Showing posts with label Alt-Folk. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Alt-Folk. Show all posts

Monday, March 2, 2020

Opal - Early Recordings, Volume 2


Another sad loss to the alternative music world: David Roback, guitarist and founding member of Mazzy Star, died last week in Los Angeles. Here's his obituary in the New York Times.

I was living in New Zealand in 1994, where there was plenty of great local alternative music being played on the country's stations, so I really didn't begin to hear Mazzy Star's "Fade Into You" until more than a year after it came out, when I returned to the States for grad school.


It took me forever to find out who the song was by, as it seemed that every time I heard it during that time, it wasn't identified by artist. I heard the tune on rare occasions playing softly in the background of urban hubbub in cities like Boston and Washington D.C., or would catch the tail end of it once in a while on obscure radio stations with unknown call signs, while walking the streets of other towns I was in in the mid/late '90s... and every time I was too slow to find out any information on this haunting but annoyingly obscure song. Mind you, this was long before the days of song-IDing apps like Shazam, so if you missed the radio DJ providing you with the details, or weren't around enough cool in-the-know people to clue you in, you were pretty much on your own.  But it was maddening.

Finally, while hearing the song while strolling near, of all places,
Fisherman's Wharf in San Francisco while on a visit there in the late 1990s, someone I accosted on the street told me it was a Mazzy Star tune. I immediately ran across town to Amoeba Music near Golden Gate Park and grabbed their album So Tonight That I May See. Amoeba also had the band's full discography there in the stacks under the "Mazzy Star" card; not only the albums that came
before (1990's She Hangs Brightly) and after (1996's Among My Swan) the one I went there for, but also music from bands related to the group. When I saw a copy of Opal's Early Recordings amongst the discs, it was then I knew why "Fade Into You" sounded so familiar; it was through my brief encounter with that band many years earlier that I had first become aware of the genius and songcraft of David Roback.

As per the NYT article:
"David Edward Roback was born in Los Angeles on April 4, 1958, to George and Rosemary (Hunter) Roback...  He studied art at the University of California, Berkeley, and [in 1981] formed the band Rain Parade, which included his brother, Steven.  Rain Parade was one of several bands in what became known as the Paisley Underground, a revival of psychedelic rock in California in the early 1980s. Mr. Roback left the group after it released its first album, Emergency Third Rail Power Trip (1983).

In the mid-1980s he founded the group Opal with Kendra Smith, the bassist from Dream Syndicate, and the drummer Keith Mitchell. Opal, which featured Ms. Smith as lead singer and expanded on the Paisley Underground sound, released the album Happy Nightmare Baby in 1987."
Opal evolved from Clay Allison, the band Roback formed in the immediate aftermath of his departure from Rain Parade. Clay Allison played a handful of obscure gigs across the U.S., but by the time they determined they were ready to record, the name change had already occurred (the new moniker was reportedly derived from ex-Pink Floyd Syd Barrett's 1969 song "Opel"). Opal was together for just three years; in addition to their sole 1987 LP, the group also released a pair of "psych-folk-leaning" late-80s
EPs (Fell From The Sun and Northern Line) that were later collected on the Early Recordings compilation, released on the U.S. incarnation of Britain’s Rough Trade label, which went under in 1990. Neither the album nor the EPs sold very well, which was of absolutely no concern to Roback and his reclusive band mates.  “It doesn’t matter how well our records do,” he told The San Diego Union-Tribune in 1990. “None of that matters, because we’re completely free.”

However, Rough Trade had enough faith and confidence in Opal to utilize some of its remaining limited resources to finance the recording of a simple black-and-white music video for the song "Empty Box Blues", featuring Smith and Roback enjoying a quiet day together in the countryside and on the beach:  As fate would have it, MTV VJ Dave Kendall deigned to air this video on the station's 120 Minutes program (dedicated to alternative music) sometime in mid 1990... and luckily, I happened to be watching the show that night.  Here's what I saw, and fell in love with:


I thought that "Empty Box Blues" was a damn-near perfect song: whimsical, melancholy, and filled with an undefinable sadness and nostalgic yearning. When I ran up to DC later that month (I was living in southeastern Virginia at the time), I found and purchased a cassette copy of Early Recordings containing this song at the old GWU Tower Records. It went with me on my six-month Navy deployment to South America later that year, and I got the opportunity to absorb the group's other wistful tunes, like "Strange Delight", "Northern Line" and my other fave, "My Only Friend".

What I was unaware of was that by the time I got into Opal, the group had already long ceased to exist. The band went out on the road in the fall of 1987 supporting their sole album Happy Nightmare Baby; a final gig that December in England at the Hammersmith Odeon ended with Smith hurling her guitar to the stage and abruptly announcing she was leaving the group.  Roback quickly promoted Opal backup singer Hope Sandoval to lead vocalist and reconstituted the group as Mazzy Star. After producing the three albums I referenced above, Mazzy Star went on a long hiatus beginning in 1997 before reuniting, with an album (Seasons Of Your Day) in 2013 and occasional live concerts over the past three years... right up to Roback's death last week.

Pat Thomas, current manager of Roback's former band mate Kendra Smith (even with all the turmoil surrounding the dissolution of Opal, the two remained good friends), wrote an excellent tribute/remembrance of him in this week's Variety; here it is.

