Genre: progressive
Rating: 3
stars ***
Title: Seasons
Company: Dunhill
Catalog: DS
50091
Year: 19
Country/State: London,
England
Grade
(cover/record): VG+ / VG+
Comments: gatefold
sleeve
Available: 1
Catalog ID: 6127
Price: $20.00
|
I'
"Seasons" track listing:
(side 1)
1.)
(side
2)
1.)
NB: (1) reissued in remastered form by HTD (HTD CD 68)
1996. (3) reissued on CD (Repertoire REP 4447-WP). (5) reissued on CD
(Vertigo 846 448-2) in 1990. (6) reissued on CD (Repertoire REP 4447-WP)
1994. There's also a CD, Live At The BBC (Pseudonym CDP 1022 DD)
1995.
45s: |
1 |
Romeo Jack/Seven O'Clock Hymn |
(Fontana TF 1060) |
1969 |
2 |
Mid-Winter/Spinning Wheels Of Time |
(Mercury MF 1096) |
1969 |
3 |
All My Life/Falkland Green |
(Vertigo 6059 073) |
1972 |
4 |
Give Me Luv/Song Of Evening |
(Vertigo 6059 092) |
1973 |
This folk trio formed in the late sixties. In fact they were originally a
duo - of Yorkshire-born Simpson and Australian Tranter. Glen Stuart joined
them after they got a recording deal with Fontana. After what is now a very
rare album on Mercury, they recorded a series of fine progressive
contemporary folk albums on Vertigo. Seasons is beautiful, its
subject matter being as the title suggests. It got to No 55 in the UK Album
Charts. Guitarist Davey Johnstone was added to the line-up for the third
album which also featured a guest appearance from Rick
Wakeman. The In Concert album, which featured them live in
Amsterdam, was disappointing in comparison to Songs From Wasties Orchard,
which many consider to be their magnum opus. Johnstone departed after these
two albums to work with Elton
John and Kiki
Dee.
Stan Gordon was added for Lord Of The Ages, which was well
received. Bassist Graham Smith who'd done session work on the album joined
the group shortly after. Within the year, though, Gordon and Smith had both
departed, leaving Simpson and Stuart as a duo.
In the mid-seventies they briefly experimented with a more rock-based
format, but this, like most of their subsequent line-ups, was short-lived.
Stuart then quit the band for good in this era but Simpson remained to work
with various line-ups over the next 15 years. He also recorded a solo album,
Listen To The Man, in 1983.
You'll also find the band on Vertigo's 1971 compilation Heads
Together, First Round, playing Good Morning Sun and on Vertigo
Annual 1970, singing Goin' My Way (Road Song).
The BBC radio sessions CD contains three tracks from 1969, four from
1987, but concentrates on 1971, showcasing their distinctive brand of folk
favourably.
Prior to recording for Vertigo Magna Carta made a record for the
Road Safety Campaign. When You're Young put across a road safety
message in the lyrics and featured pleasant harmonies and acoustic guitar.
The 45 appeared on various labels credited to individual London boroughs
including Enfield and Camden. In each case the 'A' side was a song about
'The Green Cross Code' performed by kids from Argyle School in Camden. None
of the 45s had catalogue numbers.
Retrospective compilation appearances include: The Bridge At
Knaresborough Town on Electric
Psychedelic Sitar Headswirlers Vol. 6 (CD).
For more information on the band check their website: http://www.geocities.com/Broadway/3389
(Vernon Joynson/Gra Culpin)
Recently reviewed my collection of vinyl LPs from the 70's and
"Seasons" was the most significant recording. Vinyl-> digital
not up to scratch; but the re-mastered professional digital version has
transported me back in time. Absolutely fabulous!!
David
www.drthorne.net.au
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0
out of 5 stars MAGNIFICIENT,
March 30, 2008
An album I'll never get tired of listening, that's for sure...
Maybe Magna Carta's (Chris Simpson)'s master piece, together with the
magnificient album "Lord of the Ages", but there is hopefully
more to come (come on Christopher)...
Pure Magic !
Highly recommended to any music lover.
Enjoy!
Thierry
In progressive rock circles, Magna
Carta are a bit like the Little Engine That Could -- from
relatively modest beginnings in 1969, they've endured across 36 years
and counting, even as their louder, more heavily amplified rivals from
the same era have long since been consigned to history. Acts such as King
Crimson and Emerson,
Lake & Palmer may be better (and much more widely) known, but Magna
Carta have stayed together, making music decades longer. The group
was founded in 1969 by Chris
Simpson (who also sang) and Lyell
Tranter on acoustic Gibson guitars and Glen
Stuart singing harmony. Formed in London, they made their debut at
the Coalhole Folk Club in Cambridge, and coming off of the
enthusiastic response to the ten songs they did that night, Magna
Carta were rolling. They were not, strictly speaking, a pure folk
group even then, but utilized folk and traditional elements very
heavily in their songwriting and sound, in a manner similar to that
adopted by John
David Gladwin and Terry
Wincott of the
Amazing Blondel at approximately the same time.
