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MARMALADE
- FINE CUTS: THE BEST OF
Salvo
If
you’ve heard of Marmalade at all, it’s most likely
through hit single and Beatles cover , the frankly awful song
Ob-La-Di, Ob-La-Da. Certainly, I’d
tagged the band as something of a one-hit-wonder – though
in fact, the band did have a handful of charting singles. Still,
a double album ‘best of’ CD is a somewhat interesting
proposition, especially with the two CDs clocking in at nearly
80 minutes each, and culling material from a mere four LPs. You
have to wonder what has actually been left off here…
Musically, CD 1 is archetypal Sixties pop – jangly guitars,
heavily harmonised vocals, and a floating, laid back sound that
owes more to the American West Coast than the band’s native
Scotland – you’ll hear a lot of the Monkees in this
collection. As with much late Sixties pop, there’s a strand
of melancholia running through these slickly produced tracks,
and while a lot of the music feels fairly anonymous – pleasant,
but without any distinctive sound of their own – there are
a few stand out numbers. The US hit Reflections of
my Life, I See the Rain,
Man in a Shop (complete with backward
fuzztone guitar) and the funky, bass-led, freak out guitar soloing
blues number Mess Around, which sounds
like it was recorded specifically for go-go dancers to groove
to.
The
Seventies stuff on CD 2 shows signs that the band were trying
to move on from the beat sounds of the previous decade, but not
quite sure where to go. So we have acoustic numbers like The
Ballad of Cherry Flavar (still heavy on the harmonies),
and country rock flavoured Is Your Life Your Own,
while laid back blues numbers like Mama channel Crosby, Stills
and Nash so thoroughly that you could probably pass it off as
them. Lady of Catrine sounds like Simon
and Garfunkel, There’s even the eight-minute Free-style
prog-blues workout Can You Help Me –
something you imagine would’ve been unthinkable for the
band a year or two earlier – and possibly still unthinkable
at the time, given that this is a previously unreleased track.
But then, tracks like Radancer expose
the band's pop roots, sounding like something the Bay City Rollers
might've come up with, and Bad Weather
and I've Been Around Too Long are proto
hard rock. With such a schizophrenic sound, it's not hard to see
why the band didn't sustain a following.
There are plenty of covers too – Hey Joe
sounds like an easy listening version compared to Hendrix, painfully
lacking in guitar brutality and emotion; equally, Piece
of My Heart feels very limp compared to
the Big Brother and the Holding Company, Dean Ford definitely
being no Janis Joplin. Other covers include The Bee Gees’
Butterfly, Dylan’s Mr
Tambourine Man (by way of The Byrds) and I
Shall be Released, Lovin’ Spoonful’s
Summer in the City and Stay
with Me Baby (recorded by just about everyone…)
– an awful lot of covers, mostly of tunes that were still
pretty fresh in the memory, and none of which bring anything new
or interesting to the songs.
At their best, Marmalade produced some top rate Sixties pop music;
at their worst, they made some shockingly bland music, and it’s
unsurprising that they didn’t ride their success very far
into the next decade. While their attempts to adapt to the new
decade are admirable – and produced some decent music –
the band were always going to be doomed by their past. Unsurprisingly,
they soon deteriorated with line-up changes and after a few final,
fairly unsuccessful records (none of which are represented here),
what was left of the band drifted onto the nostalgia circuit.
This collection, while hardly essential for the casual listener,
certainly collects all the Marmalade you’ll ever need, and
is a lovingly packaged set that I doubt anyone involved with the
band expected to ever see. If you are a fan of Sixties pop, you’ll
probably find this a welcome set...
DAVID
FLINT
BUY
IT NOW (UK)
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