Showing posts with label Barclay James Harvest. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Barclay James Harvest. Show all posts

Saturday, June 23, 2018

Barclay James Harvest - XII (1978)

(U.K 1967 - Present)
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Barclay James Harvest (BJH) were formed in the late sixties when two R&B bands from Oldham merged to create the Blues band The Blues Keepers; sponsored by local businessman (and manager) they practised extensively in a rented 18 Century farmhouse, eventually gravitating towards progressive rock and changing their name to Barclay James Harvest. BJH experimented with new forms of music, going beyond the guitar, bass and drums format to include strings, woodwind and brass, and to this end acquired a Mellotron to simulate these sounds.

There has always been some debate over the title XII, and what it meant, by a stretch it could be seen as their twelfth together, but the more commonly held explanation is that it marks their twelve years of making music together. However, this would turn out to be the last release before Woolly Wolstenholme packed up his Mellotron and left the band in June 1979, marking the end of one era of the band’s history.

Originally released in September 1978, the album was another big selling release for the band achieving Silver disc status in the UK and Gold in Germany. The album followed in the wake of “Gone to Earth” and saw BJH consolidate the success they had found in Germany and Europe.

The album struck a chord with the record buying public thanks to tracks such as ‘Berlin’, ‘In Search of England’, ‘Nova Lepidoptera’ and more, and its popularity continues to endure.

By the late 1970s, Barclay James Harvest’s prog roots were increasingly only evident in the somewhat nebulous ‘concepts’ that they used to loosely tie their album tracks together with, and the vaguely mystical sleeve art. The music itself seemed to have been smoothed off and simplified to compete with the soft-focus, radio-friendly charms of Journey, REO Speedwagon et al.

Yet perhaps that was just where their muse naturally took them. They certainly weren’t bad at this AOR lark, as this 1978 album showed, and this new sonic overhaul works well – perhaps too well for those of us who found the airbrushing of BJH’s sound a little cloying in the first place. In Search Of England’s sentimental anthems haven’t aged well, and the single Berlin is also a bland affair. But the second half of the album makes up for it, as the new audio clarity further enhances the spacey Floydian float of Nova Lepidoptera, and the banks of harmonies enveloping Harbour are fluffier than ever. Then the best is saved until last – Giving It Up and The Streets Of San Francisco remain two of the band’s finest ballads
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Album Review
You could tell Woolly Wolstenholme was not long for this band, as he was clearly withholding his “A” material (saving it up for his post-BJH solo album Mæstoso, no doubt). “Harbour” is by far the weakest song he’s written for BJH, but “In Search of England” is one of the album’s high points. Elsewhere, John Lees is responsible for the vast majority of the best stuff on this album (going by the song titles, it looks like he was envisioning a sort of concept album, but forgot to tell the other guys in the band!).

“Fact: The Closed Shop” is something of a return to the folky sound of the band’s delightful early singles, or maybe it’s just the use of recorder, harpsichord and Mellotron that’s colouring my perceptions. “Science Fiction: Nova Lepidoptera” is a fine spaced-out mood piece (just ignore the lyrics: doggerel cobbled together from science fiction book titles. No, really!) and “Fiction: The Streets of San Francisco” is likewise evocative (but again: ignore the lyrics, especially if you happen to be a San Francisco native).

Les Holroyd sounds really disinterested this time: “Berlin” is the only song here he contributes that’s anything better than mediocre (amazingly, it was the song that established them as superstars in Germany). And what is up with all the crude attempts at sexual imagery, the infamous “shoot all my love into you” line from “Loving Is Easy” and the entire song “Sip of Wine,” which I am convinced is about oral sex! [thanks to Progbear]
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This post comes with MP3's (320kps) ripped from my vinyl (another Bazaar treasure) along with full album artwork and label scans.  In pristine condition, this rip surpasses any quality you can get from CD and literally jumps out and grabs you while playing. Must be something to do with it being a German pressing I think.  Enjoy
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Tracklist
01. Fantasy: Loving is Easy (4:05)
02. Berlin (4:58)
03. Classics: A Tale of Two Sixties (3:35)
04. Turning in Circles (3:33)
05. Fact: The Closed Shop (3:50)
06. In Search of England (4:18)
07. Sip of Wine (4:31)
08. Harbour (3:46)
09. Science Fiction: Nova Lepidoptera (6:00)
10. Giving it Up (4:47)
11. Fiction: The Streets of San Francisco (5:49)

