Showing posts with label Harvey Mandel. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Harvey Mandel. Show all posts

Friday, October 17, 2025

Harvey Mandel - Feel The Sound (1974)

Year: 1974 (CD 1989)
Label: Line Records (West Germany), JACD 9.00799 O
Style: Blues Rock, Progressive Rock, Jazz-Rock
Country: Detroit, Michigan, U.S. (March 11, 1945)
Time: 29:28
Format: Flac Tracks 16/44,1 kHz
Size: 173 Mb

This album reminds me very much of the Jeff Beck release "Rough and Ready". The reason is the vocalist sounds very much like Beck's vocalist Bobby Tench from that album. And that is a compliment to all parties involved. Love the Beck album and I love this one by Harvey. Mr. Mandel is criminally unknown. Easily makes my top ten favorite guitarist list. This is a classic 70's release. Harvey is tapping his ass off here and it's obvious Eddie Van Halen was listening. He used to watch Harvey live at the Whiskey in L.A. In the early 70's. Be nice if he would ever mention Harvey as a huge influence. What a douche. Anyway, if you love blues/rock guitar with jazz chops make a point to hunt this down. You will not be disappointed. Thank you Harvey.
(amazon.co.uk/Feel-Sound-Harvey-Mandel/dp/B01G93QDI4)

Album recorded and mixed in the analog domain - AAD. That is, a minimum of digital processing.
A=Analog. D=digital. The first letter stands for how the music was recorded. The second letter for how it was mixed. The third letter stands for the format (all CD's will have D as the last letter).

01. Got To Be Bad (03:53)
02. Sore Throat (02:35)
03. Just Wanna Be There (04:28)
04. Candles By The Bedside (04:07)
05. Feel The Sound (06:02)
06. I Got Your Slot (02:53)
07. Rankachank Blues (02:50)
08. Forever And Forever (02:36)

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Wednesday, October 1, 2025

Harvey Mandel - Shangrenade (1973)

Year: 1973 (CD 1998)
Label: Repertoire Records (Germany), REP 4712-WG
Style: Jazz-Rock, Instrumental
Country: Detroit, Michigan, U.S. (March 11, 1945)
Time: 31:21
Format: Flac Tracks 16/44,1 kHz
Size: 209 Mb

Mr. Mandel made some sweet music with Canned Heat and he also made some super solo jazzy blues rock platters. This great musician doesn't seem to have received the accolades he deserves. I can't stress enough how good these solo albums are if you are into well played funky/jazzy/jammy, blues rock. I would recommend any of Mr. Mandel's early (70's) recordings to any guitar freak. I believe they are that good.
Review by rod45. Dec 30 2016 . 4/5
When I first listened to this particular album of his and I was completely blown away by his playing. This collection of fusion inspired funk rock tracks should grace any list of best instrumental albums. Mandels use of tapping predates almost any other recorded music and his use of it has to be heard to be believed. Highly recommended to any guitar freak or fan of instrumental music.
Review by SixStringMark. Dec 26 2007. 4/5
Why does this album not show up in all the lists of essential guitar albums? Shangrenade is an album of great instrumental music and wonderful guitar innovation. At the time of it's release, no one was using the two handed finger tapping technique that Mandel had mastered. The album was truely years ahead of it's time. Today, many guitarists routinely use the techniques that originated with this album. Even if you are not a guitar player and cannot appreciate the innovative playing, this album is still a gem to listen to. A classic jazzy funky rock instrumental record. It has always been one of my personal favorites.
Review by the_odd_box. Nov 29 2007. 5/5
(rateyourmusic.com/release/album/harvey-mandel/shangrenade-2/)

01. What The Funk (03:06)
02. Fish Walk (04:46)
03. Sugarloaf (04:16)
04. Midnight Sun (Version 2) (03:42)
05. Million Dollar Feeling (03:32)
06. Green Apple Quickstep (03:09)
07. Frenzy (04:32)
08. Shangrenade (04:14)

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Monday, September 8, 2025

Barry Goldberg - Barry Goldberg and Friends (1969)

Year: 1969 (CD 1991)
Label: Sequel Records (UK), nex cd 160
Style: Blues, Blues Rock
Country: Chicago, Illinois, U.S. (December 25, 1941 - January 22, 2025)
Time: 63:00
Format: Flac Tracks 16/44,1 kHz
Size: 400 Mb

