members. Thus the two halves to the CD have very different styles. Rare Bird features a unique double-organ sound, is rather heavy, atmospheric and at times almost surreal-sounding. It simply is stunning for a band's debut. Somebody's Watching finds the band a bit softer with more guitar influence, although by no means dominant. There is a bit more pop/jazz flavor to many of the tracks, led of course by the reworking of Morricone's For a Few Dollars More in the guise of Dollars by Rare Bird. This song breathes life into the album. Turn Your Head is a catchy and melodic tune, while Who is the Hero and High in the Morning are songs written by contributors to the group over a period of several years and allow the group's musicality, skill and subtleness to be evident. Somebody's Watching is a bit more commercial and popish than previous Rare Bird efforts, but it is contains several gems which grow on the listener. And it requires careful listening to grasp all the well-crafted and meaningful lyrics and musical nuances. For the money, you get two Rare Bird classics consisting of about 78 minutes of great music. Sound quality is very good.
6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Great debut and a good fourth album,
By
This review is from: 1st//Somebody's Watching (Audio CD)
Rare Bird started off as one of the earliest rock bands to feature keyboards but no guitar (Lee Michaels took that concept even further by including only organ and drums in his setup). The truly amazing thing about Rare Bird was the band was formed in October 1969, and their debut was released in December 3, 1969, just two months after their formation. It's amazing how they were able to pull that off. After all, it usually takes a band a year or two after formation to get an album out. Their debut was a historic album for it marked the very first album ever released on the Famous Charisma Label (what it was called then), this is the same label that also gave us the likes of Van der Graaf Generator/Peter Hammill, Genesis, Lindisfarne, Monty Python, etc. The album also received a US release on the ABC/Probe label, but it featured a totally different cover. As this album came out not too long after In the Court of the Crimson King and Colosseum's Valentyne Suite, you can tell that, with the longer numbers on this album, that the prog rock scene has finally arrived with full force. Rare Bird's music featured the powerful vocals of Steve Gould, future Spinal Tap guy David Kaffinetti on electric piano, Graham Field on organ, and Mark Ashton on drums. "Sympathy" was the hit on the album (at least a hit on Continental Europe) with lyrics that are perhaps even more relevant now than it was in 1969. There are several great progressive numbers including "Beautiful Scarlet", "Iceberg" and "God of War". "God of War" seems a little untypical for Rare Bird, with a more dark and sinister atmosphere than I'm accustomed to from these guys. I liked the whispered spoken dialog. These progressive songs are nothing short of masterpieces, some of the greatest prog I have ever heard. My complaint with them is they sound too short. Songs like "God of War" could me much longer and still be killer. The album also includes several great, shorter pieces like "Bird on a Wing", "Melanie", "Times", etc. "Times" sounds a little out of place, for the first half of the song, the band was trying to have a more 1950s vibe going on. Then the second half is much more progressive territory with great organ work. I find this album a bit underrated in light of their followup, As Your Mind Flies By, but it's a great album and a great way to start the Charisma label.As for Somebody's Watching, that one was their fourth album, from 1973, their second for Polydor. Apparently by the time they came to Polydor, they temporarily broke up previously, with Graham Field teaming up with ex-King Crimson and future Greenslade drummer Andy McCulloch to form Fields (who had an album released in 1971 on CBS), and Mark Ashton playing with tons of other artists (that I'm not familiar with). When they came back together, the band now consisted of just Steve Gould and David Kaffinetti, with brand new musicians, this time with guitarists. Their first Polydor album, Epic Forest might as well be another band calling themselves Rare Bird. Steve Gould's vocals seemed to be greatly reduced, and they went for a more mellow, West Coast-influenced sound, influenced by the likes of Crosby, Stills & Nash (even some of the vocals sound like Graham Nash), with a stronger acoustic bent, sound little like the two albums they did for Charisma. Still it's a great album. With Somebody's Watching, they added ex-Van der Graaf Generator bassist Nic Potter, and the band went for a slightly funkier sound, such as the title track and "Third Time Around", with David Kaffinetti including some clavinet on some of the pieces, especially "Turn Your Head". "Who is the Hero" and "High in the Morning" are another one of those examples of this new version of Rare Bird having a more West Coast-influenced sound, while "Turn Your Head" is a nice piece despite much of the song simple repeats "Turn your head around" over and over. Then there's "Dollars", where they do Ennio Morricone's theme to Sergio Leone's well-known Spaghetti Western, For a Few Dollars More (w/Clint Eastwood), and then do an extended and wonderful jam afterwards. While I feel Somebody's Watching is not quite as strong as Epic Forest, it's still quite good. I'd give four stars to Somebody's Watching, but a full five for their debut, and since I can't do four and a half here for the 2 for 1 CD set, I'd have to give it the full five. Regardless, this is a great way to hear the original and second version of Rare Bird.