They were signed to Mercury Records' British division and debuted with
a self-titled LP. They were then shifted over to the related Vertigo
label -- which was more specifically devoted to progressive rock acts
-- for their second album, Seasons.
By that time, their sound had solidified around Simpson's
singing, songwriting, and steel-strung Martin D18; Tranter's
arrangements and nylon-strung Gibson; and Stuart's
vocal arrangements and his five-octave harmony range. Seasons,
produced by Gus
Dudgeon, featured as its centerpiece the side-long title work, and
also a much larger contingent of musicians, among them Tony
Visconti on bass, Rick
Wakeman on keyboards, Tim
Renwick on flute, and Davey
Johnstone on guitar; it was also the group's first record to be
released in America, under license to Dunhill Records, though it made
virtually no impact on the U.S. side of the Atlantic.
When Tranter
decided to return to his native Australia, Johnstone,
a virtuoso-level guitarist fluent in several styles, replaced him in Magna
Carta, leading to the core lineup that recorded Songs
from Wasties Orchard and the live album In
Concert before Johnstone
was stolen away -- with help from Dudgeon,
who used him on his sessions -- by Elton
John and, later, Kiki
Dee. Johnstone's
replacement was guitarist Stan
Gordon, who worked on Lord
of the Ages (1974) and was joined by bassist Graham Smith. By
1975, however, the group was down to one member -- Gordon
and Smith left in 1974, and a disagreement about their sound and
future direction led to Stuart's
exit in 1975 after the release of Martin's
Cafe (the latter also marked their final release on Vertigo).
When the appropriately titled Putting
It Back Together was released in 1976 -- featuring Simpson,
guitarist Tommy
Hoy (late of the Natural Acoustic Band), and bassist Nigel
Smith, with Chris
Karan and Pick
Withers on drums -- the group was on Polydor (the parent label of
Vertigo) in Europe and Ariola in the United States. Withers
later became an official member of the group for a short time, before
joining Mark
Knopfler, David
Knopfler, and John
Illsley in what became Dire
Straits, and other new members from this period included Robin
Thyne and Lee
Abbott, who ultimately took over the bassist spot. Thyne
and Hoy only
lasted a couple of years, and for the next three years the membership
in Magna
Carta became rather fluid, with Alistair Fenn, George
Norris, and future Albion
Band member Doug
Morter passing through on guitars, along with several drummers,
including future Icicle
Works alumnus Paul
Burgess. They enjoyed an unexpected radio hit during this period
with "Highway to Spain" off of the 1981 LP Midnight
Blue, and Simpson
also released his first solo album, Listen
to the Man, around this same time.
The turning point for Magna
Carta and Simpson,
both professionally and personally, came the next year when he met Linda
Taylor, a Yorkshire-born singer and guitarist. At the time, Simpson
was promoting his solo single "Sting of the Gin," and she
was recording a material of her own. He ended up playing on some of
her sides, and she appeared on some of his new songs, and by 1983
she'd joined the group. Her arrival reinvigorated Simpson's
work, and through 1984 -- a point where virtually all of the other
progressive rock bands with which they'd started had long since ceased
working -- Magna
Carta kept performing and recording, with Simpson
and Taylor,
supported by Abbott,
at the core of the lineup. The middle of the decade, however, saw the
pair withdraw from performing -- instead, for two years they ran a
music club in the Middle East. It was in 1986 that they revived the
group, with Abbott
once more joining them in the core lineup and a considerably expanded
sound, including a keyboard player (Gwyn Jones) and lead guitarist
(Simon Carlton).
In 1990 Simpson
and Taylor
married, and since 1992 with Abbott's
exit, they've comprised the core of Magna
Carta, which continued to tour Europe -- where the band had a
large audience -- regularly. In keeping with their appeal as a live
act, most of their releases since the early '80s (with the notable
exception of 2001's Seasons in the Tide) have been concert recordings.
