Wednesday 15 July 2020

Brits Back Door, from 1972 to 1976 (4 albums)










Here's a band I'd never heard of until it was mentioned, recently, in passing at the finish of a wonderful comment to the Coley Goodbye Brains post from long ago, which you should check out.  Those brits really have a flair for this kind of discursive personalized annotation as I discover every time I read the obituaries from one of their newspapers, though nowadays one can spend every waking minute carrying out exactly that activity if one so chooses.  Which one never does, of course.  But the point is, one could choose to do so.  It's all about choice.

Anyways as the commenter alluded to, the four official Back Door albums are all quite similar to Coley's, which came out in 1972 and whose tracks for the most part were written by the sax player Barry Cole.  On Back Door the composers were Colin Hodgkinson (bassist) and Ron Aspery (sax and flute, also keyboards), the two were augmented with percussionist Tony Hicks.  Info is here for the first release.  Most of the music is instrumental, every once in a while on one side maybe on average there is a bluesy vocals song, usually these are inferior to the remainder, being pretty basic.  Despite the genre description, this is trio jazz-rock (more the latter than former) in the primitive or proto style with a nice deep rocky bass-driven energy without any of the 'swingin' style of jazz.  Typically, the rhythm section will carve out a nice funky riff with some unusual aspect that the sax will then build on with its own slightly demented off-topic melody.  It reminds me of the Sweet Smoke albums (Just a Poke) which I'm sure you all know already.  And the compositions are solid right from the beginning in the early 70s contemporarenous to Coley's Goodbye Brains, all the way to the 1976 Activate record which had absolutely zero commercial sacrifice-- the kind that for example led Black Sabbath in the mid-70s to synthesizer and pop plus uptempo soul beats, and that very full production sound typical of the times.

An example from the second album of the jazzier, sweeter Sweet Smoke-like sound featuring the wonderful flute talents of Aspery:





An ex. from the last album of the Coley-like instr. riffin' and the total absence of musical compromise:









6 comments:


  1. as so many times before thanks to the commenter

    https://www88.zippyshare.com/v/K4qNwcdR/file.html

    https://www.sendspace.com/file/ow9n9o

    ReplyDelete
  2. Interesting band indeed!
    I discovered them in 2006-7 along with Audience (which was one of the now obscure and almost-forgotten british prog band with an acoustic guitar and a saxophone). Haven't heard this music for some time actually...

    ReplyDelete
  3. They even made it to ELP´s Works Vol. 1 as backing band for Carl Palmer on Side 3 of the double album and you can listen to Hodgkinson´s extraordinary bass playing on Alexis Korner´s Both Sides album

    ReplyDelete
  4. Thanks as ever for this, Julian. Even though the drummer and sax player are long dead (the latter being a rather thirsty man as I understand it), I believe Colin Hodgkinson is still with us. I saw him at the Marsden Jazz Festival in Yorkshire in 2008 doing Back Door stuff (so to speak) with Rod Mason on sax - he was brilliant, and the highlight of the festival, even though John Surman was also there.

    ReplyDelete
  5. ...I guess everybody was there already, but nevertheless:
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iEkzweEhKQc

    ReplyDelete
  6. About ten years ago we randomly called into a remote north Yorkshire moorlands pub, near where we were staying on holiday,and it turned out to be the one which used to be frequented by this band. There was some memorabilia on the wall, explaining the connection. I knew of Ron Aspery through his library music work, in particular this piece, used on a mid 1990s ITV kids programme - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7YTSbz6YfoM

    This is the pub's website: https://lionblakey.co.uk/

    ReplyDelete