Signature Sound
At 15, Andy Fraser began a brief tenure playing bass in the John Mayall Bluesbreakers, was considered a ‘little snot’ - Andy’s words - by drummer Keef Hartley, and smoked his first joint with Mick Taylor in Holland having left school and been given permission by the court to tour abroad as a minor: providing he would be in bed by a specified time [1]. He wasn’t tucked up as agreed that night. At 16, and able to go to sleep when he pleased, he was a member of new band Free.
It is as bass player with Free that Andy Fraser is understandably
and rightly best known. Perhaps less well known by many is his significant
songwriting partnership with Paul Rodgers, producing and co-writing, for
example, theirs and one of the world’s biggest rock hits All Right Now, but also so many more outstanding Free numbers, a
fact I have already mentioned in writing about their first great album Tons of Sobs.
Andy split from Free in 1971, rejoined briefly in ’72 and
then left again. He flirted with starting new band Toby, recording some tracks;
jammed and might have produced something spectacular with Frankie Miller in his
Rumbledown Band [*] - but didn’t - and then went on to record the album First Water with guitarist Chris
Spedding in their band Sharks.
In 1975, Fraser released two albums as the Andy Fraser Band,
the first eponymously and the second titled In
Your Eyes. It is this first release that I want to write about here. It is
excellent. The songwriting, not surprisingly, is superb and without doubt
reflects the signature Free sound of which he was so instrumental [incidental
pun]. Whilst some reviewers don’t see this clear continuation, I can’t comprehend
how that’s possible. More surprising than the songwriting thread is how Andy’s
vocal also echoes that of Paul Rodgers – not exactly, obviously – but for me it
is a strong rock voice, and Andy acknowledges Rodgers as a natural influence as
well as many others, Frankie Miller included.
Opener Don’t Hide Your
Love Away immediately stamps the signature sound: driving rhythm with
thumping bass and the melodic line sung strongly above this. Second Changed Man is bluesier and uses effects
on the bass to produce a ‘new’ sound within the funky whole. Ain’t Gonna Worry is back to the signature
sound of Free ballads and would have nested easily in any of their albums. The
same applies to seventh track Keep On
Loving You.
Eighth Love Is All
Around is interesting in that Fraser’s vocal is at its most characteristic,
and therefore clearly not a Rodgers’ clone, and definitely not as distinctive. The
chorus ‘all around’ carries the stamp I have been proclaiming, but the bass
effects again provide that difference too: what I trust I am characterising is
a songwriting and performance that bears the praiseworthy and recognisable
roots of Fraser’s Free period yet with movements away from this – but not too
far. Not until the second release In Your
Eyes.
[1] interview with Dmitry M. Epstein, DMME.NET – Classic Rock and Beyond
[*] Listen to Kossof playing I Don't Know Why The Sun Don't Shine in this band here:
[*] Listen to Kossof playing I Don't Know Why The Sun Don't Shine in this band here:
http://thehelplessdancer.wordpress.com/2010/02/12/minstrels-poets-vagabonds-the-rumbledown-band/
No comments:
Post a Comment