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The Sound of 65/There's a Bond Between Us

 
Album Review: The Sound of 65/There's a Bond Between Us

Review

This two-LPs-on-one-CD package is essential listening for anyone who is seriously interested in either British blues, the Rolling Stones' early sound, or the history of popular music, in England or America, during the late '50s and early '60s. In England during the years 1957-1962, jazz and blues used to intermix freely, especially among younger blues enthusiasts and more open-minded jazzmen -- by 1963, most of the former had gone off to form bands like the Rolling Stones, the Yardbirds, the Pretty Things, etc., with guitars a the forefront of their sound, while the latter (most notably British blues godfather Alexis Korner) kept some jazz elements in their work. The Graham Bond Organization (along with Zoot Money's Big Roll Band and other, similar outfits) represented the jazzier side of the British blues boom, less charismatic and sexually provocative than blues-rock bands like the Stones or the Yardbirds, but no less potent a product of the same inspiration, sax and organ being much more prominent in their sound. Indeed, Bond's playing on the organ as represented on this CD is the distant antecedent to Keith Emerson's more ambitious keyboard excursions of 3-4 years later, without the incessant copping of classical riffs. The playing and singing (by Graham Bond and a young Jack Bruce) are curiously soulful, and when Ginger Baker takes a solo on "Oh Baby," it's a beautiful, powerful, even lyrical experience (as drum solos go), and one of those bold, transcendant, virtuoso moments, akin to Brian Jones' harmonica solo on the Stones' version of "Hi Heel Sneakers." The band was more exciting on stage, as the evidence of their one surviving early live performance indicates, but they were worth hearing on record as well. In a universe that was fair and idealized, this CD and the two albums contained on it would rank right up there in sales with anything (including the Bluesbreakers with Eric Clapton album) that John Mayall ever released, and Bond also proves himself a more fervent and exciting figure here than Mayall ever seemed on his records. ~ Bruce Eder, All Music Guide

Tracks

Track TitleComposersPerformersTime
(I'm Your) Hoochie Coochie Man Willie Dixon The Graham Bond Organisation (3:13)
Baby Make Love to Me The Graham Bond Organisation (1:52)
Neighbour, Neighbour The Graham Bond Organisation (2:40)
Early in the Morning The Graham Bond Organisation (1:50)
Spanish Blues Graham Bond The Graham Bond Organisation (3:05)
Oh Baby Graham Bond The Graham Bond Organisation (2:42)
Little Girl Graham Bond The Graham Bond Organisation (2:15)
I Want You Graham Bond The Graham Bond Organisation (1:45)
Wade in the Water Traditional The Graham Bond Organisation (2:41)
Got My Mojo Working The Graham Bond Organisation (3:11)
Train Time The Graham Bond Organisation (2:24)
Baby Be Good to Me The Graham Bond Organisation (2:35)
Half a Man Graham Bond The Graham Bond Organisation (2:06)
Tammy Ray Evans, Jay Livingston The Graham Bond Organisation (2:49)
Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? Don Kirkpatrick, Keith Knox The Graham Bond Organisation (2:05)
Hear Me Calling Your Name The Graham Bond Organisation (2:37)
The Night Time Is the Right Time Lew Herman The Graham Bond Organisation (3:01)
Walking in the Park Graham Bond The Graham Bond Organisation (3:30)
Last Night Charles "Packy" Axton, Ivan Johnson, Smoochy Smith The Graham Bond Organisation (3:00)
Baby Can It Be True? Graham Bond The Graham Bond Organisation (5:04)
What'd I Say Ray Charles The Graham Bond Organisation (4:16)
Dick's Instrumental Smoochy Smith The Graham Bond Organisation (2:33)
Don't Let Go Jesse Stone The Graham Bond Organisation (2:43)
Keep A-Drivin' Chuck Willis The Graham Bond Organisation (2:04)
Have You Ever Loved a Woman? Graham Bond The Graham Bond Organisation (4:53)
Camels and Elephants The Graham Bond Organisation (4:41)

Credits

Ginger Baker (Drums), Ginger Baker (Cover Design), Jack Bruce (Bass), Jack Bruce (Vocals), Graham Bond (Organ (Hammond)), Graham Bond (Sax (Alto)), Graham Bond (Vocals), Graham Bond (Mellotron), Graham Bond (Main Performer), Getty (Arranger), Dick Heckstall-Smith (Sax (Tenor)), Harry Shapiro (Liner Notes), Robert Stigwood (Producer), Vicki Wickham (Liner Notes), The Graham Bond Organisation (Arranger), The Graham Bond Organisation (Performer)
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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