Badger
1973
One Live Badger
01. Wheel of Fortune (7:04)
02. Fountain (7:12)
03. Wind of Change (7:00)
04. River (7:00)
05. The Preacher (3:35)
06. On the Way Home (7:10)
Brian Parrish / electric guitar, lead vocals (1,4-6)
Tony Kaye / keyboards, Mellotron
Dave Foster / bass, lead vocals (2,3)
Roy Dyke / drums
Recorded at the Rainbow Theatre, London, 15/16 December, 1972
Produced by Geoffrey Haslam, Badger and Jon Anderson
02. Fountain (7:12)
03. Wind of Change (7:00)
04. River (7:00)
05. The Preacher (3:35)
06. On the Way Home (7:10)
Brian Parrish / electric guitar, lead vocals (1,4-6)
Tony Kaye / keyboards, Mellotron
Dave Foster / bass, lead vocals (2,3)
Roy Dyke / drums
Recorded at the Rainbow Theatre, London, 15/16 December, 1972
Produced by Geoffrey Haslam, Badger and Jon Anderson
That the nucleus of Yes got rid of Peter Banks on guitar to make space for Steve Howe was not really a beautyful gesture , but to get rid of Tony Kaye was even worse ( they will invite him back during the eighties and those mediocre albums - feeling guilty Mr Anderson?) especially for the second most pompous KB player around (behind Keith) , Rick Wakeman . Of course this paid of incredibly well, as Fragile outsold all previous albums together, but the Yes Album is still my Yes fave album and Tony Kaye was really excellent.
So Kaye will first join Banks in a group called Flash (unlike most proghead , I never really enjoyed that openly commercial semi-hard-prog . Commercial ? look at the covers to see how hard they tried ) and after one album Kaye , obviously not pleased with this band , left to form the much better Badger. Most people think Highly of this album and I do too but just barely making the fourth star ( your life will not be affected if you own it or not or even if you never hear this while you are alive , you will not have missed that much) . But I do give this album four star because Kaye really got a bum deal from Yes and to a lesser Extent frm Flash , and here he shows what he can do. Releasing your first album as a live is rather odd choice , but why not ? It was probably cheaper than a full-blown studio album. I think the drummer was from Ashton Gardner and Dyke who made a few good almost prog albums .
If Kaye does not develop by himself the masterful songwriting from Yes (Anderson getting too much credit IMO for the composer part as he developped the idea and heard jingles and all the other four musicians ) but it is clear with this album that He held his share of the creation in his former group. This was of course very raw sounding and I would've like to hear the studio versions, but alas this never came to be as some of the members left after this and the following album sounds nothing like this , especially with Lomax singing. Give it a try , but I tell you there are better bands still to be discovered before this one. Worth a spin .
ReplyDeleteTHis is one of those Lp's I bought strictly for the cover. I had no idea who they were until I opened the jacket and saw both Tony Kaye and Jon Anderson's names. Then when I played it I was real pleased with the record. It's been played regularly and I did get the CD version also which has a slightly brighter mastering but remains true to the LP. I'd reccomend it for anyone liking heavy keyboard bands. It sure is a keeper.
http://www.filefactory.com/file/e3zaid0vagc/F0073.rar