Music Reviews: The Kinks’ ‘Muswell Hillbillies/Everybody’s in Show-biz – Everybody’s a Star,’ plus John McCutcheon, Collective Soul, Mick Kolassa, and Brian Lisik

Kinks Muswell Hillbillies - Everybody's in Show-biz box set contents

You may feel you can skip your daily weightlifting session on the day you lug homeย Muswell Hillbillies/Everybodyโ€™s in Show-biz – Everybody’s a Star,ย the eight-pound, 50th-anniversary edition of theย Kinksโ€™ first two albums for the RCA label.

Delivering everything but group leader Ray Daviesโ€™s kitchen sink, the box set includes four CDsโ€”one for each of the two original albums, plus one with 11 new remixes by Davies and one with a โ€œtour montageโ€ that incorporates previously unreleased versionsโ€”as well as all the above content on six colored vinyl LPs. Also featured are an oversized 52-page hardcover book with liner notes and new band interviews; a 1971 home movie from Davies on a Blu-ray disc; six photo prints; a map of Londonโ€™s Muswell neighborhood, where Davies and his brother and bandmate Dave grew up; and a pin/badge with a Kinks logo.

All these extras notwithstanding, the main attractions in this BMG-label box set are well-remastered copies of the two original albums: Muswell Hillbillies, which came out in November 1971, and Everybodyโ€™s in Show-biz – Everybodyโ€™s a Star, which showed up only about nine months later and combines studio recordings with excerpts from a pair of March 1972 Carnegie Hall concerts in New York. 

Kinks Muswell Hillbillies

Muswell Hillbillies, which flopped commercially, lacks an obvious follow-up to โ€œLola,โ€ the Kinksโ€™ lyrically ahead-of-its-time hit from the prior year. Still, this 10th studio album offers Daviesโ€™s engaging albeit acerbic take on the working class and modern life. There are numbers that musically and lyrically reflect his roots, such as the title cut, which employs some trad-jazz elements and references his childhood neighborhood, but that song and others also draw on American country music as well as rock and theatrical and cabaret styles.

Though some of the songs are upbeat, the lyrics, which showcase Daviesโ€™s sardonic wit, paint a decidedly different picture. โ€œIโ€™m a 20th-century man, but I donโ€™t want to be hereโ€ is among the first lines he utters on the LP, and it seems most of the albumโ€™s other protagonists would rather be somewhere else as well. The one in โ€œAcute Schizophrenia Paranoia Blues,โ€ for example, confides that โ€œIโ€™m too terrified to walk out of my own front door,โ€ and the one in โ€œComplicated Lifeโ€ confesses that โ€œI woke this morning with a pain in my neck, a pain in my heart, and a pain in my chest.โ€ 

In โ€œHere Come the People in Grey,โ€ the state is forcing the unhappy singer from his home, while the poignant โ€œOklahoma USAโ€ describes a woman living in her dreams because her work bores her, and her home is in decay.ย ย You might expect the proceedings to be cheerier in โ€œHoliday,โ€ where Davies proclaims, โ€œOh what a lovely day todayโ€ฆto have a little holidayโ€โ€”but only until he adds that heโ€™s โ€œlookinโ€™ in the sky for a gap in the cloudsโ€ and โ€œthe salt gets in my blisters and the sand gets in my hair.โ€ And: โ€œThe seaโ€™s an open sewer, but I really couldnโ€™t care, Iโ€™m breathing through my mouth, so I donโ€™t have to sniff the air.โ€ A lovely day indeed.

The discontent continues on the studio disc in Everybodyโ€™s in Show-biz – Everybodyโ€™s a Star, which also failed to rack up significant sales. Another loosely constructed concept album, this record focuses on touring and fame. In โ€œHere Comes Yet Another Day,โ€ for instance, Davies seems to be talking about himself when he sings โ€œDrank myself to sleep last night, beer stains on my pillow, I gotta pull my things togetherโ€ฆTune up, start to playโ€ฆcanโ€™t be late, mustnโ€™t make the people wait.โ€ Amid the gloom, though, is some beautiful music, including the reflective โ€œSitting in My Hotelโ€ and โ€œCelluloid Heroes,โ€ a song about stardom that musically and lyrically ranks with the best numbers Davies has ever written.

The albumโ€™s campy concert tracks have their moments, but mostly disappoint. The band delivers the title cut and three other numbers from Muswell Hillbillies, several other Kinks compositions, and vaudevillian readings of โ€œBanana Boat Songโ€ (aka โ€œDay-Oโ€), the Jamaican folk song; โ€œMr. Wonderful,โ€ the 1955 Broadway number; and โ€œBaby Face,โ€ the 1920s Tin Pan Alley jazz standard. The only Kinks hit on the program is โ€œLola,โ€ but on that track, the group merely provides instrumentation while the audience supplies the vocals. 

