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Message from the Country

 
Album Review: Message from the Country

  • Artist: The Move
  • Rating: StarStarStarStarHalf Star
  • Release Date: 1971
  • Total Time: 38:28
  • Genre: Rock

Review

By 1971, it was clear that changes were in the offing for the Move. Message from the Country shows them carrying their sound, within the context of who they were, about as far as they could. One can hear them hit the limits of what guitars, bass, drums, and keyboards, with lots of harmony overdubs and ornate singing, could do. Indeed, parts of this record sound almost like a dry run from the first Electric Light Orchestra album, which was in the planning stages at the time. The influence of the Beatles runs through most of the songs stylistically. In Jeff Lynne's case, it was as though someone had programmed "Paperback Writer" and other chronologically related pop-psychedelic songs by the Beatles into their songwriting and arranging, but the album also shot for a range of sound akin to The White Album across the ten songs on this album -- except that the members of the Move are obviously working much more closely together. Reduced to a trio and all but wiped out as a live act, they went ahead and generated what was, song for song, their most complex and challenging album. Heard today, it seems charmingly ornate in execution yet also simple in the listening, very basic rock & roll dressed up in the finest raiment that affordable studio time could provide. Despite the obvious jump from the post-psychedelic "Message from the Country" to the driving, delightful "Ella James" and the leap into airy pop-psychedelia on "No Time," not to mention the novelty interlude of "Don't Mess Me Up," there's a sense of unity here, the entire album somehow holding together as something powerful, bracing, and visceral, yet cheerfully trippy. In that sense, it goes The White Album one better. Based on its musical merits, it all should have sold the way some ELO albums later did, instead of getting lost in the transition between the histories of the two groups. Even decades on, it was still essential listening for fans of either the Move or ELO, as well as Roy Wood. ~ Bruce Eder, All Music Guide

Tracks

Track TitleComposersPerformersTime
It Wasn't My Idea to Dance Roy Wood The Move (3:31)
The Minister Jeff Lynne The Move (4:29)
Message from the Country (Lyrics) Jeff Lynne The Move (4:45)
The Words of Aaron Jeff Lynne The Move (5:26)
Ben Crawley Steel Company Roy Wood The Move (3:07)
Until Your Mama's Gone Roy Wood The Move (5:06)
No Time (Lyrics) Jeff Lynne The Move (3:39)
Ella James Roy Wood The Move (3:13)
Don't Mess Me Up Bev Bevan The Move (3:11)
My Marge (Lyrics) Jeff Lynne, Roy Wood The Move (2:01)

Credits

Jeff Lynne (Bass), Jeff Lynne (Guitar), Jeff Lynne (Keyboards), Jeff Lynne (Vocals), Jeff Lynne (?), The Move (Main Performer), Roy Wood (Guitar), Roy Wood (Vocals), Roy Wood (Wind), Roy Wood (?), Bev Bevan (Drums), Bev Bevan (Vocals), Bev Bevan (?), Denny Cordell (Producer), Denny Cordell (?)
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Wikipedia: Message from the Country
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Message from the Country
Studio album by The Move
Released 8 October 1971
2005 Remastered
Genre Rock
Length 38:28
Label UK Harvest
USA Capitol
Producer Roy Wood and Jeff Lynne
Professional reviews
The Move chronology
Looking On
(1970)
Message from The Country
(1971)
US alternate album cover

Message from The Country is the fourth and last album by The Move, as well as its only album for EMI's Harvest Records. This album has long had the reputation as The Move's best album, although it was recorded while the band was transitioning itself into the Electric Light Orchestra.

Contents

History

Recorded in 1970-71 at the same time that The Move was also laying down tracks for the first Electric Light Orchestra album (and even during some of the same sessions), there are inevitably some similarities in style between the two albums, especially the heavy use of "tracking up" (overdubbing) to capture all of the instruments being played by Roy Wood and Jeff Lynne. Nevertheless, Wood and Lynne were determined to maintain some differentiation between the sound of their two groups (for example, by confining Wood's saxes to Message and Wood's cellos to the ELO debut). All the same, there are evident similarities between the songs on Message and what was to follow from both men.

