クリームのジャック・ブルースが1971年7月にリリースしたソロ・アルバム『Harmony Row』が新たに2CD+2Blu-rayの4枚組ボックスセットで発売!
このボックスセットでは、『Harmony Row』をオリジナル・マスターテープから新たにリマスター&ミックスして収録。
CD1は、1971年のオリジナル・ミックスのリマスター・ヴァージョン、CD2には、スティーブン・W・テイラーによる新しいステレオ・ミックスを収録。Blu-ray1には、スティーブン・W・テイラーによる5.1サラウンド・サウンド&ステレオ・ミックスを収録。以上の各ディスクには、未発表のセッションアウトテイクやデモなどのボーナス・トラックが追加収録されている。
また、Blu-ray2には、1971年のグラナダTVコンサートのパフォーマンスや、1972年にドイツで放送されたジャック・ブルースのTVドキュメンタリー『Swing In』を収録。シド・スミスによる新しいエッセイを掲載したイラストブックも付属。
■収録内容
DISC 1
Harmony Row
The original mix remastered
1 Can You Follow?
2 Escape to the Royal Wood (On Ice)
3 You Burned the Tables On Me
4 There’s a Forest
5 Morning Story
6 Folk Song
7 Smiles and Grins
8 Post War
9 A Letter of Thanks
10 Victoria Sage
11 The Consul at Sunset
Bonus tracks
12 Green Hills (Can You Follow?)
13 There’s a Forest (first take)
14 You Burned the tables on Me (Electric Piano version)
15 Can You Follow? (first take)
DISC 2
Harmony Row
The new stereo mixes by Stephen W Tayler
1 Can You Follow?
2 Escape to the Royal Wood (On Ice)
3 You Burned the Tables On Me
4 There’s a Forest
5 Morning Story
6 Folk Song
7 Smiles and Grins
8 Post War
9 A Letter of Thanks
10 Victoria Sage
11 The Consul at Sunset
Bonus tracks
12 Riffs (Take 14)
13 Smiles and Grins (Olympic Studios demo)
14 A Letter of Thanks (Olympic Studios demo)
15 End Piece
DISC 3
BLU-RAY - Harmony Row
96 kHz / 24-bit new 5.1 Surround Sound & stereo mixes by Stephen W Tayler
1 Can You Follow?
2 Escape to the Royal Wood (On Ice)
3 You Burned the Tables On Me
4 There’s a Forest
5 Morning Story
6 Folk Song
7 Smiles and Grins
8 Post War
9 A Letter of Thanks
10 Victoria Sage
11 The Consul at Sunset
Bonus tracks
12 Riffs (Take 14)
13 Smiles and Grins (Olympic Studios demo)
14 A Letter of Thanks (Olympic Studios demo)
15 End Piece
DISC 4
BLU-RAY - Jack Bruce & Friends: Out Front -
Granada TV 1971
1 Smiles & Grins
2 A Letter of Thanks
3 Folk Song
4 Powerhouse Sod
5 You Burned the Tables On Me
Swing In WDR TV 1972
6 You Burned the Tables On Me
7 Theme for an Imaginary Western
8 Politician
9 Rope Ladder to the Moon
10 Folk Song
発売・販売元 提供資料(2025/04/24)
Harmony Row is the legitimate follow-up to Jack Bruceexcellent songs for a tailor, although 1971 also saw the almost-simultaneous release of 1968 jazz tapes entitled Things We Like by this artist. An elaborate gatefold package has a shadow photo of the artist from the back, overlooking a golden sun on the waters. The self-produced disc begins with the pop excursion Can You Follow, which blends into Escape To The Royal Wood (On Ice). Jack Bruce provides the voice, keyboards, bass, and some percussion, making this very much a solo project. You Burned The Tables On Me takes things into a progressive rock-meets-jazz arena. The only reference to blues here is Bruces voice, but guitarist Chris Speddings scratchy guitar, and the percussion -- either by Jack Bruce or drummer John Marshall (who plays on what is not specified) make the track sound almost like Cream without Clapton. Theres a rare photo of Peter Brown in the second cardboard gatefold, and one of Bruce, while all of Browns lyrics are spread out for public consumption. A nice touch, as Peter Brown is to Jack Bruce what Keith Reid is to Procul Harum, and the cleverly obscured words are sometimes the only foundation to grasp at while one of rock & rolls most innovative bassists goes from genre to genre, combining rhythms and melodies that defy commercial categorization. Harmony Row is the album that combines many flavors of Bruces experimentations, making it courageous, adventurous, and hardly the product for a mass audience. Folk Song is barely a folk song; it is a progressive pop tune with that elegant, Procul Harum-like, sweeping, mystical statement. Theres a pretty piano against church-like organ and vocals, with amazing guitar embellishments by Chris Spedding. Folk Song has elements Bruce would examine again, on the album Monkjack; its a song which should have made him the darling of underground FM radio. Its a far cry from the all-out assault of his forthcoming power trio, West, Bruce & Laing, which emerged a year after this. The delicacy of Smiles And Grins suggests that hard jazz is what would have given the project with Leslie West a much needed diversion. But what happened was that Bruce embraced the trail Mountain stampeded down, while a purer blending of the two would have been re-readings of this Harmony Row material. Post War is a good example of how the underappreciated Leslie West could have expanded his influence -- Speddings contributions are enormous, and like West, he is the only other musician save the drummer on Bruces essential projects in 1971 and 1972, on the albums Harmony Row, and Why Dontcha. Drummer John Marshall appeared on the previous Songs for a Tailor, as did Spedding, though they didnt perform together on that disc. Here, Jack Bruce takes two players from that solo album, and moves them into another head-space. His use of the talents around him is impeccable, and yet another reason why fans should have embraced this quirky and intelligent troubadour. A Letter Of Thanks is so complex it borders on The Mothers Of Invention-style of non-groove, while Victoria Sage is more in-line with the ideas set forth on Songs for a Tailor, and with exquisite vocals by this tremendous singer. The final track, the tasty, Spanish-influenced The Consul At Sunset, utilizes multiple percussive ideas with piano and guitars overlapping Peter Browns words; those words are as important as the contributions from Marshall, Spedding, and Bruce. Its actually quite an amazing transition when set against the other discs released in this four-year period, and a stunning output from a major artist without yielding a Top 40 hit. ~ Joe Viglione
Rovi