Freedom to Music
Matching Mole – March (Live 1972) (@256)
22 Mar 2010
(Review from bbc.co.uk, progarchives.com)
By the time this album was recorded (March 1972, a month after Sinclair’s departure) the band were playing continuous sets with much room for collective improvisation amid the more arranged pieces. “March” captures both the uncertainties and glories of this method beautifully.
The material is drawn mainly from their eponymous first album, with guitarist Phil Miller’s rifferamas “Part of the Dance” and “Lything and Gracing” in full effect. Despite their progressive tricksiness, the Mole’s renderings of them are faintly haphazard, teetering on the brink of destruction then turning away at the last nanosecond. Wyatt’s extraordinary drumming comes across as a wired concoction of Tony Williams and Keith Moon; he and bassist Bill MacCormick sometimes appear to be operating in seperate time zones.
The sublime “Instant Pussy” features Robert’s trademark cosmic scatting, though without the usual echo (‘Where’s the sheets of sound?’ he repeats as the engineer desperately searches for the right buttons and fails to find them). Another vocal gem is “No Alf Measures”, Wyatt’s lovely arrangement of an early Kevin Ayers tune. Their cover of Caravan number Waterloo Lilly is surprising and vocal-less.
Miller’s distinctive playing has a keening, bluesy quality that sits nicely with his nibbled distortojazz stylings. His and MacCormick’s playing is kept in check by McCrae’s measured, shimmering electric piano.
So powerful, so thrilling, and so vital and lively their play should be.
Line-up:
- Bill MacCormick / bass
- Dave McRae / electric piano
- Phil Miller / guitar
- Robert Wyatt / drums, vocals
Track List:
01. March – 4:49
02. Instant Pussy – 4:53
03. Smoke Signals – 6:20
04. Part Of The Dance – 9:54
05. No Alf Measures – 5:44
06. Lything And Gracing – 11:36
07. Waterloo Lilly – 4:21
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about 6 years ago
OGG!
blodwynpig_aheadringsout_1969.zip
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about 3 years ago
Fantastic, Thank You.
about 3 years ago
Thanks very much for this one, sakalli!! I just (wrongly) assumed this would have inferior sound quality because so many archival releases from short-lived bands long since defunct often sound lousy because there isn’t much to pick from–but oh not the case with this one: the sound is crystal clear and sharp!!! I’ve always loved Bill MacCormick’s bass playing esp. with 801 and Phil Manzanera’s solo albums, etc. This set does resemble mid-70s fusion era Soft Machine a bit, which is very tasty for those who like that stuff! Thanks again, for great (live this time) music i would have never taken a chance on myself!
about 2 years ago
Thanx once more…!