The title track has a certain amount in common with ELO’s "10538 Overture", another Lynne composition recorded during these sessions. Wood's "Until Your Mama’s Gone" is the "godfather" of "Ball Park Incident", Wood’s first single with Wizzard, the group he formed after leaving ELO in 1972. "Don't Mess Me Up", Bev Bevan's sole contribution to the songwriting, is an affectionate tribute to the 1950s rock'n'roll and doo-wop sound, in particular that of Elvis Presley and the Jordanaires, and Lynne's "The Minister" has sometimes been likened, very favourably, to the Beatles' "Paperback Writer".

The Move was also responsible for the cover, as the painting was done by Roy Wood, based on an idea by Jeff Lynne.

The lengthy sessions for this album mostly just involved Wood and Lynne, because of all the tracking up being done. As a result, during these sessions, bassist Rick Price quit The Move, reducing it to a trio. Instead of replacing him, Roy Wood added bass duties to his other roles, as well as erasing Price's tracks on the existing songs and then re-recording the bass lines. Although drummer Bevan did not quit, in the liner note for the 2005 reissue he states that this is his least-favorite Move album.

However, US rock critic Robert Christgau has called Message the Move's "only decent, only great album."[1]

All previous Move singles had been solo Roy Wood compositions, but this album presented a problem with only four such songs (with four songs by Lynne, one Lynne-Wood joint credit, and one Bevan song). Ultimately, Wood's "Ella James" was released as a single in 1971, but it was quickly withdrawn when Harvest Records and the group felt that Wood's "Tonight" (not originally on Message) would be a more commercial choice for The Move's first single on the Harvest label. No other song from the album was ever issued as a single, although The Move released two more hit singles ("Chinatown" and "California Man") before becoming ELO permanently.

"Ella James" was later covered by The Nashville Teens.

The initial 1971 album on the Harvest label in the UK and Capitol Records in the US contained tracks 1-10 below (with an alternate album cover - seen at right - on the US release), as did a later reissue on CD on Beat Goes On Records in the UK and One Way Records in the US, both long since deleted. The bonus tracks on the current reissue are alternative takes and A-sides or B-sides of singles.

The US rights to the Message songs were transferred to United Artists Records shortly after the release of Message, and various compilation albums and CDs containing some combination of the songs on Message and the five single tracks were released in the US by United Artists for years prior to this comprehensive reissue. One such album is the 1972 LP release Split Ends; another is the 1995 CD Great Move: The Best of The Move.

Track listing

  1. "Message From The Country" (Jeff Lynne) – 4:45
  2. "Ella James" (Roy Wood) – 3:11
  3. "No Time" (Lynne) – 3:38
  4. "Don’t Mess Me Up" (Bev Bevan) – 3:07
  5. "Until Your Mama’s Gone" (Wood) – 5:03
  6. "It Wasn’t My Idea to Dance" (Wood) – 5:28
  7. "The Minister" (Lynne) – 4:27
  8. "Ben Crawley Steel Company" (Wood) – 3:02
  9. "The Words of Aaron" (Lynne) – 5:25
  10. "My Marge" (Lynne-Wood) – 1:59

Bonus Tracks (2005 reissue)

11. "Tonight" (Wood) – 3:15
12. "Chinatown" (Wood) – 3:06
13. "Down on the Bay" (Lynne) – 4:14
14. "Do Ya" (Lynne) – 4:03
15. "California Man" (Wood) – 3:35
16. "Don't Mess Me Up" (Alternate session version) (Wood) – 3:18
17. "The Words of Aaron" (Alternate session version) (Lynne) – 6:03
18. "Do Ya" (Alternate session version) (Lynne) – 7:00 (includes "hidden track" of "My Marge" (Alternate session version) (Lynne-Wood))

Personnel

  • Roy Wood – lead and backing vocals, guitars, steel guitar, recorders, bass, clarinet, bassoon, tenor and baritone saxes.
  • Jeff Lynne – lead and backing vocals, guitars, piano, percussion.
  • Bev Bevan – drums, backing vocals, lead vocal on 'Ben Crawley Steel Company'.
  • Rick Price - bass on some original tracks (erased and redubbed by Wood)


Notes



 
 

 

Copyrights:

Album Review. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Message from the Country" Read more

 

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