Album Reviews
The hard Beatle-Byrd sound of their first album, which turned arty in their second (Da Capo), has been smoothed out quite a bit. Large scale orchestration augments the basic combo on several cuts, replacing the self-contained "orchestration" of Da Capo.
Forever Changes features fairly tight, well-arranged tracks. Its weakest point is in the material. Some of the songs meander and lack real melodic substance. Leader Arthur Lee composed 9 of the 11 cuts. In his quest for originality, Lee sometimes had trouble giving the songs continuity. "The Red Telephone" is an example of this. It contains both excellent and mediocre portions.
The strongest cut on the album is the opener, "Alone Again Or." Other good ones are "A House is not a Motel," "The Good Humor Man," "You Set the Scene" and "Andmoreagain." These and the other tunes on the album run the range from hard rock to folk to soft orchestration.
Despite the album's flaw of inconsistency, it is nice to listen to. The background orchestration is pleasant and the recording is technically good.
Love disappeared for a time before releasing this album, and it's good to have them back. Forever Changes provides some good stuff for open ears.
(Posted: Feb 10, 1968)
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- Alone Again Or
- A House Is Not A Motel
- Andmoreagain
- The Daily Planet
- Old Man
- The Red Telephone
- Maybe The People Would Be The Times Or Between Clark And Hilldale
- Live And Let Live
- The Good Humor Man He Sees Everything Like This
- Bummer In The Summer
- You Set The Scene
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- Portions of Album Content Provided by All Music Guide © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC.