Procol Harum- A Salty Dog
Track List
Procol Harum Fuses Classical Structures, Rock Motifs, and Sweeping Melodies with Unparalleled Virtuosity:A Salty DogFeatures Ravishing Symmetry Between Piano, Organ, Guitar, and Strings
Mastered from the Original Master Tapes for Reference-Level Sound, Clarity, and Presence: Ultra-Dynamic Mobile Fidelity 180g Vinyl LP Limited to 3,000 Numbered Copies
A call for "all hands on deck" opensProcol Harum's third album, and with that command, an effort that witnesses the band coming into its own as a collective capable of fusing classical structures with rock motifs via an expertise, virtuosity, and style matched by none of its peers is on its way to making history.A Salty Dogsurvives as proof no other artist ever sounded likeProcol Harum– while also demonstrating few collectives boasted a lineup full of such ace instrumentalists.Stacked with exploratory themes, boundary-crossing directions, and sweeping melodies,A Salty Dogproudly veers off traditional course and ventures to intrepid places forbidden to even the most thrill-seeking groups of the highly experimental era.
Mastered from the original master tapes, pressed at RTI, and strictly limited to 3,000 numbered copies, Mobile Fidelity's 180g vinyl LPtakes its place as the definitive-sounding analog version of the record. The intertwined symmetry between organistMatthew Fisherand pianistGary Brooker, central to every song on the set, gets revealed with newfound detail, openness, and clarity. Produced byFisher,A Salty Dognow resonates with a presence and immediacy stunted on prior editions.The full-bodied tones, front-to-back imaging, and grand dynamics inherent on this audiophile edition elevate the 1969 favorite to landmark status. In addition, the evocative cover art, which pays homage to thePlayer's Navy Cutlogo, is reproduced in faithful-to-the-original fashion.
Thecinematic breadth of the sonicsparallels the scope of the bold arrangements, which include strings, recorders, bells, celeste, and a myriad of guitars.BrookerandFishersplit vocal duties, save for on "Crucifiction Lane," which boasts a rare lead from marvel-in-the-makingRobin Trower. The latter's prodigious guitar lines add another distinctive element to the compositions and further up the ante of the interplay betweenBrookerandFisher.Troweraccents tracks such as the topsy-turvy "The Milk of Human Kindness" with bluesy vibes and jolts "Juicy John Pink" by way of jukejoint energy. Not to be outdone,B.J. Wilson's still-unsung percussion draws from R&B and swing techniques to supply a natural albeit firm footing.
For all the proficient playing and narrative storytelling, the most impressive feat surroundingA Salty Dogremains its accessible complexity and relative modesty.Procol Harumnever comes across as pretentious, self-indulgent, or contrived. Anchored byFisher's unique Hammond M102 organ riffs, the works function as a summation of their parts. Tunes like "Wreck of the Hesperus" serve as wondrously varied tapestries stitched with swelling chamber rhythms, barbed thickets of distortion, and thundering progressions.It's a ravishing picture of majestic subtlety and sheer power.
NMEwrote shortly after the record's release that "the most exciting facet of this tremendous album is not so much that it contains the Procols' best recorded works to date, but that their potential is still nowhere near being fully spent."Rolling Stoneconcurred, observing, "‘Too Much Between Us' is the kind of song you can float away on – its background and vocal of marimba and acoustic guitar in a perfectly understated waltz-time are beautifully ethereal."
A notable footnote,FisherdepartedProcol Harumshortly after the release ofA Salty Dog, permanently impacting the band's trajectory and sound. His performances here are just one reason this inimitable album carries sway nearly five decades after its release.
“If you love this record I think you will be very happy you bought Mobile Fidelity's reissue. Your happiness will begin on the opening track when Brooker begins singing and the strings enter. You've never heard Brooker sound so tonally "Brookerish", nor have the string harmonies ever sounded so lush and ‘right.’”
&mdashMichael Fremer,Analog Planet