Skip to main content
Advertise Buy the paper Contact us Shop Subscribe Support us
Album reviews with KEVIN BRYAN, January 15 2024
Reviews of Bob Marley and The Wailers, Stackridge and The Blues of Tombstone Dunnery Vol 1

Bob Marley and The Wailers
Catch A Fire (50th Anniversary Edition)

(Island Records)
★★★★

THIS nicely packaged three-CD set serves up an expanded version of the trailblazing 1972 album which helped to establish Bob Marley as a major creative talent and brought the distinctive delights of reggae to the attention of the mainstream rock fraternity for the very first time. 

The fascinating bonus tracks on offer here include extended versions of Wailers’ gems such as Slave Driver and 400 Years and the first official release of the live recording of the group’s concert at London’s Paris Theatre in May 1973. 

Half a century later reggae seems to have slipped back into the shadows once again, but Catch A Fire remains one of the most vital and compelling collections  that have been produced in this or any other genre.

Stackridge
Mr. Mick

(Esoteric / Cherry Red)
★★★

THE recording and release of this ambitious concept album from amiable West Country prog-rock merchants Stackridge was fraught with difficulties before it finally appeared on the market in seriously truncated form in 1976. 

The original version of Mr. Mick had featured a story and narration penned by children’s author Steve Augarde but Rocket Records rejected it out of hand and the track listing had to be totally rejigged before they would allow it to finally see the light of day. The album was critically well received nonetheless but record sales were disappointing and, worn down by the whole experience, Stackridge sadly gave up the ghost soon afterwards. 

This expanded CD reissue from the good people at Cherry Red also finds space for the original, unreleased version of the album, leaving listeners to decide which of the two competing artistic conceptions they prefer.

Francis Dunnery
The Blues of Tombstone Dunnery Vol 1 

(Self-released)
★★★

CUMBRIAN singer and guitarist Francis Dunnery is probably best remembered these days for his musical exploits with prog pop merchants It Bites during the latter half of the 1980s, most notably their Top 10 singles success from 1986, Calling All The Heroes. 

This brief glimpse of fame and fortune wasn’t destined to last too long, however, and the original incarnation of the band finally gave up the ghost in 1990. 

Dunnery has occupied himself since then by tackling a variety of interesting solo projects as well as working as a trusted sideman with rock luminaries such as Robert Plant and Carlos Santana. 

This eclectic musician’s latest album serves up his sublime celebration of the delights of the blues genre via 12 freshly minted tracks led by Take My Joy Away, She Left Me With The Blues and Riding On The Blues Train.

Ad slot F - article bottom
More from this author
Gig Review / 6 October 2024
6 October 2024
ANGUS REID time-travels back to times when Gay Liberation was radical and allied seamlessly to an anti-racist, anti-establishment movement
Interview / 15 March 2024
15 March 2024
ANGUS REID speaks to historian Siphokazi Magadla about the women who fought apartheid and their impact on South African society
Theatre review / 22 February 2024
22 February 2024
ANGUS REID mulls over the bizarre rationale behind the desire to set the life of Karl Marx to music
Theatre Review / 16 February 2024
16 February 2024
ANGUS REID applauds the portrait of two women in a lyrical and compassionate study of sex, shame and nostalgia
Similar stories
Music / 26 August 2024
26 August 2024
KEVIN BRYAN, CHRIS SEARLE and TONY BURKE review new releases from Dickey Betts, Little Johnny England, Greenslade, Benet McLean, Sam Newbould, Sofia Jernberg/Alexander Hawkins, compilation: Walking To New Orleans, compilation: This Is Goldwax: 1964-1968, Jack Bruce
Album reviews / 4 March 2024
4 March 2024
Reviews of Simon Stanley Ward & The Shadows of Doubt, The Long Ryders, and Status Quo
Best of 2023 / 15 January 2024
15 January 2024
STEVE JOHNSON casts an eye over a crowded field of creativity
Culture / 27 November 2023
27 November 2023
Reviews of Poco, Ward Knutur Townes and Shake That Thing! The Blues in Britain 1963-1973