Still, this box set has a lot to offer. Serious fans will be interested in its wide array of extras, and many listeners will likely warm up to bothย Muswell Hillbilliesย andย Everybodyโ€™s in Show-biz โ€“ Everybodyโ€™s a Star, both of which deliver more pleasures than their initial sales and reviews would suggest.ย 

The box set is available here.

Also Noteworthy

John McCutcheon--Leap!

John McCutcheonLeap!After listening to this 43rd (!) LP from John McCutcheon, you wonโ€™t be surprised to learn that he often collaborates with Tom Paxton. They share a penchant for traditional folk, seem to have similar senses of humor and eyes for detail, and even sound a lot alike. (McCutcheonโ€™s baritone may also remind you of Richard Shindell.) 

The 18 tracks on this all-originals set cover a wide terrain. On โ€œThe Ride,โ€ for example, McCutcheon offers a philosophy of life, while โ€œThe Troublesโ€ addresses the Holocaust, โ€œFuller Brushโ€ delivers a traveling salesmanโ€™s pitch, and โ€œListenโ€ talks about a friendโ€™s failed romance. (โ€œI tried to warn you, tried to tell you he was a jerk,โ€ he begins.). The lyrics command attention throughout the CD, and so does the music, which prominently features fiddler Stuart Duncan and includes such guests as guitarist Pete Kennedy of the Kennedys, flutist Seamus Egan, and singers Kathy Mattea and Tommy Sands.

The album is available for download here.

Collective Soul--Disciplined Breakdown

Collective Soul,ย Disciplined Breakdownย (25th-Anniversary Edition). The Georgia-based alt-rock outfit Collective Soul created its aptly titled 1997 third album while immersed in a legal battle with its former manager that resulted in a freezing of financial assets. But the group, whose first two albums were multiplatinum sellers, managed to turn lemons into lemonade. Recording on the cheap because of a lack of available funds, the band’s members turned their frustrations into another hit album, and one that at times is as hook-filled and addictive as anything youโ€™ll hear from, say, U2 or Oasis.ย 

This 25th-anniversary, two-CD edition offers a remaster of the original LP, an alternate version of one of its tracks, an alternate mix of another, and, most notably, an 18-song, hour-and-a-half contemporaneous Chicago concert that features strong renditions of hits from the groupโ€™s first two albums, eight numbers from Disciplined Breakdown, and an energized cover of Ozzy Osborneโ€™s โ€œCrazy Train.โ€

The album is available on vinyl here and on CD here.

Mick Kolassa--They Call Me Uncle Mick!

Mick Kolassa,ย They Call Me Uncle Mick!.ย Blues singer and guitarist Mick Kolassa puts his distinctive stamp on music from multiple genres and eras in this fine acoustic collection.

The album opens with โ€œMy Pencil Wonโ€™t Write No More,โ€ a lighthearted 1931 number by the Mississippi Sheiksโ€™ Bo Carter, and includes โ€œSunny Side of the Street,โ€ the Jimmy McHugh and Dorothy Fields standard that dates from the same period. Hank Williamsโ€™s โ€œIโ€™m So Lonesome I Could Cryโ€ is also here, as are six Kolassa originals and bluesy versions of John Prineโ€™s โ€œDaddyโ€™s Little Pumpkinโ€ and Joni Mitchellโ€™s โ€œWoodstock.โ€ Among the large and stellar backup crew are guitarist and percussionist Jeff Jensen, who co-produced with Kolassa, a violinist, a couple of slide guitarists, and two harmonica players, including Bobby Rush on one track.

The album is available here.

Hotsy Totsy! - Brian Lisik & Hard Legs

Brian Lisik & Hard Legs,ย Hotsy Totsy!.ย Akron, Ohioโ€“based Brian Lisik follows up eight studio albums with this incendiary concert set, which finds the singer and his two accompanists occupying a sweet spot between garage rock and power pop and making a much bigger sound than youโ€™d expect from three people.ย 

You may be tempted to turn the volume up loud enough for the neighbors to call the cops, but before they arrive, youโ€™ll be rewarded with passionate, tightly constructed rock and roll plus the occasional dose of humor. (โ€œBye Bi Love,โ€ for example, is about falling in love with a lesbian.) There are also multiple nods to vintage rock, such as when Lisik covers the Driftersโ€™ โ€œUnder the Boardwalkโ€ and works a quote from the Troggsโ€™ โ€œLove Is All Aroundโ€ into a self-penned rocker called โ€œJunior High School.โ€ 

The album is available for download here.


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