5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Rare Bird no frills just great music.,
By A Customer
This review is from: 1st//Somebody's Watching (Audio CD)
This Rare Bird debut Album is a unique example of keyboard driven rock which was recorded in London in late 1969.The music has a unique sound with the use of keyboards instead of guitars with Graham Field on Hammond Organ and David Kaffinetti on Electric Piano.The sublime keyboard playing of Kaffinetti and Field comes to the fore on the compositions 'Times' and 'God of War' the latter being a precursor for progressive rock.Steve Goulds vocals are excellent on the powerful track 'Beautiful Scarlet ,Mark Ashton also does a great job on drums and backing vocals . The lyrics of the track 'Sympathy'seem more relevant today than when they were first written 35 years ago. Rare Bird were simply the best.Why they never made it big in the UK is a mystery,on this CD you also get the Somebody's Watching album which has a different sound than the original band had, but also has some fine tracks on it.
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
EXCELLENT SET!!!!!!,
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: 1st//Somebody's Watching (Audio CD)
I was lucky enough to find a seller who had the 2CD set of this...which contained RARE BIRD 1969...AS YOUR MIND FLIES BY 1970..SOMEBODY'S WATCHING 1973...and BORN AGAIN 1974...all tracks are present and remastered (very consistent sound thoughout) by the Italian company VHRCD...If you can find this version....GET IT!!! I paid the same price as the 2on1 cd. I waited a very long time for these to finally be remastered....and was worth the wait
4 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
solid debut from largely forgotten progressive rock band,
By
This review is from: 1st//Somebody's Watching (Audio CD)
i haven't heard the somebody's watching album, and know relatively little music from the latter incarnation of rare bird. rare bird were a talented outfit that emerged at the end of the 1960's. stylistically, they are an early progressive rock band somewhat reminiscent of yes or early genesis, and unlike most bands in that they lacked a guitar player...most fans seem to believe that their greatest moment was their 2nd lp, as your mind flies by. steve gould's vocals can occasionally be heavy handed, but at the same time, he does possess a powerful voice... the outstanding tracks on this good but not outstanding debut are sympathy and beautiful scarlet. sympathy was a minor hit in the u.k., but apparently a big hit in continental europe, and the song did receive some airplay here in the u.s.a., where the rare bird album reached a modestly successful 117 on the billboard charts. sympathy is a rather simple, brief, and haunting ballad that is essentially a plea for peace and compassion with pertinent and relevant lyrics, it is surprising that it wasn't an even bigger hit. beautiful scarlet is a minor masterpiece that belongs in a progressive rock canon of sorts, with nice tempo changes, thrilling (if to some listeners somewhat pompous/ cliched keyboard runs that kind of sounds like the type of music where the silent movie villain is tying the hero's girlfriend to the train tracks!) and fine vocals. god of war is another fine track, and while there are some other decent tunes, there is indeed some filler that precludes this album from being a true classic of the genre. however, the album should appeal to prog fans and enthusiasts of 60's rock, as the two cuts i've mentioned are superb.
1 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Rare white soul from Prog' Dinosaurs...,
By
This review is from: 1st//Somebody's Watching (Audio CD)
It's funny reading the other reviews on this page, as they all seem to concentrate on the first LP in this collection.Personally I think it's dysmal.At a time when rock music was being over taken by self important and serious 'musicians' and wonderful youthful psychedelic punk kids like the Small Faces and Syd Barrett were getting knocked out of the way, this first Rare Bird recording shows why the intellectualisation of pop music had to be erradicated by 1976.Over blown self indugent boredom...... Now as for 'Somebody's Watching'..that's a whole different kettle of hippies! I LOVE this LP.I've had it on vinyl for about 30 years and was delighted to find it on CD.As previously mentioned,the sound of this is so totally different from the 1st LP, that it's hard to imagine why they kept the same band name! It's akin to Led Zeppelin turning into Bucks Fizz! But there are some truely wonderful songs on this recording, from upbeat pop - Somebody's Watching- to meloncholic sadness of High in the Morming (which sounds like a plea to a drug addicted friend to clean up).There is hard rock/pop in the likes of Third time around and Dollars.But the creme de la creme is without a doubt the genius of 'More and more'.White soul at it's best, harmonies that would have put the O'jays to shame.Right up there with the Average White Band at the time.Magnificent. The 5 stars in my review are aimed at 'Somebody's watching' as I'd give the first LP a whacking great ZERO. But for the latter recordings, worth the price of purchase alone.Wonderful. |
|
Most Helpful First | Newest First
|
|
1st//Somebody's Watching by Rare Bird (Audio CD - 1997)
Used & New from: $15.98
| ||