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Mott The Hoople - Young Ginger and the Stick Insect (1971)

Track listing:
  1. Long Red 3:48
  2. Thunderbuck Ram 4:49
  3. The Chosen Road 3:02
  4. Death May Be Your Santa Claus 4:02
  5. Baby's Got A Down (Aka Moonbus) 5:15
  6. Laugh At Me 5:32
  7. Ohio 4:04
  8. Downtown 2:52
  9. The Debt 4:16
  10. Sea Diver 2:57
  11. I Can Feel 8:42
  12. When My Mind's Gone 6:48
  13. Wrath And Wroll 3:11
  14. Half Moon Bay 18:06

Notes


Allmusic Review by Dave Thompson

Is there a single wormhole left to explore in Mott the Hoople's pre-"Dudes" catalog? After more than 30 years of hungering for even the briefest look behind the scenes, you'd seem it's fast getting to the stage where there really can't be much of note left that we haven't heard. Apparently not. By the time this album reached the streets in 1998, cleaned up versions of six of its 14 tracks had already made it out on overground releases -- the live "Sea Diver" on the Stockholm to Philadelphia live album; "Long Red," "Santa Claus," "Downtown," "The Debt," "Moonbus," and an alternate live take on "Ohio" on the All the Young Dudes box set. But don't start thinking that maybe Young Ginger is entirely a waste of time. All but one of the boxed set tracks was remixed for the occasion -- this is your chance to hear them in their original state. Elsewhere, "The Chosen Road" emerges as a powerful, if incomplete, band demo; a BBC version of "When My Mind's Gone," despite a lot of surface noise, apparently salvages a recording which even the BBC don't own; and two cuts from Mott's 1970 Fillmore West show prove just what an amazing spectacle the band must have been back then. What all this boils down to, then, is let your own conscience be your guide. Mott, after all, remain one of the crucial bands of the early '70s, and half an album of generally excellent, unavailable material is a helluva lot better than none.

This, the second in the "Guy Stevens" series, is altogether a more mixed bag than its predecessor (Hoopling Furiously). It is culled from various sources and keeps mostly to Island-era material.

Long Red opens the proceedings. Its of better quality than on Very Sticky Fingers, but a tape glitch still mars things somewhat. It has, in any case, since appeared on the Anthology in sterling sound quality. Thunderbuck Ram is next, and is altogether more interesting, it being a different mix from both the official Mad Shadows release and the Two Miles From Heaven recording. Phally's organ is well up in the mix, but another tape glitch again spoils things somewhat. The Chosen Road is next, and quality is pretty good. It is obviously a demo (from the Mad Shadows sessions), as Ian has only a few of the words worked out, but is otherwise complete - its a shame it wasn't on the box set. Death May Be Your Santa Claus is an alternate take from the Brain Capers version, and is of noticeably lower quality than on the Anthology. Ditto Baby's Got A Down On Me (aka Moonbus, also on the Anthology). That said, quality here is still better than on Very Sticky Fingers.

Next is a live version of Laugh At Me, recorded at the Fillmore East in 1970. Considering it is an audience recording, the quality isn't too bad, although obviously not a patch on a commercial recording. A live version of Ohio is next, again taken from an audience recording at the Fillmore East, this time in 1971. The arrangement is pretty much identical to the Croydon version on the Anthology, and the quality isn't too bad considering the age of the recording. Downtown is MTH's rare third single and suffers somewhat from being taken from an obviously well worn 45. Ditto The Debt (which was the flip-side to Midnight Lady). Both are, of course, available in A+ quality on the Anthology. Sea Diver is also a live version, recorded at the Tower Theatre, Philadelphia and so is also available in better quality on the Stockholm To Philadelphia set.

I Can Feel is interesting, as it is from a live (audience) recording in Lausanne, Switzerland in 1970. Again it is of average quality. When My Mind's Gone is from a BBC John Peel show, and is very hissy. The poor quality aside, it is none the less priceless in terms of rarity value. The set finishes with a lengthy Half Moon Bay, recorded at the Fillmore West in 1970. For an audience recording the quality is quite good, and the result is eminently listenable. The CD tray liner claims Wrath And Wroll precedes Half Moon Bay, but this is incorrect. A lengthy jam, yes, so you may want to call it Rabbit Foot... (just as on the first album).