Polygram reissued the group's early Vertigo albums at the end of the
1990s, and in 2004 Repertoire Records re-released Seasons
in a mini-LP gatefold edition re-creating its original packaging
format in miniature. Although some critics, embarrassed by the more
pretentiously "arty" and fey sides of progressive rock
(especially in its folk division) have expressed disdain for Magna
Carta, that reissue and the periodic release of anthologies of the
group's work testify to the existence of an audience for their work,
even 40 years into their history.
by Richie Unterberger
Magna
Carta's second LP was dominated by the 22-minute, nine-part suite
"Seasons," which took up all of side one. "Seasons" was
indeed a grand conceptual work inspired by the changing of the seasons. Its
laudable ambition apart, it's pretty ordinary, mild pop-influenced
early-'70s British folk-rock. There's a dated preciousness as it varies the
pace slightly from jolly full-band good-time folk-rock and pastoral
harmonizing to twee fairytale-like narration and almost pop-like
orchestration. The six standard-length songs on side two can strike an
almost too-cheerful pop-folk bounce, with soft rock orchestration and
harmonies that make it vaguely reminiscent of American sunshine pop at
points. Simon
& Garfunkel are an obvious influence, too, on songs like "Give
Me No Goodbye" (overlaid with slight sitar licks),
"Scarecrow," and "Elizabethan," though Magna
Carta could make Simon
& Garfunkel sound almost heavy in comparison. The closing
"Airport Song," which was plucked from the LP as a shot for a hit
single, goes furthest into pop with its bossa nova beat and easy listening
arrangement, though the Simon
& Garfunkel influence in the vocal harmonies is nearly overwhelming.
This pretty undistinguished pop-folk-rock effort was paired with their third
album, Songs
from Wasties Orchard, on a 1999 single-disc CD reissue that also
included historical liner notes.
Magna Carta was much more mainstream than other famous Folk rooted acts
of the time – maybe because Chris Simpson
had already acquired some vices while he unsuccessfully tried to launch
his career, either solo in duos or integrated in Pop or Rock groups, I
mean he did know what it took to make a tune being instantly catchy even
if he had to recur to lullaby-ish melodies and, already in his
late 20s he definitely had what I consider a too formal way of singing
when he put the trio together with guitar player Lyell
Tranter and singer Glen Stuart;
but on the other hand they could be considered as heretic as the other
Folkies, Acid or Prog or whatever, in that they neither shunned electric
instruments or fully respect the traditional Folk canons and song
structures; apparently that was also the opinion of the Vertigo
executives when they signed the trio to their “underground” swirling
label.
The band’s sophomore effort was an enormous artistic leap from their
debut album; the result of a 3 A.M. inspirational coup and clocking at
over 22 minutes, “Seasons” is a real conceptual piece, with a
seamless succession of themes that come and go, a Prologue and an
Epitaph that lyrically concludes and musically reprises the opening
theme; No efforts were spared to make Simpson’s dream materialize and
both Gus Dudgeon and Tony
Visconti contributed in the production, arrangements and
playing; additional musical help was provided by session bass and
double-bass player Spike Heatley,
drummers Barry Morgan and Tony
Carr, guitarists Tim Renwick
and future full-time member and virtuoso multi-instrumentalist Davey
Johnstone, blossoming keyboards wizard Rick
Wakeman (who unfortunately has pretty discreet appearances) and
the LSO (which unfortunately adds
unnecessary pomp on some tracks, although in other occasions is used
with inspired parsimony).
Opening up with the twin arpeggiated acoustic guitars and what would
become their trademark spoken word passages – he doesn’t avow it,
but Simpson does seem to share Glen Stuart’s much trumpeted love for
theater – instruments and ambiences successively alter the tonal
spectrum and seamlessly morph unto each others , double-bass bottom
ends, hi-pitched vocal harmonies with quasi feminine characteristics ,
bowed cellos, churchy organs, sudden impacts of bass & drums
underlying a Country-feel interspersed with ternary recorder lead
Renaissance passages, meaty or chirping bottleneck slide runs
contrasting ethereal vocal and acoustic guitar trills, a deep syncopated
electric bass that supports spoken lyrics embellish by guitar
flourishes, a tension mounting up and down sequence where the LSO
enters with its mighty string, woodwinds and horns power, going the
Symphonic Pop-Rock route propelled by a galloping bass and restless
drums briefly interrupted by special effects of city-sounds before
finally going full-circle and back to the initial acoustic theme
where the LSO adds some tasty cinematic drama.