Barclay James Harvest were:
- John Lees / vocals, lead guitar, recorder
- Stuart "Woolly" Wolstenholme / vocals, electric piano, Moog, Mellotron
- Les Holroyd / vocals, bass, rhythm guitar
- Mel Pritchard / drums
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Barclay James Harvest XII Link (112Mb) New Link 16/12/2023
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Tuesday, March 6, 2018

Barclay James Harvest - Live (1974)

(U.K 1967 - Present)
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“I don’t think people realise how far back Barclay James Harvest goes,” says guitarist and vocalist John Lees. “We played Middle Earth at the Roundhouse in 1968 with The Gun, and with Pink Floyd at London All Saints; with Genesis and Led Zeppelin, Pink Fairies, Edgar Broughton, that kind of heritage.”

Lees is right, of course, as many associate the group with their 70s heyday but their story started in Oldham in 1967 when two blues groups joined together to form Barclay James Harvest.

The ambitious group attracted an early patron in local fashion entrepreneur John Crowther, who had bought Preston House, a semi-derelict farmhouse in nearby Diggle, into which the group moved en masse. “We all more or less quit our jobs and threw holiday pay and final pay into a pot, and with his help we were going to write the hit single,” Lees recalls.
Crowther hawked a demo tape around record companies and the band were briefly signed to Parlophone, then moved to EMI’s new progressive subsidiary, Harvest, whose name was suggested by the group.

Initially they played in a melodic, folky style and experimented with chamber ensemble instrumentation such as tenor horn, oboe, recorder and cello, both in the studio and onstage. “We were looking for something very different,” says Lees.

They had come across a mellotron at Abbey Road Studios that Woolly Wolstenholme played on 1968’s Early Morning, their debut single for Parlophone, and they hired one from a keyboard shop in Derby – the first time it had left the shop. They eventually bought it, and it became a hallmark of their sound.

But in the questing spirit of the era, the band were determined to work with an orchestra. They had met up with Robert John Godfrey, who worked for the group’s agents, Blackhill Enterprises. Godfrey orchestrated some of the songs on Barclay James Harvest (1970) and Once Again (1971), and they also worked with orchestral leader and orchestrator Martyn Ford.

Barclay James Harvest were one of the first rock groups to tour with an orchestra, from early 1971, but things weren’t as grand as they might have appeared. “It was a disaster,” say Lees. “It was a [London-based] student orchestra who were hard to work with. We needed to pay for extra rehearsals when they weren’t up to speed, because what we were doing was groundbreaking at the time, marrying a rock band to an orchestra.”

Lees recalls that their budget dictated that the orchestra would get smaller as they played further away from London. The venture practically bankrupted John Crowther, souring their relationship, but it had its benefits.

“It probably made the group, because then we had to pay for it all and that meant gigging for as many days as we could, every week for a year and a half to two years, doing universities, clubs and colleges,” Lees explains. “And that gave us a name and really cemented our career.”

By Everyone Is Everybody Else, released in 1974, the hard-working group had developed into a tougher proposition, with dramatic, anthem like songs fuelled by Lees’ incisive rhythm guitar and keening lead lines, cut with vocal harmonies along the lines of Crosby, Stills And Nash, particularly on bass guitarist Les Holroyd’s Poor Boy Blues.

Barclay James Harvest were virtually unique in progressive rock in that their songs were full of social commentary and even politics. “I’m fortunate in that I can explore my anxieties and fears in songs, but there was always a caveat with me that I don’t really want to ram it down anybody’s throat: if you get the lyrics, then great. If not, it still stands up as a song.”

Lees’ The Great 1974 Mining Disaster references the Bee Gees’ 1967 single New York Mining Disaster 1941, updating it to reflect the miners’ strike that brought down Edward Heath’s government. Holroyd’s Negative Earth is a tale of the ill-fated Apollo 13 mission set to a swooning melody, while Lees’ Child Of The Universe and For No One are statements against war and for peace and universality.

