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David Axelrod - Song of Innocence CD (album) cover

SONG OF INNOCENCE

David Axelrod

 

Crossover Prog

4.27 | 37 ratings

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Sean Trane
Special Collaborator
Prog Folk
4 stars A good 60's LA Scene record producer with some good New Orleans contacts, Axelrod is best remembered for his production of The Electric Prunes' two proggier albums, including the stunning Mass In F Minor and Release Of An Oath and his Cannonball Adderley collabs. Indeed, the man was not just behind the mixing console, but also wrote some of the music and arranged the pieces he hadn't written. Based on William Blake's Song Of Innocence, this first album is simply an awesome concept instrumental music album, mixing jazz, rock and classical realms with astounding arrangements and impeccable virtuosity. Indeed, most of the players on this album wouldn't ring a bell to most progheads, the best-knowns being Mac Rebbenack (AKA Dr John) and Leon Russell, but the rest of them being obscure studio musicians, some from the New Orleans scene. But let that not distract you, because all of them are awesome, such as Earl Palmer's inventive drumming, Carol Kayes' superb bass playing (she must've been the best female bassist for decades >< she's on Beach Boys' Good Vibrations). The horn and string sections are ever-present, but never overly so, the first hailing from the local jazz scene and the latter from LA's philharmonic orchestra. BTW, this album chronologically precedes TEP's Mass album.

The relatively-short (27-mins) album's music is clearly progressive in many 'prog' facets, including frequent tempo changes and time sigs, constantly changing musical soundscapes (despite remaining samey-sounding via the recurring theme), with brilliant histrionics solos, from the guitar to brass instruments. You'll even get some harpsichord interventions to boot, but it is really the production of the album that is impressive, with plenty of space given to the drums and bass. But what really makes the difference is his ever-so-positive and happy songwriting and the attention to the individual instruments' interventions, much like Mozart would write a score for the triangle in his symphonies. Some may dismiss his music's cinematic qualities as some kind of easy movie score, but in some ways, that's a tremendous compliment, even if not intentional at first. Indeed, it's quite easy to tag on superb filmed images to this ever-so-happy music.

The album came with a very 'psych' artwork and gave a short written description of each track's meaning. Although Axelrod's next 'solo' albums would retain much of the trademarks laid out on Innocence; they would change musical direction, often nearing to crooner stuff, but with the same kind of impeccable arrangements. In some ways, Axelrod is one of my preferred arranger, along with the often-stupendous Gil Evans, and this debut album is at the height of Out Of The Cool or Las Vegas Tango stuff. In some ways, it's a bit of a shame that the Capitol label for which he worked for let him go (he had no royalties paid out to him) and strike it out on his own, because it would never be as exhilarating as his late-60's music. While his later albums may not do much to a proghead's fancy, this debut album should do wonders to his happiness and give him many musical orgasms.

Sean Trane | 4/5 |

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