OUT OF FOCUS — Rat Roads

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OUT OF FOCUS - Rat Roads cover
4.36 | 2 ratings | 1 review
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Album · 2002

Tracklist

A1 I'd Like To Be Free 7:15
A2 Table Talk 12:03
A3 Rat Roads 5:16
B1 Fallen Apples 2:18
B2 Straight Ahead 4:39
B3 Tell Me What I'm Thinking Of 3:58
B4 Climax 12:47
B5 Kitchen Blues 0:31
B6 Good-Bye Honey 0:59

Line-up/Musicians

Acoustic Guitar – Peter Dechant (tracks: A2, A3, B2, B4)
Baritone Saxophone – Ingo Schmid-Neuhaus (tracks: A1 to B1, B4)
Bass Guitar – Stephan Wiesheu (tracks: A1 to A3, B2 to B4, B6)
Bongos – Grand Roman Langhans (tracks: A1)
Drums – Klaus Spöri (tracks: A1 to A3, B2 to B4, B6)
Electric Guitar – Remigius Drechsler (tracks: A1 to B4, B6)
Organ [Hammond] – Hermann Breuer (tracks: A3), Michael Thatcher (tracks: A2, B2)
Organ [Hammond], Electric Piano – Hennes Hering (tracks: A1, B3)
Soprano Saxophone, Flute – Moran (tracks: A2)
Tenor Saxophone – Moran (tracks: A1 to A3, B3 to B5)
Trombone – Hermann Breuer (tracks: A1, A2, B4)
Trumpet – Jimmy Polivka (tracks: A1 to A3, B2, B4)
Vocals – Moran (tracks: A1, B3)

About this release

Tripkick ‎– Tripkick 006 (Germany)

Recorded 17.-28. July 1972 at Bavaria Studios Munich

Thanks to snobb for the addition

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FunkFreak75
The second batch of "songs" (many existing in varied states of development or as unfinished jams) gleaned from the cutting floor of 1972's sessions for their Four Letter Monday Afternoon album (the band's last). Man! This band had so much untapped potential! And Jazz-Rock Fusion seemed the direction they were definitely headed.

1. "I'd like to be free" (7:15) strummed guitar chords open this tout seul until tenor sax joins in playing a simple variation on George Gershwin's "Summertime" from Porgy and Bess. The rest of the band gels around this theme, sprouting a very pleasant motif that gushes forward with solid momentum, thick bass and thin drums supporting Moran Neumüller's Bob-Dylan/Damo Suzuki-sounding voice singing, once again, in English but this time with less vehement social commentary, more a laid back statement of dreamy desire. The instrumental soloing in the. fourth and fifth minutes is excellent, separated by SPENDER DAVIS GROUP/BLOOD, SWEAT & TEARS-like bridges. A very pleasant and melodic song that could have made many radio listeners quite happy (but would, of course, require some editing in order to fit radio time formats). (13.375/15)

2. "Table talk" (12:03) opens like a DON ELLIS song with layers of multi-instrumental stuff going on all at the same time--including what sounds like a horn section--all seeming separate but eventually falling into a merger that works really well together even thought they still sound separate. (Very difficult to explain. Think of three bands on stage at the same time--bass and drums, keyboards and guitars, and horn section--each launching into their own totally unique song, at first somewhat awkwardly but eventually, somehow, entraining with one another into a multi-layered sound that works!) One of the coolest songs I've ever heard in my life. It's like Miles' Bitches Brew only everything makes sense and sounds good! (25/25)

3. "Rat roads" (5:16) a song that starts out as another slower, more spacious variation on the Gershwin "Summertime" theme that eventually speeds up and gels into a kind of Brazil '66 "Newlywed Game" theme song. Nice but definitely feels like an extract of an unpolished, incomplete song. (8.875/10) 4. "Fallen apples" (2:18) gentle tenor sax sax accompanied by gntle arpeggiated electric guitar chords and some cymbal and brush play. Pretty, (4.5/5)

5. "Straight ahead" (4:39) organ-led but not Brian Auger's version, more like a punched-in excerpt from a long jam that was recorded and achopped up and hashed out to make several songs on these later releases. Nice palette and performances but not a proper song; just a jam. (8.875/10)

6. "Tell me what I'm thinking of" (3:58) jazz chord progressions over which Moran sings. Kind of like "Take Five" with vocals. (8.875/10)

7. "Climax" (12:47) another song of multiple streams of individual musicians working independently--as if warming up or tuning their instruments--that smooths out for the second and third minute before beginning to take shape--to turning into something cohesive--in the fourth minute. It almost becomes Steve Reichian before the trombone, rhythm guitar, saxes and keys begin to merge over drummer Klaus Spöri's "Shaft"-like cymbal play. Bassist Stephan Wiescheu carries forward the trombonist Hermann Breuer's repeated pattern as the horns seem to go their own separate ways but then goes his own way when Hermann returns to carrying his mathematic melody line again. This is when the drums finally get to break out and, with the rest of the rhythm section, present a hard-driving motif over which the horns continue to add their loose change. At the end of the ninth minute we're left with only bass and drums and two electric guitars: one jazz strum-leading while the other picks delicately from behind. A cool song that the band has pulled off here: so creative! The final 90 seconds sees the gaggle of horns almost coming together for the first time. (22.125/25) 8. "Kitchen blues" (0:59) sounds like something that was recorded back in the 1930s. (4.3333/5)

9. "Good-bue honey" (0:31) sounds like something from a live, on stage jam. The guitarist in the lead sounds as if he's trying on some Chuck Berry. (4.25/5)

Total Time: 50:57

So these are the songs that didn't make the cut to be included on the 94-minute long double album release back in 1972. Man! They had a lot of material! I find it quite interesting how founding member and Hammond organ expert Hennes Hering has been almost completely removed from the band's sound palette--here represented on only a couple of songs.

A-/five stars; an odd smattering of many outcasts from the Four Letter Monday Afternoon recording sessions now edited and released 30 years later. The mercurial album has somehow earned a masterpiece metric--based largely on the mind-blowing beauty of the album's second song. On the whole I would not call this album a masterpiece. "Table Talk," however, is, as I've said above, one of the most amazing songs I've ever had the privilege of laying witness to--thus making the acquisition of this album as a listening experience a HIGHLY recommended experience to seek out for yourselves.

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