Half of the songs on Everyone Is Everybody Else fed into the double album Barclay James Harvest Live, released in 1974, which took many by surprise as it showed that in concert, they were one of the most powerful progressive groups in the UK, their songs elongated and swelling into huge choruses, all powered by Mel Pritchard’s spectacular drumming. It was their first UK chart success, breaking into the Top 20.

Despite “selling out gigs for fun”, the physical size of the PA, the lights and the road crew meant they were only breaking even at the end of UK tours. “That’s one of the reasons we went into Europe, where you could get more bums on seats and justify the cost of the show,” says Lees.

Barclay James Harvest released their eighth studio album, Gone To Earth, in 1977. How does Lees feel they had progressed musically over the decade since forming? “I think it was a great learning curve through the whole of that era,” he says. “Take Hymn. We are producing, from a simple beginning, this huge, climactic number, with what appear to be massive brass and strings, which was in fact just us using synthesizers, mellotron and guitars. Sea Of Tranquility was an orchestral thing Woolly had done, so there’s quite a level of sophistication creeping into the arrangements when you get to Gone To Earth.”

Lees continued his rather cheeky rearrangement of songs with Poor Man’s Moody Blues. Written after a snide music paper review of the group, it’s a pastiche of The Moody Blues’ Nights In White Satin. “I wish I hadn’t penned it – it’s haunted me ever since,” admits Lees. “It might sound similar, but musically it’s not the same at all. The Greeks use it as a wedding song. When they have the first dance, they play Poor Man’s Moody Blues. How that figures, I do not know.”

As Barclay James Harvest began to play more in Germany, that country’s audience formed a peculiarly strong bond with the group. They became massive there, and while Gone To Earth reached No.30 in the UK charts, in Germany it peaked at No.10 and stayed in the album charts for 197 weeks. As of 2011, it was ranked No.6 in the list of albums that have spent the most time in the German charts.

“On one of the later tours we did in Germany, in 1979-80, we sold a million tickets,” says Lees. “It’s ridiculous! I’ve got a platinum ticket at home. Then we went on and played to 185,000 people in front of the Reichstag.”

Barclay James Harvest may have never had the hit single they wanted at the outset, but they’ve more than made up for that with album sales. “We’d sold something like seven million albums back in the late 70's – I hate to think of how many we’ve sold now,” laughs Lees. “It’s fantastic really. We’ve just always had massive support.”
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Album Review
Why review a live album that was originally released in the year 1974. Well first of all Barclay James Harvest was one of the pioneers of the Symphonic Rock. And in my opinion this album is one of the best live albums of the seventies. At that time the band lost their record contract with Harvest, had no manager and had a huge debt to EMI. After a complex deal Polydor released this double live album for a special price and it became the band's first ever chart record, making number 40 in the UK album chart. It was recorded at the Liverpool Stadium and at London's Theatre Royal, Drury Lane. The Drury Lane performance was close to perfection ... only the Mellotron was speeding up and slowing down in the middle of songs and producing some interesting if unmusical wailing sounds. The decision was made to salvage everything possible from the Drury Lane tapes, mixing down the offending Mellotron as far as practicable, overdubbing a minimum of new parts in the studio, and to use the Liverpool tapes only for songs which could not be saved from the Drury Lane concert.

Live at the Theatre Royal, Drury Lane, London
The album opens with one of my favorite John Lees compositions “Summer soldier”. Broad Mellotron strings and melodic guitar solo's that gives you a shivering that runs down your spine. One of the classic BJH tracks. “Medicine Man” is more upbeat and has that great Moog solo of Woolly. The sound could be compared with the Moog solo's of Peter Bardens in the early days of Camel. The music is working towards a big climax. “Crazy City” was I believe the opening of side two of the double album. The vocal refrain has some CSN&Y influences. The instrumental parts are always building up towards a climax. And that could also be a melodic vocal part.

“After the Day” has a very emotional opening with a soaring guitar part and that great Mellotron carpets. After a slow delicate vocal part the passionate guitar and the Mellotron strings return in this very melodic track. This live album was a kind of best of album in those days. “The great 1974 mining disaster” is for me one of the classic BJH compositions. A slow vocal opening is followed by a delicate melodic guitar solo. “Galadriel” is a short and delicate ballad where the vocals are put on top of a layer of Mellotron strings that reminds of the early King Crimson sound.



