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Blues from Laurel Canyon

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Blues from Laurel Canyon
Studio album by
ReleasedNovember 1968
Recorded26–28 August 1968
StudioDecca Studios, London
GenreElectric blues
Length47:59 (original)
61:11 (2007 reissue)
LabelDecca (UK)
London (U.S.)
ProducerMike Vernon, John Mayall
John Mayall chronology
Bare Wires
(1968)
Blues from Laurel Canyon
(1968)
The Turning Point
(1969)
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic [1]

Blues from Laurel Canyon is a 1968 album by John Mayall, featuring British blues music. It was his first album after the breakup of his band the Bluesbreakers in May 1968,[2] though others claim it was on 14 July 1968. It was also his last album with Decca before moving to Polydor.

John Mayall sings and plays harmonica, organ and guitar on the album. The other band members are a young Mick Taylor (guitar), Colin Allen (drums) and Stephen Thompson (bass). The guitarist Peter Green is featured on the track "First Time Alone". The engineer was Derek Varnals. All the songs on the album were written by Mayall.

The title of the album derives from Laurel Canyon, California, United States (in the Los Angeles area) where John Mayall subsequently lived from 1969 to 1979. It forms a record of his visit there before moving to the US on a more permanent basis. The area was favoured by many musicians at the time. It was recorded at Decca Studios in West Hampstead, London, England between 26 and 28 August 1968, and was released on the Decca label.

The album was innovative for its time, especially by the standards of blues recordings. The first track opens with a recording of a jet airliner landing, dissolving into the driving rhythm of the song. There were no visible track divisions on the vinyl album. Some songs fade or segue into the next track, others stop on a chord which is immediately followed by the introduction of the next track. Tabla drums are used, as is the technique of hitting guitar strings with a drumstick. The final track is a long song which moves into an extended lead guitar solo underscored by Mayall's Hammond organ, fading into a simple unaccompanied guitar figure which repeats until it too fades.

The lyrics are autobiographical and refer, if obliquely, to people Mayall met on his first visit, such as Frank Zappa and Moon Unit Zappa (on "2401"), the band Canned Heat (on "The Bear"), and famous groupie, Catherine James (on "Miss James").

From a technical point of view, the album demonstrates the limitations of the recording technology of the time. A substantial number of vinyl albums were issued in monophonic format, since many home record players, at least in the United Kingdom, could not reproduce stereophonic sound. On the stereophonic releases, including the CD re-releases, the stereo imaging separates the instruments quite strongly. For instance, in the song "Walking on Sunset", the drum kit, situated on the left, is inaudible in the right hand channel. The overall impression is that of being in a hallway with several rooms off it, each one containing a particular instrument. There is no sense of being in a room with several instruments playing and generating an ambient sound-field, as might be expected from a live recording, or one mixed with more available sound inputs.

A remastered and expanded version of this album was released in the UK in August 2007.

Track listing

All songs written by John Mayall — timings and keys also included.

Original tracks

  1. "Vacation" – 2:47 E
  2. "Walking on Sunset" – 2:50 Ab
  3. "Laurel Canyon Home" – 4:33 C
  4. "2401" – 3:42 A
  5. "Ready to Ride" – 3:32 E
  6. "Medicine Man" – 2:43 G
  7. "Somebody's Acting Like a Child" – 3:27 Db
  8. "The Bear" – 4:40 Bb
  9. "Miss James" – 2:30 F
  10. "First Time Alone" – 4:49 B
  11. "Long Gone Midnight" – 3:27 Eb
  12. "Fly Tomorrow" – 8:59 D

Bonus tracks

  1. "2401" – 3:56 A (Single version)
  2. "Wish You Were Mine" – 8:36 (Live '68, previously on Primal Solos)

Personnel

Technical
  • Derek Varnals - engineer
  • Adrian Martins - assistant engineer
  • Dominique Tarlé, Stephen C. LaVere, Rob Bosboom - photography

References

  1. ^ Davies, Ben. Blues from Laurel Canyon at AllMusic
  2. ^ Christopher Hjort, Strange Brew : Eric Clapton & the British Blues Boom, 1965-1970, Jawbone Press, 2007, 352 pp. ISBN 978-1-906002-00-8