The 4 Seasons' 1969 psych-pop classic The Genuine Imitation Life Gazette was one of the strangest and most unexpected concept albums of the '60s, and though it's been in and out of print several times in the CD era, it's never been showcased as well as it is in Collectors' Choice's new edition, which pairs the album with the far more straightforward 1966 collection Working My Way Back To You. Genuine Imitation's glee-club vocals and British Invasion shimmer are as lovely and ludicrous as ever, and songs like the sympathy-for-the-clueless-middle-class bounder "Mrs. Stately's Garden" and the ravages-of-divorce sketch "Saturday's Father" remain surprisingly moving. Still, the album's major appeal comes from hearing Frankie Valli and his mates appropriate melodies from "Hey Jude" and sing lines like "Chameleons changing colors while a crocodile cries." As for Working, it combines hits like the title track and "Can't Get Enough Of You Baby" with legitimately rocking post-Dylan pastiches. The weirdest? "Beggars Parade," an anti-hippie anthem in a "Positively 4th Street" vein, with the winning line, "Why should you work like the rest when it's easier to protest?" Genuine: B+; Working: B The crate-digging heroes at The Numero Group have taken one of their periodic breaks from compilations to reissue a full album, Catherine Howe's airy 1971 folk-jazz curio What A Beautiful Place. Fans of Van Morrison, Joni Mitchell, The 5th Dimension, and Nick Drake should find a lot to like in Howe's gentle, windswept ballads, though deeply personal lost-love songs like "Nothing More Than Strangers," "Words Through A Locked Door," and "It's Not Likely" have their own kind of bruised integrity. These pretty, solemn songs couch hard truths in soft clothes A- The college-rock sound and North Carolina music scene of the '80s can both be traced back to The Sneakers, a little Winston-Salem band featuring contributions from Chris Stamey, Will Rigby, Mitch Easter, and Don Dixon during its brief run at underground success in the late '70s. The compilation Nonsequitur Of Silence (Collectors' Choice) combines a few rare tracks, some re-recordings, and the band's two EPs, 1976's The Sneakers and 1979's In The Red. The latter EP and the bonus tracks are merely okay, showing an inexperienced group of singer-songwriters trying too hard to smooth out their rough edges. But The Sneakers is a real wonder, combining hooky Big Star power-pop with clunky Captain Beefheart abstraction—the latter probably unintentionally, though that doesn't make it any less effective. B+
Recent
-
Jan 30, 2007
Music in BriefThe Earlies caught the ears of discerning listeners with the 2004 EP collection These Were The Earlies, a bewitching combination of...
-
Jan 23, 2007
Music in BriefAnyone who's ever wondered what Will Oldham's alt-country croak would sound like in front of sludgy psychedelic hard rock should cock an ear...
-
Jan 16, 2007
Music in BriefSome people took Rancid to task for ripping off The Clash, but The Clash was a great band, and under-influential given the wide variety of its...
-
Jan 9, 2007
Music in BriefLaunched in 1965 by New York attorney and Esperanto aficionado Bernard Stollman, ESP-Disk' found a permanent niche in "out" music with its...
-
Jan 2, 2007
Music in BriefListen to the alternate universe of The O.C. collapse on itself via the show's sixth (!) soundtrack disc, Covering Our Tracks...
-
Dec 27, 2006
Music in BriefThe DVD series Live At Full House Rock Show (ARD) presents mid-'80s concerts originally broadcast on German television. The latest...
-
Dec 19, 2006
Christmas Music In BriefSarah McLachlan's basic sound—all music-box tinkle and formless angelic moan—represents the best and worst of Christmas music...
-
Dec 13, 2006
Music in BriefHo-diddly-ho, it's the most wonderful time of the year for those of us tired of the endless flood of new music: the time when record labels,...
-
Dec 5, 2006
Music in BriefFor a preview of what may be awaiting retro-pop fans in 2007, try Barcelona+ (Silverthree), a three-song EP (plus five generally...


- Comments