Curiously side two also has a bit for every taste as if the stigma of
the changing seasons still prevailed, light weight Folk-Pop with
orchestration excesses, briefly saved by a jazzy tip-toed piano on
“Goin’ My Way” or without salvation experimenting Simon but much
more Garfunkel-esque cheesy instincts on “Airport Song”, a salvation
the sitar and tablas Oriental coloring can neither provide on “Give me
No Goodbye”;
Fortunately things get more serious and beautiful on the wistful mood of
“Elizabethan” with sparse arrangements of bowed cellos and
woodwinds, delicate vocal harmonies and acoustic guitar ornamentations,
on the Amazing Blondel-like baroque moods of the intertwined guitars and
double-bass of “Scarecrow” or on the alternation between organ
bathed Pastoral and fluxes of Rock energy, thudding drums and alas a too
short passage of virtuoso Prog organ on the Epic-wanna-be “Ring of
Stones”.
6360
003 Vinyl LP (1970) |
[Rating33231785] |
Nous sommes là,en évidence,face à ce qui aurait pu être un chef
d'oeuvre.....un Folk progressif dit "de chambre",raffiné,délicat
et subtile....mais vite nous tombons dans la caricature d'une musique déchirée
entre le kitsch et l'effet "carte postale" d'une formation
appliquée qui force l'admiration d'une bande de touristes embarqué
dans un "tour operator".
Folk progressif à tendance concept album...c'est par là...messieurs,on
se dépêche!...au suivant...!
6360
003 Vinyl LP (1970) |
[Rating29992691] |
Totalement suranné.
REPUK
1034 CD (2004) |
[Rating29906363] |
There's different kind of things on "Seasons" but this is too
folk (rock) for me, and light. Good but boring.
6360
003 Vinyl LP (1970) |
[Rating21601703] |
Good, progressive folk music. If you're into stuff like Pentangle, S
& G, and Fairport Convention, then you might like this as well.
Recommended.
6360
003 Vinyl LP (1970) |
[Rating12757786] |
Though undeniably quite twee, this is one of my favourite albums, it's
of a similar style to Steve Ashley's "Stroll On" - some
fantastic arrangements for group, strings and woodwind on the side-long
title track
6360
003 Vinyl LP (1970) |
[Rating11061917] |
This is the finest acoustic progressive folk you can hear... maybe the
high pitch voice of Glen Stuart or the delicate acoustics riffs of Chris
Simpson and Lyell Tranter (australian guitar player who left the band
after this release). This british trio is supported by Rick Wakeman who
add the classical arrangements to the album.
In this album is always present inspiration and melodic voice harmonies
from the 22:00 mins suite "Seasons" to the commercial but
lovely "Airport Song".
This is a British example of folk music expressed in a progressive
ambient. No north-american motifs here despite that there are some
reminiscences of Simon and Garfunkel what is just a lovely coincidence.
6360
003 Vinyl LP (1970) |
[Rating7612137] |
Almost as good as Lord Of The Ages, Seasons is a very pleasant &
sane progressive folk album. The progressive folk songs are quite catchy
and easy to enjoy. The lead & backing vocals are excellent, being
among the strongest points of the record. It globally sounds a bit like
Simon & Garfunkel in a more progressive & refined manner. It is
definitely an major album for 1970. One can recognize Rick Wakeman's
organ solo on "Ring of Stones". There is a narration on some
traks. There are some excellent orchestral arrangements on a few tracks,
courtesy of the "London Symphony Orchestra". The warm acoustic
bass and the omnipresent acoustic guitars contribute to enhance the
overall value of this record. Usually, I'm not very fond of country
music but I must admit that the such part on the "Seasons"
track is very good. The delightful last song "Airport Song"
reminds me the excellent Frankie Goes To Hollywood's "San
Jose".
6360
003 Vinyl LP (1970) |
[Rating7436799] |
A solid baroque folk album, featuring some pleasant American country
guitar playing, over-polished orchestral arrangements, a sitar number
("Give Me no Goodbye") and a long progressive folk suite
taking the first side of the LP. The suite has several great moments and
is definitely fine as a whole, but it's a bit too verbose. The standouts
are the wonderful, mellow "Elizabethian" with its descendant
cello theme and its old-time mood, and the nice, tuneful pop-folk of
"Airport Song", which are worth the entire album.
6360
003 Vinyl LP (1970) |
[Rating7162527] |
Season's suite is one of the prettiest song ever written. Rick Wakeman
appears in the album.
The first nine tracks are awful
6360
003 Vinyl LP (1970) |
[Rating2422481] |
One half of this lp sucks, the sidelong title cut. The other half is
excellent britpsych that is sort of like mid period Fairport of maybe
kinda like Steeleye Span. "Elizabethian" is a fragile
Victorian mind floater with ancient instruments, and "Give Me No
Goodbyes" is a strong psycher w/electric sitar riffs that just
burn their way into yr. already burned brain. A winner, if you can
find it at a record show on the cheap. Excellent vinyl and pressing,
like all the UK Dunhill shit.Alrighty then!
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