Well... where to begin? This compilation ofthe entire properly recorded output of one of the finest progressivebands ever assembled anywhere (No lie, Mordechai, read on!) is, Iregret to say, not complete. The blame can be left at no doorstepother than that of the idiots who were running the U.S. and U.K.'srecord companies in the 1970s as the progressive groundswell began towane (listen to some of the releases of 1974 or '75 from PremiataForneria Marconi, Henry Cow or Magma and you will note the envelopewas about to break!) and the punkeroos were about to emerge. Yes, Iknow, we cover quite a bit of grungeola here (as a friend of ourslikes to put it, "there's a lot of it about!" - exactly what ProcolHarum once said in a ditty off GrandHotel about syphilis!), and thedifferences between the two are minimal, but we've never done so atthe expense of something else. Music to you is what makes you whistlein the shower. It separates you from the beasts (and the ChristianCoalition, for a' that); and NationalHealth (which at one time or anothercontained Steve Hillage, Bill Bruford, Phil Miller, Pip Pyle, JohnGreaves, and well nigh half of the aforementioned Cow) not only blewaway every competitor I could name in complexity and the pure intensejoy of music, they were a positive force that could put a silly grinon your face while they slyly perforated your horizons. The wildoptimism, the flights of lunatic fancy, all strongly based in theprogressive English idiom we've known for decades, should have becomemore than the dead end industry indifference made it. And there areany number of people who would give their left nut to hear the tuneslisted below, so it's criminal that these wonderful bits are nowconsigned to the hell where all sheet music goes:
WHEN PERFORMED | TITLE | COMPOSER | LENGTH |
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| [with completely different ending] | | |
| "A Separate Function" | | |
All right, what's all this then, amen?National Health
This band never made a living for itsmembers, never played to the amount of people it deserved to, in factonce when they approached Virgin Records (who were far too busytrying to sign the Sex Pistols to provide an A&R man with earsinstead of cauliflowers), they were told the demos that they'dsubmitted were not original enough. No doubt the codswallop-brainedorang-outang with whom Stewart had a screaming fight thought the twoHatfield albums were by two different bands! And us Americans can'tcongratulate ourselves neither: had
I admit the above situation smells a wholelot worse than the dead Bishop on the landing, Vicar Sergeant, butthe music does remain, and now you can have all this marvelous stuffin one package. What does it sound like? Think of Frank Zappa aroundthe time of Hot Rats
© 1995 ToneClusters