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Caravan - It's None of Your Business CD (album) cover

IT'S NONE OF YOUR BUSINESS

Caravan

 

Canterbury Scene

3.23 | 69 ratings

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siLLy puPPy
Special Collaborator
PSIKE, JRF/Canterbury, P Metal, Eclectic
2 stars It's hard to believe that CARAVAN has existed in one form or another as a band since 1968. That's well over a half century! Regarded as one half of the original Canterbury Scene along with Soft Machine this band released five classic albums beginning with its 1968 eponymous debut and ended with 1973's "For Girls Who Grow Plump in the Night" before succumbing to the same record company pressures that many prog bands experienced. Starting with 1975's "Cunning Stunts" CARAVAN began to water down its Canterbury jazz-rock roots and instead deliver sometimes bland AOR and cheesy pop that alienated fans of yore and attracted little if any new followers.

Somehow through it all band leader and only band member to embark on the entire CARAVAN journey, Pye Hastings has continued to sporadically release albums throughout the 80s, 90s and 21st century and while few have probably been sitting back waiting for the next chapter of the CARAVAN canon, here it is! IT'S NONE OF YOUR BUSINESS is the first studio album since 2013's "Paradise Filter" and released on the MadfishMusic label. The album features nine tracks with the current lineup of Pye Hastings (guitar, vocals), Geoffrey Richardson (viola, mandolin, guitar), Jan Schelhaas (keyboards) and Mark Walker (drums). Lee Pomeroy guests as the bassist and Jimmy Hastings adds some additional flute sounds.

Given CARAVAN's fall from grace so very long ago, one may ask why another CARAVAN album so late in the game? After all it's only the first five albums that have any sort of epic status and the remaining 11 albums that followed merely forgotten filler that even very few CARAVAN fans get excited about. Well it makes a little more sense when you realize that Pye Hastings wasn't one of those Canterbury dudes that went from band to band like many of his compatriots did. Nope, CARAVAN was and remains his baby and the ONLY band he has participated in since leaving The WIlde Flowers so very, very long ago. Born in 1947, Hastings is now in his 70s and no spring chicken and unfortunately his classic vocal style has deteriorated a lot as has his songwriting bravado.

IT'S NONE OF YOUR BUSINESS is an earnest attempt to recreate the classic CARAVAN sounds of yore circa 50 years ago when "If I Could DO It All Over Again, I'd Do It All Over You" and "In The Land Of The Grey And Pink" were circulating in the British underground. Unfortunately this latest offering falls flat in capturing those long abandoned moments and Pye Hastings' vocals haven't aged well as the entire album sounds like your grandfather telling tales of yore in musical form although the lyrics are purportedly in reference to the more recent pandemic and other events. While CARAVAN has always been more of a progressive pop band shrouded in Canterbury mystique, IT'S NONE OF YOUR BUSINESS unfortunately points to the albums that came after the classic big 5 era rather than returning to past glories.

Right from the start with the opening "Down From London," it's clear that Hastings is trying to rekindle the magic that has elevated CARAVAN into classic prog status but unfortunately doesn't succeed in doing so. The tunes do employ catchy pop hooks that are indeed out of the CARAVAN playbook but missing are the progressive touches that made albums like "Waterloo Lily" and "For Girls Who Grow Plump In The Night" so utterly addictive. The album comes off as a soft rock tribute to 70s folk rock without ever going where a classic CARAVAN fan would hope. While nobody really expects an artist well past his prime to deliver a product that will outdo the classic era, i was hoping for at least something progressive.

What really is the deal breaker for me with IT'S NONE OF YOUR BUSINESS is that Hastings' vocals sound so feeble and weak. We can probably safely say that CARAVAN hit its prime close to 50 years ago and will never rekindle those classic moments but you can't blame an old timer for trying. Unfortunately this album does nothing for me whatsoever. If only a few time signature deviations were inserted or some jazzy moments. Nope, this is just simple songwriting that is pretty straight forward with only a few flute sounds to give any indications of a prog connection. It unfortunately appears the classic past masters are no longer capable of delivering what the fans truly want from them. So it would be best to give this album a miss and instead turn to Norway's Needlepoint who HAS successfully reconstructed those classic CARAVAN sounds circa "In The Land Of The Grey And Pink" with amazing acumen. Oh well, Pye. We still love you! Just not this newest edition to your post-classic era canon.

siLLy puPPy | 2/5 |

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