PopTodd Posted August 2, 2014 Share Posted August 2, 2014 This album came up as a recommendation for me in AllMusic just now. I read the review and found it totally intriguing. I would think that the descriptions would intrigue many of you, too.So… anyone hear ever hear of this? Ever hear it?What more can you tell me? The short, :30 samples sound great and I am putting it on my wish list, but I want to hear personal thoughts from some of you folks, too. After playing together in various incarnations since their college years, this group of NYC raggamuffins emerged in 1970 with One Kiss Leads to Another under the name Hackamore Brick. While this solid slab of proto-punk pop-flavored rock & roll would be the only output from the band for almost 40 years as they disappeared under the waves of commercial failure, the years that followed saw the legacy of the album growing. Critics loved it, and as new listeners wrapped their heads around what was becoming a definitive cult classic, rave reviews began popping up sporadically, some citing the band as the first to have a "post-Velvets" sound. From the opening strains of album kick-off track "Reachin'," the songs here find their sound somewhere between the quiet melancholia of the Velvet Underground's reflective third album and the more high-strung rock of Loaded. Chick Newman's strained vocals (often buried in the mix) can evoke Lou Reed's disaffected big city cool, and the straightforward songwriting and playing are cut from a similar cloth as well. As indebted to the Velvets as the group clearly is, Hackamore Brick's brilliance comes more from their sophomoric demeanor, as all the songs have an offhanded, almost observational feeling to them that separates them from the gnarly street tales and world-weary junkie seriousness of Lou Reed and co.'s classic tunes. While songs like "Peace Has Come" and "Someone You Know" are heavy-hearted enough, they never feel airless, but keep a meandering pace, coming off more like friends jamming on an autumn day than some chronicle of the N.Y.C. freak show that was very much alive and surrounding the band at that time. Direct, unassuming rock & roll numbers like "I Watched You Rhumba" and "Oh! Those Sweet Bananas" predicted the buzzing and youthful spirit of the Modern Lovers or the Feelies, while "Radio" takes on the same flip character as "Sitting on My Sofa"-style Kinks tunes, extolling the virtues of the FM dial with a goofy grin. Only the drifty "And I Wonder" falls into some of the proggy cliches of the era, leaving the rest of the album soundly rooted in foundational rock & roll aesthetics, delivered with a passionate and wonderful lack of sophistication that makes One Kiss Leads to Another every bit as worthy of praise as the downtown N.Y.C. bands that went on to greater exposure all around them. On par with other lost wonders like Virgin Insanity's Illusions of the Maintenance Man or Ed Askew's Little Eyes, this album has a hidden power that was not just ahead of its time in 1970, but still unfolding decades later. Quote Link to post Share on other sites
GtrPlyr Posted August 3, 2014 Share Posted August 3, 2014 I have that record, it's a good one. If you like the whole '70s NYC, Lou Reedish guitar pop, you're gonna dig this one. Quote Link to post Share on other sites
PopTodd Posted August 4, 2014 Author Share Posted August 4, 2014 Giving a first listen now -- on Spotify -- and finding this to be just as much Grateful Dead as it is VU. Not as excellent as the review might imply. Still, about halfway through, and I will listen through to the end. Not sure how many more listens this will warrant. But I'll probably give it another shot at some point to see if it starts to grow on me. Right now, though, it's just a bit disappointing.(But with expectations raised as high as mine were, I don't know that there really could have been any other result.) Quote Link to post Share on other sites
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