Sometime in the late seventies a beautiful singer out of Florida called Paula Moore released two equally beautiful albums with compositions by herself and guitarist Larry Rubin. Not sure about you out there, but when I see covers like the above I get plenty excited on the hope we are dealing with DIY, private-pressed earnest and naive songwriting from the true glory days of the US of A. Which are not right now or in the near future, in my opinion. And that's exactly what we get here.
In the discogs database she appears as Paula Moore 2 and Paula Moore 3, and indeed it was confusing to me whether or not it was the same artist, despite my wife's protestations that the face was the same on both covers, I didn't quite believe her, to her eventual anger, but scanning the backs of the records clarified the matter fully as Rubin appears on both. Hopefully the powers that be on that site will correct that misclassification without too much comlaint or undue delay. (The lazy idiot who entered the Paula Moore 2 album also didn't bother to include side 2 's songs. Amazing how when I make even the smallest punctuation error on that site for a new entry I get angry comments from the guys-- the 'basement dwellers' as my wife always calls them-- and obviously, there are no females in that group, who are charged with checking the database info.)
On this first album of two, confusingly, ST-- at least I am assuming it is chronologically prior, based on the fact it is slightly less sophisticated in production, though there's no way to know-- we hear her melancholy and well-thought craftsmanship perfectly turned out, as in a track called Thursday's Mood, composed by herself:
Gives you a nice idea of why I love this LP so much. Overall, very close in spirit to Rosemarie Taylor from just recently. Classic Americana from the 70s like those collectible ceramic animals they used to give away at (full-serve!) gas stations for free. Anyone out there remember those? Even for me it's the faintest of early childhood memories.
Some tracks are by Larry, most by Moore.
Moving on to the second album, the penultimate song Sad Song Spinster must have seemed like such a clever pun, about a middle aged (?) man listening to his vinyl collection alone in a basement, maybe it was even created de novo from the idea of combining the two ideas into one concept... or is it just plain silly? Well there's one thing I do know, the song is outrageously beautiful, with the lead guitar playing such delicate arabesques around the melody and rhythm:
Listening to this again, I'm stunned by the contrast between the sheer beauty of the music and the awkwardness of the lyrics. But maybe I should throw it out there, how many reading this including myself are similar to the man as described, with a "six-pack by his side," "spinning songs and singing along as if from the bottom of his heart?"
My one complaint would be the brevity of both albums, and perhaps, more trivially, the descents into bluegrass that sometimes overtake the band in moments of weakness...
Please, if anyone knows anything about her, let us know in the comments section...
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ReplyDeleteBoth files are expired?
ReplyDeleteyeah I guess I was holding on to these 2 for a little while
Deletehttps://www.sendspace.com/pro/dl/yhrlgg
ReplyDeletehttps://www.sendspace.com/pro/dl/xg7t0t
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ReplyDeleteCan I have the lyrics of the first album?
ReplyDeleteI don't know if there is a lyric sheet, but I'll have a look at the sleeve tomorrow and let you know
DeleteThank you Julian!!!
DeleteCan I have the lyrics of the first album?
ReplyDeleteSaw her perform live in '78 or '79 in Ft Lauderdale (bought the second album from her that night). She actually drove my buddy and I home when our "driver" ditched us at the bar. They were friends with her back then.
ReplyDeletevery cool... so sad these artists who crafted such beautiful albums, and then were so lost to time
Deletethat second album is a real gem, unbelievably beautiful, I listen to it all the time still
So do I, I took it to a company that copied it to a CD. It's a great album!
DeleteTo add to that story, she put out a music video in 1984, or around that date. I was with her and my buddies for the first viewing "party" when it was aired on TV. Great song, but the video was....ok....
Hey Julian, I somehow missed this post back then. The first DL link worked but not the second Could you please re-up? Thanks
ReplyDelete1st
ReplyDeletehttps://www.sendspace.com/pro/dl/yhrlgg
2nd
https://www.sendspace.com/file/1mdnhg
Muchas gracias
ReplyDeleteSurely, nowhere else, from no one else could these PM titles be found. Gratitude...
ReplyDeleteI am reminded of another artist... with a pair of releases, sought...
Sarah Kernochan - House Of Pain, (1974)
Sarah Kernochan - Beat Around The Bush, (1974)
Curiously, the reissue on one of these may have omitted a track featured on the original vinyl release.
Bless...