Sold Date:
December 9, 2024
Start Date:
December 2, 2024
Final Price:
$45.00
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This is the Mississippi reissue (out of print ) UNPLAYED COPY.
This is the Mississippi Records reissue with the booklet.Record is unplayed mint condition.
"Never
was a record more aptly named, for a kick-off. Proof positive
laid-back does NOT equal boring. But oh dear, where are my manners? For
the uninitiated, Michael Hurley (aka Elwood Snock, Doc Snock, Hi Fi
Snock, the Horrible Horrible Pearly Snock Man or simply The Snock) is
one of the most shamefully neglected artists of any era; a
singer/songwriter whose style, despite evidence of vestiges of folk,
jazz, blues, country and rock'n'roll, is all his own, though in an
unguarded moment he once confessed to playing 'the baroque blues'.
'Armchair Boogie' was his second LP. Me, I reckon it's rather fine.
Here's why.
'Werewolf' is unquestionably Michael's most famous
song. It'd appeared on his debut and has done so on other records
since; who's to say it won't crop up again? I for one won't object if
it does. The version that opens Side 1 of this recording is one of the
best versions, a duet with Rube The Card aka the great Robin Remailly
on fiddle that reminds this here listener of nothing so much as a
hillbilly version of 'The Black Angel's Death Song' as done live by
Reed and Cale in Paris in 1972. You follow? Like Reed, Hurley is the
very personification of that gosh-darned fine line between the deadly
serious and the utterly hilarious. Dismiss him as either at your peril.
Part of the charm of 'Armchair Boogie' rests in its being recorded in
the Snock's bedroom. Sounds as if he's right there in your living room
playing just for you. Lumpen piano and playful bass help to propel such
tunes as 'Grand Canyon Line' and 'Get The Best Of Me' in lugubrious
fashion and the wondrously named Pasta Saco adds a cute harmony to
Michael's lead on the truly contemplative and downright lascivious
'Open Up (Eternal Lips)', another Snock classic subsequently
re-recorded.
But my favourites are the solo performances such
as 'Light Green Fellow'; someone once told me it sounded like Nick
Drake. Bit wide of the mark, I'd say; for starters that criminally
over-rated performer never touched the heights scaled by the Snock, not
in my book any road. Then there's 'English Nobleman', featuring a
Snock mock-English accent that sounds like The Singing Postman and
containing the revelation that said nobleman's 'dignity would be
besmirched/if you hit me in the face with a pie'. Terrific. By utter
contrast 'Troubled Waters' is a tale of dark resignation to one's fate
in the light of one's true love going pear-shaped and recalls the
quirky craft of the great Robin Williamson as much as anything. Then
you have the inimitable 'Sweedeedee' as referred to by Julian Cope
during the course of 'Planet Ride' off 'St. Julian' and featuring
Earthquake Anderson on the mouth organ. This song cannot be
over-praised, it's that good. So is 'When The Swallows Come Back To
Capistrano', originally performed all those years ago by Gene Autry and
The 5 Satins, amongst others. There are even those as would argue that
this LP saves the best till last, namely the instrumental gem
'Penguins', with Michael Kane's cornet harmonizing so, so sweetly with
the Snock's mock trumpet on this delightfully lilting finale. None of
this even takes into account the enigmatic solo guitar piece Ravager's
Reel' or the sublime and heartfelt tale of a dog's blues that is
'Jocko's Lament'.
To wrap up, I'd have to say 'Armchair
Boogie' is one of the most effective and enjoyable relaxant/stimulants
I've ever used. Whenever the world or whatever gets on my case I bung
it on and time goes all elastic on me and I feel an overwhelming need
to nibble or guzzle something nice in the company of someone even
nicer. Not many other products I feel I can endorse in such a fashion,
to be frank. Michael Hurley is one in a zillion and this is just one of
the great records he's done down the years. If you don't know his
stuff then go remedy. And if I'm preaching to the converted here, well
pardon me, as Bob Mitchum said in the crap remake of 'Cape Fear', all
over the place."