Geordie Boy makes good
Holly Hughes | NYC | 09/08/2005
(5 out of 5 stars)
"As a longtime Alan Price fan dutifully replacing my vinyl with CDs, this cache of Alan Price recordings was a godsend, one-stop shopping for a musician who's always a pleasure to listen to. From the early stuff like I Put A Spell on You, when Price was defiantly proving he could be just as bluesy on his own as he was with the Animals, through several delicious Randy Newman covers (I love Randy Newman, but Price's renditions of things like So Long Dad, Tickle Me, and Living Without You are better than Randy's), through Georgie Fame duos, it covers his solo career intelligently, and has shrewd selections from subsequent albums such as O Lucky Man!, Between Today and Yesterday, and A Gigster's Life For Me. If you had to pick only 41 tracks from the man's 30-plus prolific years as a solo artist, these would probably be the tracks you'd want -- they highlight his chamelon-like ability to perform in any number of music genres, from blues to folk to bossa nova to country to music-hall-tinged political commentary. But while this does showcase his versatility and his amazing voice, with its complicated bluesy texture and nuanced phrasing, it doesn't showcase his keyboard work as well, which is a pity because he is one of the great pianist/organists of his era. It's a good introduction, but it eventually sent me back to acquire the full albums, where some of his most interesting numbers were buried. Price has always thought of himself as an entertainer rather than an artist, though in fact he is a considerable artist; often his albums featured some facile pop numbers, which got more airplay than the purer and more intriguing back tracks. So buy and enjoy, but don't stop here -- he gets better the deeper you dig. (The House That Jack Built, the Complete 1960s Alan Price Set recordings, gives you perhaps a truer idea of just how good Price can be.)"
Ex-Animal made brilliant solo music
Peter Durward Harris | Leicester England | 03/12/2005
(5 out of 5 stars)
"Alan is best remembered for the classics he recorded with the Animals, most notably House of the rousing sun, but he made plenty of great music after quitting the Animals and going solo. One of the reasons he quit the Animals was that he didn't like the extensive touring, so he did less of that as a solo singer - this may be why his solo records met with only limited success in America, where he had one minor hit (I put a spell on you) but was otherwise ignored.
After leaving the Animals, Alan had four UK top ten hits and three other hits that nearly made the UK top ten including Rosetta, a duet with Georgie Fame. The remarkable aspect of Alan's solo hits is their variety. I put a spell on you (a cover of a Screaming Jay Hawkins song) is a bluesy song that could so easily have been recorded by the Animals. By contrast, Don't stop the carnival (a cover of a Sonny Rollins song) is a calypso-flavored song, while Hi Lilli hi lo is a cover of a song from a fifties musical (Lilli). Simon Smith and his amazing dancing bear (written by Randy Newman) is another great song.
Alan sometimes wrote his own material and two of his UK top ten hits were with his own songs. One was The house that Jack built, but the other is perhaps the most famous of Alan's solo hits even though it wasn't the biggest of his hits. It is, of course, Jarrow song, an anthem for the people of Newcastle. Alan also had a minor hit with a superb ballad, Just for you. It deserved to be a much bigger hit but by the time of its release (1978), Alan was no longer fashionable.
This compilation contains the best of Alan's post-Animals music including some of his duets with Georgie Fame."