Great Speckled Bird

by Collector's Choice

$12.98
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Average Rating: * * * * half star
Sales Rank:33027 (lower is better)
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Release Date:2006-10-10
Label:Collector's Choice
UPC:617742070224
Binding:Audio CD
Published By:Collector's Choice
ASIN:B000G04UD2
Category:Music

Tracks on Great Speckled Bird by Collector's Choice

  1. Love What You're Doing Child - Great Speckled Bird, Tyson, Ian
  2. Calgary - Great Speckled Bird, Tyson, Ian
  3. Trucker's Café - Great Speckled Bird, Ytson, Sylvia
  4. Long Long Time to Get Old - Great Speckled Bird, Tyson, Ian
  5. Flies in the Bottle - Great Speckled Bird, Tyson, Ian
  6. Bloodshot Beholder - Great Speckled Bird, Tyson, Ian
  7. Crazy Arms - Great Speckled Bird, Mooney, Ralph
  8. This Dream - Great Speckled Bird, Tyson, Ian
  9. Smiling Wine - Great Speckled Bird, Tyson, Sylvia Frick
  10. Rio Grande - Great Speckled Bird, Garrett, Amos
  11. Disappearing Woman - Great Speckled Bird, Tyson, Sylvia Frick
  12. We Sail - Great Speckled Bird, Tyson, Sylvia Frick
  13. New Trucker's Café - Great Speckled Bird,

Editorial Reviews and Product Descriptions

Album Description

You can't trace the evolution of country-rock without listening to this 1970 album by Ian & Sylvia and thier crack band of Buddy Cage, Amos Garrett and N.D. Smart II; like our previous reissues of records by the Dillards (Wheatstraw Suite and Beau Brummels (Bradley's Barn), Great Speckled Bird brought a whole new "longhair" sensiblity to Nashville, and broke through the barriers that had separated country from rock for over a decade. As Sylvia Fricker herself says in our liner notes, "Not blowing our own horn or anything, but that album was so far ahead of its time that it really took people a long time to catch up with us and figure out what we were doing." Well, we're glad we caught up, and you will be, too, when you hear this lost classic. Produced by Todd Rundgren.

Customer Reviews

Great Speckled Bird - Ian & Sylvia - Reviewed on 2008-08-19
* * * * *

I was really glad to find this item. This album was the crucible for the folk-rock era. Ian Tyson always had the ability to select the best leading edge musicians to make up his various bands but he outdid even himself on this album. Ian & Sylvia were the "gold standard" in this era of electric folk music. The vinyl is a collector's item.
Unfortunate end of career - Reviewed on 2008-07-29
*
1 customer found this review helpful.

Ian & Sylvia and Nashville was not a good mix. The entire album seems forced, as if they are trying to be something that they are not. Stick with "Ian & Sylvia's Greatest Hits" or "The Complete Vanguard Recordings", both of which are wonderful if you are a fan of their's.
Great, as usual - Reviewed on 2007-07-30
* * * * *
4 customers found this review helpful.

This album is from Ian and Sylvia's early days. There was a freshness to their music. From "Crazy Arms" to "Truckers Cafe" it has an enthusiasm that will have you hanging on every song.
It Can't get Any Better - Reviewed on 2007-03-08
* * * * *
5 customers found this review helpful.

Ian and Sylvia were innovators in the "old" folk days. Their harmonies and arrangements still leave people breathless. With the addition of Amos Garrett and company to create Great Speckled Bird it just got better and better. The harmonies deepened and became more comples and Sylvia's voice soared to the heavens. Harmony? Listen to "We Sail" alone in a quiet room at decent volume and prepare to be amazed. Some albums don't deserve to be reissued.. my question is why did it take so long for this materpiece to reappear
Soaring Again... - Reviewed on 2006-11-06
* * * * *
15 customers found this review helpful, 1 did not.

"Great Speckled Bird" comes around on cd about as often as Halley's Comet, and usually for a similarly short duration of time. My advice is to get this true classic of the country-rock genre as quickly as you can, while it's available. Originally issued in 1970 on Bearsville Records, this album is on a par with "Sweetheart of the Rodeo", "Workingman's Dead", "The Gilded Palace of Sin", and "Music From Big Pink". It truly is that great.

Previously known as a folk duo, Canadians Ian Tyson and Sylvia Fricker went to Nashville to record this countrified effort. Todd Rundgren, also a Bearsville artist, was enlisted to produce. The original album featured an even dozen country-inflected tunes done to perfection. All were Tyson and Fricker originals except for "Crazy Arms", and the material is uniformly strong, with clear vocals and sparkling musicianship from beginning to end.

The contributions of Amos Garrett (guitar) and Buddy Cage (pedal steel) deserve special mention. Garrett was and is a very special talent. He clearly was an influence on another guitar great, Richard Thompson, who has named Garrett as one of his favorites. Garrett's lead guitar alternately stings and purrs with a string-bending technique he developed from listening to a pedal steel. He later worked with Geoff and Maria Muldaur, who were produced by Joe Boyd--the producer of R. Thompson's band Fairport Convention. I'm fairly confident that Boyd exposed the young Thompson to Garrett's playing, when Thompson was in the process of breaking free of Fairport. In 1972, as part of a project called "The Bunch", Thompson also covered "Crazy Arms" in a fashion similar to Great Speckled Bird.

Buddy Cage (pedal steel) went on to win further laurels with New Riders of the Purple Sage, after leaving Ian and Sylvia's band. Together on "Great Speckled Bird", Garrett and Cage interweave beautifully. They sound like they were born to play together.

My favorite songs on this album are "Long, Long Time to Get Old" which has rollicking, unforgettable pedal steel work from Cage, "Flies in A Bottle" (poignantly sung by Tyson), "Disappearing Woman" and "We Sail". The last two are great Sylvia Fricker compositions that together bring the album to a close. "We Sail" is a hymnlike anthem that in its own way is a stirring as another 1970 tune--the Beatles' "Let it Be".

If you aren't too familiar with Ian and Sylvia, just know that they were great songwriters (Ian wrote "Four Strong Winds", Sylvia authored "You Were On My Mind"). Ian has a very straightforward, outdoorsy tenor voice that occasionally sounds like Roy Orbison. Sylvia sounds like June Carter Cash with a vibrato, which may take a novice a few listens to get used to... but the material is so strong on "Great Speckled Bird" that nothing detracts from it.

You won't regret buying this album. If you've never heard it, you are in for a treat.
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