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CAPABILITY BROWN: VOICE
(Japanese Charisma/Virgin VJCP-2546) [1973] Capability Browns entry here rests on one piece which
appeared on their second album, VOICE. The
band recorded only two actual albums, both released in Britain on the Famous
Charisma label the same label which on which Genesis, Van Der Graaf Generator and
Monty Python all found homes. (There was a
third album, LIAR, issued by Charisma in 1976, but it is a repackaged compilation from the
first two albums.)
The
band was a six-piece in which everyone sang and played instruments. The lineup consisted of Tony Ferguson (guitar,
bass), Dave Nevin (keyboards, guitar, bass), Kenny Rowe (bass, percussion), Grahame White
(guitar, bass), Joe Williams (percussion) and Roger Willis (drums, keyboards). Ferguson and Nevin wrote the majority of the bands
material, the rest being covers (Rare Birds Beautiful Scarlet and Redman,
Argents Liar, Affinitys I Am And So Are You and Steely
Dans Midnight Cruiser). But
Capability Browns forte was vocalizing. Together
they sounded not unlike The Association: a massed choir of voices, ranging from baritone
to high clean falsettos. Their
first album, FROM SCRATCH (Charisma CAS 1056, released in 1972), had a folksy cover (the
art done in scratchboard, perhaps inspiring or inspired by the title), and was
unprepossessing. I picked up a copy when I
was chasing down obscure, quirky British bands of the early 70s and I didnt
find it sufficiently quirky to be interesting.
The instrumental parts of the album were pretty standard, guitar-band
stuff (few if any keyboards were audible), and while their take on Liar was a
good one, the album as a whole was mediocre and unmemorable. Capability Brown sounded like an Association-like
vocal group with anonymous instrumental backing (and the lack of any personnel listing on
that album didnt help although song credits and lyrics were printed on the
inner sleeve). Before
I began to write this piece I checked Capability Brown out in a couple of reference works. They arent even mentioned in Jerry Luckys
THE PROGRESSIVE ROCK FILES (a surprising omission on his part), and, astonishingly, only
their first album is described in Vernon Joynsons THE TAPESTRY OF DELIGHTS (although
all three albums are listed). Joynson has
this to say about the group: This bands staple diet was mainstream rock with
some arty pop leanings. Their FROM SCRATCH
album had a couple of tracks with more progressive leanings: Rayge and Sole
Survivor. This latter song was about
the escape from the coming war with a time machine and culminated in some fine guitar work
imitating time machine travel! He adds,
Kenny Rowe had earlier been in The Moments. Frankly,
Im not sure about Joynson. His
misattribution of the single by Brain in 1967 to a group which included Robert Fripp (denied by Fripp) is
understandable, but I am nonplussed by the fact that he finds progressive leanings
in anything on that first Capability Brown album which does not contain a track titled Rayge (he
may be thinking of Nevins No Range which leads off side two the
side which concludes with Fergusons Sole Survivor). Nor am I at all impressed by the fine guitar
work on Sole Survivor, which sounds quite ordinary to me. But
Joynsons failure to mention VOICE totally amazes me. The cover (by Hipgnosis) was a
strong clue to the extraordinary nature of this album, as was its title. Because VOICE is
Capability Browns genuine claim to fame in
progressive rock circles and a major claim it is! But
not for its first side which presented four songs competently but unexcitingly
performed in the same mode that had been used for the first album. I wonder how many people listened only to that
side and then tossed the album into a stack to be forgotten. (I suspect Joynson did that.) Anyone who did do that made a bad mistake. Side two
was the gem. Its
on side two (track 5 of the CD) that we find the over-20-minute piece called Circumstances
(In Love, Past, Present, Future Meet) which is the groups masterpiece (and its
the only piece ever credited to the group as a whole).
This side-long piece is for Capability Brown what PET SOUNDS was for the
Beach Boys and SGT. PEPPER was for the Beatles. It
is an amazingly fully realized tour de force for voice and a stunning piece of music. The
piece opens, interestingly enough, with a long keyboard-based instrumental section which
states the theme and offers the first variation. Its
easily the equal to what Genesis were doing at that same time (1973). Then a cappela voices replace the instruments to
offer new variations on the theme. As the
piece develops there are synthesizers and Mellotrons (making their only appearances in the
groups recordings for this track), solo vocals, delicate harpsichord-like acoustic
guitar sections, powerful electric guitar chords and massed vocal choirs. And overall the piece is richly melodic and
continually rewarding. It ends too soon. Sadly,
Capability Brown never did another piece like it. VOICE
was their last studio album, and Circumstances was the last piece on it. Originally
issued as CAS 1068 on Charisma in Britain, the album did have an American edition (with
the same striking gatefold cover), but never attracted the attention it deserved
probably because too many people never got to side two.
The album remains mostly unknown to progressive rock fans. But in 1990 it was issued as a CD in Japan in a
British Rock History on CD series, of which it was Vol. 12. It accurately replicates both the gatefold cover
and the gatefold interior, and in addition to Japanese notes includes all the lyrics in
English (something the LP did not have). Its
worth searching out. Just
for that one long track. |
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