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Genre: p
Rating: 3
stars ***
Title: Freedom
Company: ABC
Catalog: C
Year: 19
Country/State: G
Grade
(cover/record): VG / VG
Comments: m
Available: 1
Catalog ID: 5
Price: $
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I'
"Freedom" track listing:
(side 1)
1.)
(side
2)
1.)
Freedom's
third album, originally issued in 1970 and reissued on CD in 2000 by Angel
Air, is dire period British hard rock in the power trio format. While
there's occasional laid-back reflective songwriting amongst the largely
original material, its lumpy rhythms and unexceptional melodies make it hard
to say much of anything about it, really, except to note that it's easy to
envision them as a support act on any number of shows and tours of the era.
The numbers emphasizing vocal harmonies are at least inoffensive (if
boring), which can't be said of their outings into boogie blues-rock and
proto-metal (as on the title track) that really grate. It might have been a
cool idea in 1970 to cover the
Standells' "Dirty Water," which wasn't a hit in Britain and
wasn't yet fashionable as a garage band standard. It is not cool,
however, to retitle the song "Frustrated Woman" and take the
songwriting credits, as the members do even on the sleeve of the 2000 CD
release.
A spin-off of Procol
Harum, Freedom
was formed by guitarist Ray
Royer and drummer Bobby
Harrison. Both of them were in Procol
Harum's lineup at the outset for their debut "A Whiter Shade
of Pale" single, but were ousted almost immediately when Procol
singer, Gary
Brooker, enlisted his former bandmates from the Paramounts,
Robin
Trower and Barry
Wilson, as replacements. Freedom's
early sound, perhaps unsurprisingly, echoed Procol
Harum's in its prominent use of organ and piano, as well as heavy
rock guitar, and like Procol
Harum's early records, captured late British psychedelia as it was
starting to inch toward progressive rock.
Freedom
wasn't a Procol
Harum clone, though, with a somewhat poppier take on psychedelia
that was closer to Traffic
than Procol
Harum. Their initial lineup only released two singles in 1968
before breaking up, also recording a soundtrack for an obscure Italian
film by Dino
De Laurentis, Attraction/Black on White. The soundtrack LP was
given a limited release in Italy -- so limited, in fact, that the
group members themselves were unaware that it had come out. Recorded
with noted future producers Eddie
Kramer and Glyn
Johns engineering, this was reissued on CD in 1999, and is
actually a pretty good if derivative slice of late-'60s British
psychedelia.
In 1968, Harrison
decided to reorganize the band completely -- in fact, so totally that
he was the only remaining original member. More albums came out in the
late '60s and early '70s which, in keeping with overall British rock
trends of the period, were in a much heavier, hard, bluesier style.
These were middle-of-the-pack, or a little lower than the
middle-of-the-pack, efforts with nothing to make them stand out from
the crowd in a clogged field. They did get to tour the U.S. as support
for Black
Sabbath and Jethro
Tull, and broke up in 1972 after some personnel changes. Harrison
became the lead singer in the little-known Snafu,
while guitarist Roger
Saunders, from the later incarnation of the band, did some session
work, joined Medicine
Head, and played in Gary
Glitter's group during the '80s.
ALBUMS: |
1(A) |
FREEDOM |
(Probe SPBA 6252) |
1970 SC |
2(A) |
THROUGH THE YEARS (US only) |
(Cotillion SD 9048) |
1971 R1 |
3(A) |
FREEDOM: THROUGH THE YEARS |
(Vertigo 6360 049) |
1971 R1 |
4(A) |
FREEDOM IS MORE THAN A WORD |
(Vertigo 6360 072) |
1972 R2 |
NB: There's also a CD release, Through The Years
(Repertoire REP 4226-WP) 1991 and in 1994 Tenth Planet released Nerosubianco
(TP 011), a film Soundtrack previously only released in Italy (Atlantic ATL
08028) in 1969.
45s: |
1 |
Where Will You Be Tonight/TryingTo Get A Glimpse Of
You |
(Mercury MF 1033) |
1968 |
2 |
Escape While You Can/Kandy Kay |
(Plexium PXM 3) |
1969 |
3 |
Frustrated Woman/Man Made Laws |
(Probe 504) |
1970 |
4 |
Thanks/Little Miss Louise |
(Vertigo 6059 051) |
1971 |
A heavy rock group who had a good live act but whose albums were rather
mundane. The best track on Through The Years (the US edition) was Freestone,
the opener. The title cut, Get Yourself Together and London City
were competent but unexceptional heavy rock tracks, whilst Thanks was
mellow and more mainstream. The final track, Toe Grabber, was based
on boring guitar riffs. By the time of their final effort for Vertigo in
1972 they'd veered towards country-rock!
Bobby Harrison had previously banged the skins for Procol
Harum and went on to perform vocal duties with Snafu.
Ray Royer had played guitar in Procol
Harum. They formed Freedom when they were given a generous out of
court financial settlement to leave Procol
Harum because they were considered to be incompatible with the rest of
the band's sound.
They also contributed two tracks, Nobody and Frustrated Woman,
from their first album to Probe's Handle With Care sampler. The flip
side of their Mercury 45 can also be heard on Psychedelia,
Vol. 2 (LP) and Hen's
Teeth Vol. 1 (CD). This is an excellent slice of pop-psych penned by
Ray Royer.
Prior to their first UK album they put out an album called At Last,
which was only released in Germany (Metronome MLP 15371) 1970 and in France
on (Byg 529325) 1970. This is reputed to contain some good slices of
psychedelia. During the Winter of 1967/8 Freedom (Harrison, Royer,
Mike Lease (keyb'ds) and Steve Shirley (bs, vcls) were invited to contribute
to the Soundtrack of the film 'Nerosubianco' ('The Attraction'), which was
masterminded by noted Italian producer Dino De Laurentiis. The resulting
album has now been issued in the UK by Tenth Planet and sounding similar to Procol
Harum or instrumentally to early Traffic
is worth a listen.
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