Barry Goldberg's discography of rock jamming, recorded back when Phish and other participants in the jam band scene weren't even twinkles in anyone's eye, is an incoherent jumble of repackagings, reissues, and albums with similar titles. There may not be a single one of these albums that actually has correct credits for the instrumentalists involved; Mike Bloomfield, for example, often hides behind a pseudonym because of this or that piece of paper he signed. A simple rule may help in the location of the best of this material. If there are not that many songs, and the individual tracks are quite long, that's a good sign. If there are lots of titles, and lots of blues titles, then don't bother with it. Which brings us to this album, which from the look of its original cover was simply dumped on the market without much care or consideration. A contest between two album cover designers over who can finish an entire layout, including credits, before the coffee gets cold may have been behind the cover. The name of the bassist is left out in the process. Or is Bloomfield playing bass while Harvey Mandel is soloing, and the other way around? There are five songs in the program, two of them not much over four minutes and the rest at some kind of jam length, especially the 12-and-a-half-minute "I Got to Love My Woman." The shorties are straight blues, and are the low points of the set. The beat is not happening on the opening "Sweet Home Chicago"; it might be worth suggesting that the organist check out some records of Chicago blues to see how it should sound, but such a comment would be totally obnoxious. Surely Goldberg has listened to more records of that type of music than any music critic.
The jamming is where things really take off. Goldberg has a sound of his own on the organ and is always going somewhere interesting in his solos, provided he can keep the eager guitarists out of his way. As in his work with the Paul Butterfield Blues Band, Bloomfield uses the jams as a chance to stretch away from his B.B. King style, which is also on display, complete with bent-string elaborations that are practically byzantine. Mandel has much more personality in his playing, and is something of a master in terms of unusual tone colorings. Nonetheless, drummer "Fast" Eddie Hoh completely steals the long jam with a solo that hints at the mystery of why there are so many people in the music business with the nickname of "Fast Eddie," sounding like at least three of them are on-stage playing the drums. "Mess 'a da' Blues" is another long jam, a stock slow blues feature in which the guitarists get to chop at each other. Tracks such as this do have an appeal, but it is blues in name only; the track has no real emotional content the way an actual blues song would, and because of the athletic guitar calisthenics becomes not much more than a display of technique. The original release had no songwriting credits for any of the material.
(allmusic.com/album/barry-goldberg-friends-mw0000080080)


Album recorded and mixed in the analog domain - AAD. That is, a minimum of digital processing.
A=Analog. D=digital. The first letter stands for how the music was recorded. The second letter for how it was mixed. The third letter stands for the format (all CD's will have D as the last letter).

01. That's Allright Mama (02:47)
02. Maxwell Street Shuffle (02:28)
03. Hole In My Pocket (02:52)
04. It Hurts Me Too (04:15)
05. You're Still My Baby (03:21)
06. On The Road Again (01:59)
07. Sittin' In The Circles (03:43)
08. Capricorn Blues (01:56)
09. A Lighter Blue (02:41)
10. Twice A Man (04:30)
11. Fool On A Hill (03:21)
12. Sugar Coated Love (02:38)
13. Strung And Young (03:18)
14. The Answers In Your Head (03:27)
15. I Think I'm Gonna Cry (03:22)
16. Jimi The Fox (02:30)
17. Another Day (03:29)
18. Blues For Barry And ... (10:14)

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Sunday, September 7, 2025

Harvey Mandel - Cristo Redentor (1968)

Year: 1968 (CD 2003)
Label: Raven Records (Australia), RVCD-163
Style: Psychedelic Rock, Instrumental
Country: Detroit, Michigan, U.S. (March 11, 1945)
Time: 77:02
Format: Flac Tracks 16/44,1 kHz
Size: 424 Mb

Cristo Redentor is the debut album by Harvey Mandel. Richie Unterberger of AllMusic writes that "Mandel's debut remains his best early work." John Tobler wrote in the liner notes of the CD that Mandel "was good enough to be invited to audition for The Rolling Stones and he worked with John Mayall and Canned Heat - but it is for this Cristo Redentor album, and particularly for the utterly classic Wade in the Water that he will be remembered." This album is completely instrumental with the exception of the title track where soprano Jacqueline May Allen, joined by Carolyn Willis, Edna Wright and Julia Tillman Waters, blend their wordless voices as if another instrument.
(en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cristo_Redentor_(album))
This is an Australian release. Compared to the original vinyl, the track order has been changed and 8 bonus tracks have been added.

01. Wade In The Water (07:52)
02. Lights Out (04:56)
03. Bradley's Barn (03:20)
04. You Can't Tell Me (04:22)
05. Nashville 1 A.M. (03:41)
06. Cristo Redentor (03:50)
07. Before Six (06:31)
08. The Lark (04:42)
09. Snake (03:49)
10. Long Wait (02:48)
11. Spirit of Trane (04:04)
12. My Time Ain't Long (03:50)
13. Let's Work Together (02:52)
14. That's All Right (05:33)
15. A Little Soul Food (04:07)
16. What Comes Around Goes Around (04:24)
17. My Soul's On Fire (04:16)
18. Which Witch is Which (01:57)

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