“Negative Earth” is also a typical BJH song with a lot of melody and delicate vocals. A song in the tradition of the later albums that brought the band commercial success. It goes seamless into the beautiful love song “She said” where the electric guitar of Lees is competing again with the Mellotron of Woolly. John Lees also plays the recorder on this track. Next is “Paper wings”. After the sad opening this piece reminds me again of the “Mirage” and “Snowgoose” period of Camel. But that has to do with the sound of the Moog. In those days you had only the Hammond, the electric piano, the Mellotron and the first Moogs. For me the golden era of progressive rock. Amazing to hear the emotional and intense music of those days.


And after the beautiful “For no one” it is time for my favorite BJH song “Mockingbird”. A piece with broad Mellotron sounds and melodic guitar work. The strength of the composition is that the tension of the music is very slowly building up towards a great climax. After more than 30 years it can still bring me into tears. It is so beautiful. What does this mean? ... well it must be a great piece of music ... if it has such an impact after more than 30 years. [extract from Progvisions Website]
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French Cover
This post consists of MP3's (320kps) ripped from my newly acquired vinyl which I recently came across at a Bazaar in Geelong. In fact, I scored a number of BJH albums, all in great condition and reasonably priced. The cream on the cake is that this particular vinyl set is a German pressing, making it great quality in my opinion.  Full album artwork and label scans are also included.
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Tracklist
1. Summer soldier (10:17) 
2. Medicine Man (10:25) 
3. Crazy City (4:58) 
4. After The Day (7:27) 
5. The Great 1974 Mining Disaster (6:30) 
6. Galadriel (3:18) 
7. Negative Earth (6:20) 
8. She Said (8:33) 
9. Paper Wings (4:19) 
10. For No One (5:53) 
11. Mockingbird (7:37)

Barclay James Harvest were:
- John Lees / vocals, lead guitar, recorder
- Stuart "Woolly" Wolstenholme / vocals, electric piano, Moog, Mellotron
- Les Holroyd / vocals, bass, rhythm guitar
- Mel Pritchard / drums
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Barclay James Harvest Live Link (176Mb) New Link 16/12/2023
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Friday, August 23, 2013

Barclay James Harvest - And Other Short Stories (1971)

