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Procol Harum - BBC Live In Concert (Strange Fruit) (1974)

Track listing:
  1. Conquistador 4:43
  2. Bringing Home The Bacon 4:19
  3. Whaling Stories 8:58
  4. New Lamps For Old 4:19
  5. Beyond The Pale 3:07
  6. As Strong As Samson 5:44
  7. Simple Sister 6:03
  8. The Idol 6:45
  9. Grand Hotel 6:34
  10. Butterfly Boys 4:43
  11. Nothing But The Truth 4:00

Notes


from silver


Procol Harum: BBC Live in Concert

Considering Procol Harum's global stature as a live act, and the golden sales of their live Edmonton orchestral album (1971), it's unbelievable that 1999 should see the first official concert release from the quintessential Harum, a storming five-piece rock outfit.

The BBC recorded these eleven superb compositions (words Keith Reid, music Gary Brooker) on 22 March 1974 at Golders Green Hippodrome in London; this CD supersedes the incomplete, off-air tapes that fervent Procoholics - you can hear them yelling out "Encore" before a note's been played! - have treasured over a quarter-century.

Following a three-month lay-off for studio recording, Procol had already played six college shows and a John Peel session in March 1974 - unprecedented UK exposure for them. Brooker recalls, "You did the BBC shows as a way of getting your new album on the radio", and to Mick Grabham they were "... pretty much just another job." Reid also emphasises the workaday nature of a gig where "... if somebody screwed up, it just got broadcast that way."

1 Conquistador: Procol judiciously open with their latest hit (August 1972). They'd played Conquistador on two (now lost) 1967 BBC sessions with their original Hammond-genius, Matthew Fisher. His successor, Chris Copping, provides a final Baroque flourish!

2 Bringing Home the Bacon: another favourite 70s opener, driven by the piano and percussion of Brooker and Barrie Wilson, instrumental core of Procol's evolving line-up. This song was not included in the hour-long broadcast, 30 March 1974.

3 Whaling Stories: the band condenses a thrilling range of dramatic emotions into nine epic minutes. The BBC didn't retain concert master-tapes, so the somewhat haphazard original mix cannot now be rejigged.

4 New Lamps for Old: over half tonight's concert comes from 1974's Exotic Birds LP, whose theme of disillusion (at waning record sales?) this weary setting complements to perfection. "New Lamps was certainly very unusual for us to play live," says Reid, who always determined Procol's running-orders.

5 Beyond the Pale: although one famous 'Pale' was a ghetto for Russian Jews, Reid's title surely alludes to Procol's huge A Whiter Shade of Pale hit, a much-demanded 70s encore. Brooker actually sings 'beyond the veil'; nevertheless exotic additional sounds (Wilson's mandolins on record, Copping's banjo tonight) enhance the Eastern European flavour of his chord-progressions. 'Luckily no-one threw the tomatoes that my banjo-playing deserved!' Chris now recalls.

6 As Strong as Samson: this unusually topical Procol song, about 1973's industrial unrest, was updated during 90s tours, with '... Croats and Kurds, causing confusion and changing the words'. Sadly that reborn Harum could not include the great Barrie Wilson, who had died in 1990. Marvel here at his inspired start to the instrumental break!

7 Simple Sister: now Procol relax and let rip! If the Edmonton orchestral version of this savage belter had been included on the Live album, it might have shaken the 'classic-rock' prejudices that unjustly beset the band.

8 The Idol: Mick Grabham, unrivalled as an ensemble guitarist, shines out as the soloist here. Who was the enigmatic 'idol' who had saved these 'drowning men' before, but could now 'see no point in diving in'? "I get an image of a golden, Biblical idol," says Gary, "not someone specific from rock music."

9 Grand Hotel: like Whaling Stories, this sumptuous offering unites many disparate elements. Is that violinist quoting the Russian Gypsy air, Ochi Chyornije? 'Never heard of it,' Gary declares. 'I always owned up when something was purposely lifted ... but one's ears are unconsciously open to everything!"

10 Butterfly Boys: Reid's lepidopterous libretto angered Chrysalis, the band's record company. "Procol is the 'sinking ship' here," says Brooker, "and it's Chrysalis who've 'got the cake'. They wanted us to change it to Government Boys. We said, 'Bollocks.'"

11 Nothing But the Truth: John Peel made this 45 release (15 March) his 'single of the week', and Elton John praised it on a pop panel - sadly to no effect. Chart hit or not, this is prime Procol Harum - in full flight there really is no-one in the world to touch them.


Roland Clare, October 1999

Gary Brooker (vocal, piano)
Alan Cartwright (bass, vocal harmonies)
Chris Copping (Hammond, banjo)
Mick Grabham (guitar, vocal harmonies)
Keith Reid (words)
Barrie Wilson (drums)

Produced By: Jeff Griffin