Prog

SPIRIT

Pigeonhole-defying West Coast pioneers revisited.

- SID SMITH

Living in the age of the digital cornucopia, listeners are used to being able to hear anything at the click of a button. But it wasn’t always like that. When Time Circle 1968 - 1972 was first issued in the early 90s, the West Coast outfit, whose electric creativity sparked between psychedeli­a, pop, jazz and proto-prog musings, had fallen into relative obscurity, with only one of the four albums featured on the two-disc compilatio­n being in print at the time.

The fact that Spirit never fitted into a pigeonhole perhaps explains their relegation to rock’s margins. The straightfo­rward reissue of Time Circle and Esoteric’s five-disc celebratio­n show the capricious instincts and sense of adventure on Spirit’s 1968 self-titled debut, and that year’s The Family That Plays Together, 1969’s Clear and 1970’s The Twelve Dreams Of Dr Sardonicus are well worth exploring.

There’s a luscious quality to the first three albums that comes in part from the deployment of orchestral arrangemen­ts thanks to producer Lou Adler’s use of veteran jazzer Marty Paich’s thoughtful writing. Such ornamentat­ion, veering into baroque opulence or, as with Taurus, a bucolic splendour pulls things outside standard rock band schtick.

While guitarist Randy California might have picked up licks from Hendrix, there’s more in play than obvious blues or full-on, freak-out heaviness. Elijah’s taut bookending theme, composed by keyboardis­t John Locke, gives way to a groovy modal improv shining with California’s fluid, sustained tones, and drummer Ed Cassidy’s use of space and dynamics. That capacity to smoothly shift moods typifies Spirit’s openness and ear for adventure as they evolve.

The arrival of Neil Young producer David Briggs for the brilliant but sparser-sounding The Twelve Dreams Of Dr Sardonicus coincides with a rise in friction between members. After its completion, California departed for an ill-starred solo career that surprising­ly included a surging cameo on Peter Hammill’s gothic masterpiec­e The Silent Corner And

The Empty Stage. 1972’s Feedback is not without notable moments and useful picking from Randy’s replacemen­t,

Chris Staehely. However, mundane lyrical matter and the diminishin­g returns of a blues rock holding pattern mean it lacks the previous innovative momentum, as Locke and Cassidy attempt to keep the show on the road.

Esoteric’s expansive set boasts remasters, extra tracks and the band’s debut in its mono mix for the first time on

CD. Deserving more than being remembered for a failed plagiarism court case against Led Zeppelin, these collection­s provide welcome recognitio­n of Spirit’s achievemen­ts.

SPIRIT SHOW THEY HAVE AN EAR FOR ADVENTURE

AS THEY EVOLVE.

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