(U.K 1967 - Present)
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Barclay James Harvest is a British group, formed in early 1967 around Oldham, Lancashire area from the ashes of two separate choral groups. Wolstenholme and Lees meet one another at art school together, signing to EMI's progressive label Harvest the following year (EMI reputedly named their new label after them). They developed a symphonic style characterised by intricate keyboard-guitar interplays, and close vocal harmonies. They released their first album in the U.K.in 1969.
Line-up has remained intact since inception, as has music, which fits loosely into "flash-rock" categorization, leaning heavily on Wolstenholme's use of mellotron and keyboards. Barclay James Harvest quickly established a large and faithful following throughout Europe, an orchestra performing with the group on some gigs. Although not always favoured with critical approval, Barclay James Harvest have on a number of occasions (for instance, when they switched labels in U.K. to Polydor) appeared to be on brink of major commercial breakthrough.
In U.K., however, are established as consistently in-demand gigging band with relatively small but ardent following. Second, third and fourth albums, as listed below, first released in U.K. 1970, '71 and '72. Albums five and six both released 1974. Time Honoured Ghosts (1975) cut in San Francisco under producer Eliot Mazer, followed by Octoberon in Oct '76.
With a career spanning 20 albums over a quater of a century, they have continued to live in the shadow of other symphonic rock specialists such as Yes, ELP and Genesis.
Ignoring passing trends and rejecting gimmicky stage effects, they remained true to their own beliefs through Wolstenholme's departure after 1978's album 'XII' reduced their songwriting potential.
The melodic and often lightweight studio work belies their powerful and atmosphericlive performances as demonstrated by the 'LIve Tapes' album released on Polydor in 1978. 'A Concert For The People' (1982), recorded at an open-air concert in Berlin, drew a record crowd. British fans, however, remained indifferent.
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The band continued as a trio with regular guest musicians until 1998. One album, Welcome to the Show, released in 1990, was released under the abbreviated name BJH. However, because of criticism from fans, the full Barclay James Harvest name was restored, albeit with the inclusion of the BJH moniker.
In 1998, musical differences amongst members of BJH saw the band essentially split into two different groups, both of which retained "Barclay James Harvest" as part of their names. John Lees released an album mixing new songs and BJH classics, entitled Nexus, under the band name "Barclay James Harvest through the eyes of John Lees". Woolly Wolstenholme played in (and composed for) this band, subsequently resurrecting Maestoso to record and tour with new material, as well as back-catalogue favourites. Les Holroyd and Mel Pritchard teamed up to record under the name "Barclay James Harvest featuring Les Holroyd". Lees and Wolstenholme recently (2006/7) toured under the slightly modified band title "John Lees' Barclay James Harvest".
Barclay James Harvest Playing At the 1974 Reading Festival
Mel Pritchard died suddenly of a heart attack in early 2004. Woolly Wolstenholme took his own life in December 2010, having apparently struggled with depression for many years.
The two derivatives of Barclay James Harvest continue to record and tour to this day, and enjoy ongoing popularity, particularly in Germany, France, and Switzerland. [extracts from the 'Ultimate Encyclopedia of Rock', 1994 and Wikipedia]
Holroyd and Lees at 1974 Reading Festival
Album Review (by Dave Connolly)
'BARCLAY JAMES HARVEST AND OTHER SHORT STORIES' is the fourth album by gentle U.K. folk-psych-prog group Barclay James Harvest, and was eleased in 1971.
Like the work of Buffalo Springfield or the Moody Blues in the first go 'round, you'll need to take it on faith that the Baroque touches on Barclay James Harvest and Other Stories were effective for their time. The fuzzed guitars, Mellotron, bongos, heavy orchestration and dreamy arrangements may sound alittle stilted today, but strip them away (or simply acquiesce to enjoy them) and a very good collection of songs reveals itself. There are obvious nods to the Beatles ("Blue John Blues," "Medicine Man") and the Moody Blues (the lovely "Ursula"), but that's a fait accompli on any Barclay James Harvest album. Although the album doesn't really tell any stories (an optimistic acceptance of mortality comes into play on a couple of tracks), the band does aspire to bigger things on the aptly titled "The Poet." The only knock on this album (and it pertains to Barclay James Harvest in general) is that you wish they aspired to more. The classical arrangements are stunning, and when the band musters a big orchestral ending for a song like "Little Lapwing," you can't help but wonder how much better it would have been if they'd invoked it sooner. Musically the band is solid; Mel Pritchard's Ringo-isms on the drums are especially neat, while John Lees gets in some nice distorted guitar parts and Stewart Wooly Wolstenholme steals the show when the Mellotron comes into play. The epic "After the Day" closes things on a high note, ending with an explosion that announces all bets are off. Barclay James Harvest and Other Stories is itself a high note in the band's early catalog and worth a flyer for anyone interested in the band's oeuvre.
LP Harvest Labels
This post consists of an MP3 (320kps) rip taken from a friends CD and includes full album artwork along with some choice photos of the band in the early 70's. (NB. The live photos from their 1974 Reading Festival gig were sourced from ukrockfestivals.com with thanks).
I choose not to rip my vinyl, as it has seen better days. I purchased it 2nd hand some 30 years ago, and have really played it to death however I was lucky enough to source a CD copy for this posting. I particularly like the second side with the last three tracks being their swansong in my opinion. This album appealed to me for its wonderful symphonic and progressive rock style and I still enjoy what it has to offer more than 40 years after it's release date. Hope you enjoy it too.
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Tracks Listing
01. Medicine Man (3:56)
02. Someone There You Know (3:47)
03. Harry's Song (3:52)
04. Ursula (The Swansea Song) (2:54)
05. Little Lapwing (4:56)
06. Song With No Meaning (4:21)
07. Blue John Blues (6:50)
08. The Poet (5:33)
09. After The Day (4:05)

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Line-up of Musicians:
Les Holroyd (basses, piano, guitars, vocals)
John Lees (guitars, lead vocals, percussion)
Mel Pritchard (drums, percussion, congas, Tympanis)
Stuart Wolstenholme (keyboards, Mellotron, electric guitar, vocals, drums, acoustic guitar)
Martyn Ford (tambourine)
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Barclay James Harvest Link (93Mb)  New Link 25/10/2015
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