Thomas's article contains the following paragraph:
At the time of his passing, Roback was working with Smith on finalizing the re-release of the [Opal] albums, which will be available digitally and physically via Ingrooves Music Group, Thomas tells Variety. The group’s 1987 opus, Happy Nightmare Baby, will not include any bonus tracks, but a 1989 compilation of earlier material called, naturally enough, Early Recordings, will include five extra songs: “Hear the Wind Blow,” “I Called Erin,” “Don’t Stop the Train,” “Sailing Boats” and an alternate version of “Empty Bottles.” (Some of these songs appeared on a bootleg compilation called Early Recordings Volume 2.)
I've owned this Volume 2 bootleg for years; these recordings are from the early days of Opal, same time frame as the previous compilation, 1983 - 1987. They were never released on any official Opal project.

Here's the complete lineup:
1. My Canyon Memory (5:00)
2. Sisters Of Mercy (4:21)
3. Sailing Boats (6:02)
4. Vespers (0:42)
5. Lisa's Funeral (6:51)
6. This Town (6:02)
7. Freight Train (1:59)
8. Wintertime (3:15)
9. Little Bit Of Rain (2:30)
10. What You've Done (3:37)
11. Cherry Jam (8:27)
12. Indian Summer (3:09)
The sound quality is less than perfect, having been taken from various tape sources, but this set contains some great tracks, songs like "Sailing Boats" (referenced above), and Kendra's take on the Leonard Cohen song "Sisters of Mercy" - a must-hear.  As such, I can't figure out why, in the wake of Roback's death, they just don't release the entire damn thing, instead of onesy-twoseys from the boot.  Therefore, I'm taking it upon myself to release this fine disc from its self-imposed shackles.

So here, for your listening pleasure and in memory of the great David Roback, are the following:
  • Opal - Early Recordings, Volume 2:  A fan-assembled compilation of unreleased band tunes (of various audio quality) put out sometime around 2006; they somehow managed to dig up even more songs for the Early Recordings period, with these previously-unheard songs mixing the acoustic bits with swirling, black-light clouds of Happy Nightmare Baby style jams; and 
  • Clay Allison - King Kong Club, College Park, MD (5-14-1984):  A rare live taping of the proto-Opal group on tour in the spring of 1984 (can't remember where I managed to track this down... but no matter).  Again, somewhat sketchy quality, but this set includes great early versions of songs that ended up on subsequent band recordings.
Enjoy, and as always, let me know what you think. RIP David, and thanks for the music.

I'll close out this tribute with one of my all-time favorite Roback compositions, "Look On Down From The Bridge" from Among My Swan:


Please use the email link below to contact me, and I will reply with the download link(s) ASAP:

Opal - Early Recordings, Volume 2: Send Email
Clay Allison - King Kong Club, College Park, MD (5-14-1984): Send Email



Thursday, May 22, 2014

Ed's Redeeming Qualities - More Bad Times


A hopelessly obscure and woefully nearly forgotten band, the alt-folk group Ed's Redeeming Qualities was formed by four New Hampshire friends in 1988.  Band members Carrie Bradley and Dan Leone met while they were students at the University of New Hampshire; they later linked up with Dan's brother Dom (who moved to the state from Ohio) and Neno Perrotta. With their quirky, funny songs (many of them written by the gifted and prolific Dom) and strange instrumentation (most of their music was driven by Carrie's violin, Dan's ukelele and Neno's bongos), Ed's Redeeming Qualities quickly became one of the darlings of Boston's late-80s indie scene, along with bands like The Pixies and Throwing Muses, playing places like the Middle East and the late lamented Rathskeller ("The Rat").

Sadly, soon after their Boston debut, Dom was diagnosed with cancer.  He died in November 1989, taking with him much of the band's spirit. After Dom's death, the band relocated to San Francisco, where they landed an album contract with a small folk label. They released two albums there in the early 1990s, More Bad Times and It's All Good News, but found little commercial success with them. Their only real mainstream radio exposure was on Dr. Demento's nationally syndicated novelty music radio show, where a couple of their songs were occasionally featured. Needless to say, that's not exactly the sort of exposure you're looking for to establish and maintain a following.

Probably the only reason I know anything about this band is that Carrie Bradley was briefly a member of The Breeders. She participated in the group's legendary demo sessions and their first album, 1990's Pod.  Ed's Redeeming Qualities received its biggest exposure in 1994, when The Breeders covered their song "Drivin' On 9" on their platinum smash Last Splash:


(The Breeders also covered the song on the Pod demos - I honestly prefer that version to the album version, but whatever . . .). Bradley joined the Deal sisters' band again as a guest during their 1994 Lollapolooza tour, and ERQ started receiving some favorable press during that time.

The positive vibes from Last Splash maintained Ed's Redeeming Qualities for a while, but with the lack of commercial success it was unsustainable. The group released one final album, At The Fish And Game Club, in 1996, before disbanding the following year. Since their demise, Carrie Bradley went on to form the band 100 Watt Smile, which released two albums in the late 1990s, and does a lot of session work. Both Dan Leone and Neno Perrotta became writers, Dan penning food and fiction columns for weekly alternative newspapers and Neno writing and publishing poetry. But ERQ is still beloved in the Boston area - they played a very well-received reunion show at TT The Bear's Place in Cambridge (just around the corner from the Middle East) in January 2011. And they still have plenty of fans across the nation, who appreciate and adore their strange and humorous songs. They might not be everyone's particular cup of tea . . . but they are well worth a listen.

Here's Ed's Redeeming Qualities' More Bad Times, released in 1990 by Flying Fish Records.  This was burned off of my vinyl copy (which, in an instance of synergynistic coolness, I bought off of a member of Washington State's Beat Happening), as the CD version is nearly impossible to track down.  Enjoy, and as always, please let me know what you think.

Please use the email link below to contact me, and I will reply with the download link(s) ASAP:

Send Email