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Julie Driscoll, Brian Auger & The Trinity - Streetnoise (1969) LP

Julie Driscoll, Brian Auger & The Trinity - Streetnoise (1969) LP
Tracklist:

How Good It Would Be To Feel Free...

01. Tropic Of Capricorn
02. Czechoslovakia
03. Take Me To The Water
04. A Word About Colour

Kiss Him Quick, He Has To Part...

05. Light My Fire
06. Indian Rope Man
07. When I Was A Young Girl
08. Flesh Failures (Let The Sunshine In)

Looking In The Eye Of The World...

09. Ellis Island
10. In Search Of The Sun
11. Finally Found You Out
12. Looking In The Eye Of The World

Save The Country...

13. Vauxhall To Lambeth Bridge
14. All Blues
15. I've Got Life
16. Save The Country

Bonus tracks:

From ''The Best Of Julie Driscoll, Brian Auger & The Trinity'', Polydor - 2334 004, UK, 1970.

17. The Road To Cairo.
18. Save Me — Parts 1 & 2
19. A Kind Of Love In
20. Why (Am I Treated So Bad)
21. Break It Up
22. This Wheel's On Fire
23. Tramp

The final collaboration between singer Julie Driscoll (by that time dubbed as "The Face" by the British music weeklies) and Brian Auger's Trinity was Streetnoise in 1969, an association that had begun in 1966 with Steampacket, a band that also featured Rod Stewart and Long John Baldry. As a parting of the ways, however, it was to be the Trinity's finest moment.

A double album that featured 16 tracks, more than half of them with vocals by Driscoll, and the rest absolutely burning instrumentals by the Trinity (which was Auger on organ, piano, electric piano, and vocals), Driscoll on acoustic guitar, Clive Thacker on drums, and Dave Ambrose on bass and assorted guitars. "Tropic of Capricorn," an instrumental Auger original, kicks the set off in high gear. It's a knotty prog-rock number that has near key change elements of Memphis R&B. It sounds better than it reads; it twists and turns all around a minor key figure that explodes into solid, funky major seventh grit with Thacker double timing the band.

Driscoll enters next with "Czechoslovakia," a wide-open modal tune that hints at the kinds of music Driscoll would explore in the very near future on her debut 1969 and later with her future husband Keith Tippett. Broken melody lines and drones are the framework for Driscoll to climb over and soar above, and she does without faltering before she slides into the traditional gospel tune, "Take Me to the Water." And this is how this record moves, from progressive rock instrumentals and art songs, rock style, to inspired readings of the hits of the day such as "Light My Fire," "Flesh Failures (Let the Sunshine In)" from Hair, and one of the most stirring readings ever of Laura Nyro's "Save the Country" that closes the album.

"Indian Rope Man," is a burning, organ-driven churner that fuses Stax/Volt R&B funkiness with psychedelic rock and jazz syncopation. Driscoll's vocal is over the top; she's deep into the body of the tune and wrings from it every ounce of emotion possible and then some. Auger's organ solo is a barnburner; reeling in the high register, he finds the turnarounds and offers his own counterpoint in the middle and lower with enormous chords. The rhythm section just keeps the groove, funking it up one side and moving it out to the ledge until the coda. Another steaming rocker is "Ellis Island," with its duelling Fender Rhodes and organ lines, it may be the finest instrumental on the album.

Streetnoise was a record that may have been informed by its era, but it certainly isn't stuck there. The music here sounds as fresh and exciting as the day it was recorded. It all adds up to a must-have package for anyone interested in the development of Auger's music that was to change immediately after this record with the invention of the Oblivion Express, and also for those interested in Driscoll's most brave, innovative, and fascinating career as an improviser who discovered entirely new ways of using the human voice. Streetnoise is brilliant. Thom Jurek, Allmusic.


Julie Driscoll, Brian Auger & The Trinity - Streetnoise (1969) LP




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  • whiskers
  •  wrote in 19:16
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Many thanks
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  • marijohan
  •  wrote in 14:52
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THX a bunch for this ;o)