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3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars +1/2 -- Power-pop classic finally on CD after thirty-five years, November 16, 2008
This review is from: No More No Less (Audio CD)
At the time of its 1973 release, No More, No Less, received glowing reviews from Rolling Stone, Creem and Bomp, and the band was on their way with opening slots for Aerosmith, Bob Seger and Nazareth, and even Dick Clark gave them a spin on American Bandstand. By the following year, however, a lack of sales led to the dissolution of their contract with Mercury. The band managed one more album in 1979, but essentially disappeared without making a lasting popular mark. Further, unlike fellow cult pop heroes such as the Rubinoos, Blue Ash's unreissued catalog left their legacy in the hands of a small but influential cadre of fans: Chicago columnist Bob Greene mentioned Blue Ash in an end-of-the-70s best-of column, the Records covered "Abracadabra (Have You Seen Her?)," and Scram's Lost in the Grooves highlighted the No More, No Less as a lost treasure. While the band's debut continued to languish in the vault, a 2004 two-CD set Around Again served up demos and outtakes that suggested what we were all missing.

Apparently the haggling over rights and the location of master tapes appears to have been settled, because thirty-five years after its initial release, the original dozen tracks are finally on CD. Best of all, this is a rarity that lives up to its hype, delivering on all the promises of early-70s power pop. Blue Ash, like Big Star, The Raspberries, Badfinger and less commercially successful peers such as the Flamin' Groovies and Hot Dogs, melded the best of mid-60s harmony with the beefier guitar and drum sounds of the early-70s. They then pressed this combination into the compositionally economic mold that commercial FM borrowed from its AM cousins and used to dethrone its free-form older brothers. The results are effervescent three-minute radio gems that pack musical adventure into a tightly scripted form: guitar solos that sting with energy rather than drag with excess showmanship, Keith Moon-inspired full-kit drumming that serves as a motor rather than an gaudy accessory, melodies that lay their barbed hooks in the first verse, and choruses that lend themselves to immediate sing-a-longs.

As much as the band set out to make pop music that reflected the Beatles, Kinks and Beau Brummels, they did so in a new context. The album's two covers are instructive: Dylan's then-unreleased acoustic-and-harmonica travelogue "Dusty Old Fairgrounds" was rearranged into a blazing Who-styled drums-and-guitar rocker, and the Beatles' "Any Time at All" mimics the original's gentler verses, but lays down heavier rock for the choruses. That stretching between the sweet pop and rock dynamic characterizes much of the album, as the group employed Byrdsian jangle, Left Banke harmonics and even Brewer & Shipley styled country folk-rock, and then turned around to lay on guitar and rhythm section muscle. The opening "Abracadabra (Have You Seen Her?)," the wishful "All I Want" and the closing "Let There Be Rock" offer the glam-guitar energy of Mott the Hoople and Slade, and though "Smash My Guitar" never attains Who-like ferocity, it still manages to play out its angst with a one-take real-life smashup.

The traditional hard-luck broken hearts of power-pop turn up on "Plain to See," and the nostalgic tone of the Flamin' Groovies is heard on "I Remember a Time" and "Wasting My Time." There are country influences on "Just Another Game," bubblegum on "Here We Go Again" and West Coast folk rock (with wonderful accents of volume-pedal guitar) on "What Can I Do for You." It's easy to tag all these influences and fellow-travelers in retrospect, but in 1973 these sounds were simply part of the atmosphere, rather than icons already ripened for imitation. Blue Ash interpreted their `60s influences in the context and conventions of their times. What's surprising is how undated it still sounds, particularly compared to the radio pop of just a few years later. By sticking to the basics of guitar, bass, drums and a hint of piano, by relying on classic pop melody and craft, Blue Ash minted a timeless classic. 4-1/2 stars, if allowed fractional ratings. [©2008 hyperbolium dot com]
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3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars "Back from the Ashes": grab this lost gem while you can~, November 4, 2008
By 
J. DiMoia (Singapore, SG) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: No More No Less (Audio CD)
"No More, No Less" was one of those albums that I first encountered in high school through reading through Robert Christgau's 1970's volume, an album that I could never listen to because it was already out of print even then, but the review alone made me want more. There was also a brief account of this one in "Back from the Groove," I think--

I then encountered the first cut "Have You Seen Her?" on one of the Rhino Poptopia collections (1970's volume), and grew further intrigued, leading me to purchase the "Around and Around" demos when they came out a few years back on NOT LAME records.

So the verdict? This album holds up quite well, and the rating should be about a 4.25 but the Amazon system doesn't appear to accommodate fractionalquarter or half stars. The great cuts "Have You Seen Her," "Let It Be Rock," and "I Remember a Time" should have dominated 70's radio, as this was a band that combined Byrdsy / Searchers guitar (the "I Remember a Time" jangling intro) flourishes with a stronger rock edge.

In fact, I'm not always sure if "power pop" serves as the best description for this album, as it possesses much more bite than some of the other bands in this classification (sorry Rasberries fans). The cover of "Anytime at All" further illustrates my point, as it indicates the sources upon which the band was drawing: very early Beatles, that hybrid fusion of late 1950's American R & B with early 60's pop instincts. Even a few of the other tracks have touches of the late 1960's / early 1970's--I'm hearing traces of the Allmans and Traffic on come of the longer cuts--as the band explores its ability to jam, but this if focused playing, rarely excessive.

So grab this one now before it goes out of print, and let's hope the 2nd one also gets the same reissue treatment--in fact my only major complaint was that this wasn't issued as a double CD, which makes me think that the marketing folks are holding out for a separate reissue of the two albums.

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0 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Classic Pop Rock, January 31, 2009
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This review is from: No More No Less (Audio CD)
Long out of print, this classic album of the 70's is back. If you enjoyed the Raspberries back in the day, you will certainly like this album. Blue Ash does a great job of combining the pop and hard rock of the time. Unfortunately, few ever heard of this band at the time and even fewer today are enjoying it. Hopefully, with this re-release more will discover it.
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0 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The definition of Power Pop., January 15, 2009
This review is from: No More No Less (Audio CD)
Blue Ash were the definition of Power Pop on this record. They took all of their influences, The Beatles, The Kinks, The Who, etc. and blended them into a new genre. "Abracadabra(Have You Seen Her?)", "Dusty Old Fairgrounds", "Any Time At All", and all the rest of the songs here are examples of this new genre, Power Pop, especially "Any Time At All". Blue Ash takes this great Beatles song and kicks in into a higher gear. I hope that someone reissues their second, and last, album on CD.
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No More No Less
No More No Less by Blue Ash (Audio CD - 2008)
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