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The material on this album, heard by few until it was issued on CD in the early 21st century, might have been built up as a little weirder than it is by some of the collectors who've raved about it. While it's not the most uplifting stuff in the world, much of it is haunting but not all that out-there pop-folk. Susan Christie's fairly strong, strident vocals and moody melodies, occasionally embellished by strings, aren't the most uncommercial mixture that could have been concocted, though apparently they were too uncommercial to find release when they were originally recorded. What is unusual -- and what sets it most apart from some singers she might bear the vaguest of resemblance to at times, like Melanie, Tim Buckley, Sandy Denny, and Bobbie Gentry -- are the unexpectedly forceful distorted guitars, near-hard rock organ, and angular rhythms and mild dissonance used in some of the arrangements. In addition, for an eight-song, half-hour album, it's certainly unpredictable in the wide territory it covers -- "No One Can Hear You Cry," unlike anything else on the record, is close to sounding like a fine lost Dionne Warwick outtake, though even that gets set aside from the usual Bacharach/David production by the insertion of off-the-wall exotic tinkles of descending instrumental glissandos. If that's not odd enough in this company, there's also a cut, "When Love Comes," that's not too far off early Marianne Faithfull at her best. In contrast, "Yesterday, Where's My Mind?" is freaky at the outset, with its pummeling, tumbling drum breaks, creepy organ, and trippy ominous whisper-to-a-scream recitation, but even that track settles back into a relatively conventional song after three minutes. "For the Love of a Soldier" is another standout, managing to mix affecting antiwar folk-rock with a funky hard rock chorus quite effectively. Though Christie's not quite a major talent based on these relics, this is nicely dreamy and varied folk-rock for the most part that shows a lot of sadly unfulfilled potential, and if it's more downbeat than the norm for the genre, it's hardly gloomy.
© Richie Unterberger /TiVo
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Susan Christie, MainArtist - Finders Keeeprs Records, Composer, Producer, MixingEngineer
1969 Twisted Nerve Recordings 2006 Twisted Nerve Recordings
John Hill, Producer, MixingEngineer - Susan Christie, MainArtist - Soden, Composer
1969 Twisted Nerve Recordings 2006 Twisted Nerve Recordings
John Hill, Producer, MixingEngineer - Hill, Composer - Susan Christie, MainArtist
1969 Twisted Nerve Recordings 2006 Twisted Nerve Recordings
John Hill, Producer, MixingEngineer - JONES, Composer - Susan Christie, MainArtist
1969 Twisted Nerve Recordings 2006 Twisted Nerve Recordings
John Hill, Producer, MixingEngineer - Reed, Composer - Susan Christie, MainArtist
1969 Twisted Nerve Recordings 2006 Twisted Nerve Recordings
John Hill, Producer, MixingEngineer - Susan Christie, MainArtist - Soden, Composer
1969 Twisted Nerve Recordings 2006 Twisted Nerve Recordings
John Hill, Producer, MixingEngineer - Susan Christie, MainArtist - Hill/Hill/Hill, Composer
1969 Twisted Nerve Recordings 2006 Twisted Nerve Recordings
John Hill, Producer, MixingEngineer - Susan Christie, MainArtist - Hill/Hill, Composer
1969 Twisted Nerve Recordings 2006 Twisted Nerve Recordings
Album review
The material on this album, heard by few until it was issued on CD in the early 21st century, might have been built up as a little weirder than it is by some of the collectors who've raved about it. While it's not the most uplifting stuff in the world, much of it is haunting but not all that out-there pop-folk. Susan Christie's fairly strong, strident vocals and moody melodies, occasionally embellished by strings, aren't the most uncommercial mixture that could have been concocted, though apparently they were too uncommercial to find release when they were originally recorded. What is unusual -- and what sets it most apart from some singers she might bear the vaguest of resemblance to at times, like Melanie, Tim Buckley, Sandy Denny, and Bobbie Gentry -- are the unexpectedly forceful distorted guitars, near-hard rock organ, and angular rhythms and mild dissonance used in some of the arrangements. In addition, for an eight-song, half-hour album, it's certainly unpredictable in the wide territory it covers -- "No One Can Hear You Cry," unlike anything else on the record, is close to sounding like a fine lost Dionne Warwick outtake, though even that gets set aside from the usual Bacharach/David production by the insertion of off-the-wall exotic tinkles of descending instrumental glissandos. If that's not odd enough in this company, there's also a cut, "When Love Comes," that's not too far off early Marianne Faithfull at her best. In contrast, "Yesterday, Where's My Mind?" is freaky at the outset, with its pummeling, tumbling drum breaks, creepy organ, and trippy ominous whisper-to-a-scream recitation, but even that track settles back into a relatively conventional song after three minutes. "For the Love of a Soldier" is another standout, managing to mix affecting antiwar folk-rock with a funky hard rock chorus quite effectively. Though Christie's not quite a major talent based on these relics, this is nicely dreamy and varied folk-rock for the most part that shows a lot of sadly unfulfilled potential, and if it's more downbeat than the norm for the genre, it's hardly gloomy.
© Richie Unterberger /TiVo
About the album
- 1 disc(s) - 8 track(s)
- Total length: 00:30:52
- Main artists: Susan Christie
- Composer: Various Composers
- Label: Twisted Nerve Recordings
- Genre: Blues/Country/Folk Folk
1969 Twisted Nerve Recordings 2006 Twisted Nerve Recordings
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