Alex Chilton - 1970 (Ardent)
by Ric Stewart
In the current media perception, the transitional year 1970 was the height of the
Sixties: the middle of the Vietnam War, a time of racial and poltical polemics,
and arguably part of a post-Woodstock afterglow during which rock floated into a
state of grace. Rock had found a comfortable niche with suburban teenagers of
all ages, and there was finally no argument that this development on R&B music
was not just a fad. In 1970 Alex Chilton was in the midst of a
personal music transition from the studio-prepped pop of the Box Tops to the song
craft of Big Star and his subsequent solo career.
On 1970 this mystical time so often in vogue today, comes across as a
mellow and easy time capsule. The tapes are presented in a mix which
features only sounds common to the era, and the songs are lost gems of the
Chilton songbook including rolling opener "Come On Honey"
which catches the 20 year old Chilton stretching out his chops on classic blues
progressions. "Free Again" rides off on steel guitars and a hippy feel. The
Abbey Road-ish "All I Really Want Is Money", and the cover "Jumpin' Jack Flash"
attest to a continued fascination with British Rock while "I Wish I Could Meet
Elvis" keeps the hero worship right at home in Memphis.
This nugget of a cd
reveals the beginnings of Chilton's original songwriting style, dating from an
intriguing series of experiments which prove surprisingly relevant today. Just
one listen to the thrashing of "Sugar Sugar/I Got the Feelin'" which shows a slap
happy Chilton arriving a few years too early for the slacker movement.
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