Saturday, 22 June 2019

British Pop From The Late Sixties: Richard Barnes - Take To The Mountains (1969-1970, 2007 RPM Records)


Richard Barnes was a vocalist with the U.K. pop group the Quiet Five before departing for a solo career in 1969, and over the next four years he cut a handful of supremely glossy pop records before launching a career in the musical theater in the London cast of Jesus Christ Superstar. Twenty of Barnes' solo sides are collected on Take to the Mountains, and listening to them it seems it was his destiny to be a West End star -- while he doesn't exactly go overboard on these songs, there's a strong sense of brio in his vocal style, and Barnes isn't afraid to play to the last row of the balcony. Gerry Bron produced these sessions, and he clearly didn't hesitate to pull out all the stops, ordering up elaborate orchestrations and top-shelf studio craft on the Latin flavored "Maria Elena," the almost-psychedelic "High Flying Electric Bird," and the plaintive "I Think I'm Getting Over You."


Barnes and Bron were also shrewd judges of material, and along with a number of songs from the catalog of Tony Hazzard, Take to the Mountains also includes some impressive interpretations of the works of Harry Nilsson ("Maybe"), Emitt Rhodes ("Live Till You Die"), Cat Stevens ("Hard Headed Woman"), and Paul Simon ("Homeward Bound"), and one surprise gem is a version of Barry Mann and Cynthia Weil's "It's Getting Better," which was a hit for Mama Cass Elliot. Most of Take to the Mountains could pass for easy listening for casual listeners, but while Barnes was no rocker he was a gifted and intelligent interpretive singer, and this collection represents British pop at the peak of its form.(Mark Deming, allmusic.com)

Single

Mark Deming's review describes very well what awaits you. Wonderful late sixties british pop. Barnes is a great performer and the songs are first class orchestrated and arranged. The song selection is also only the best. Tony Hazzard, Mann & Weil, Roger Greenaway, Mark Wirtz to name a few. If you like great pop ballads with orchestral sound, you've come to the right place. Enjoy.(Frank)


Flac
mp3@320


7 comments:

  1. Now, that's nice! I somehow stumbled across an rpm compilation CD of The Quiet Five for I was searching for their wonderful (Byrd-ish) "When the Morning Sun dries the Dew" without even knowing that Richard Barnes was their lead vocalist. Now I know where I knew this strong voice from. Thanks, Frank! (you don't happen to have The quiet Five compilation?)

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    1. Hello Greeny,
      i have the ''Quiet Five -When the Morning Sun dries the Dew''. I will send you a link here in a few minutes. And by the way: Yeah i loved the parties you talked in your other comment about, too. Great times of our youth. :-)

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    2. Hi Greeny,
      here is the link: https://mega.nz/#!yLJCUaID!IAiSKWC1cg-H-fVad92Bjhz1Pvid3-EhYPL5hEGNo_o

      Viel Spass
      Frank

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    3. Oh damn, now i understand right what you meant with your comment. You have the album yourself. Oh sometimes i sleep with open eyes. Well it's no drama, i think :-) Maybe some other people will like the link.

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  2. No, no, Frank, everything is perfectly O.K.,- actually I was looking exactly for that CD, thank you very much...

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    Replies
    1. hahaha,
      my english language seems to work perfect, lol.
      All the best to you
      Frank

      Delete

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