Description
Vern & Ray San Francisco -1968
Track Listing
- Rainmaker (Bill Martin / Harry Nilsson)
- In Our Time (Rodney Dillard / Mitch Jayne)
- Old Man at the Mill (Doug Dillard / Rodney Dillard / Mitch Jayne / Herb Pedersen / Dean Webb)
- Touch Her If You Can (Rodney Dillard / Mitch Jayne)
- Woman Turn Around (Rodney Dillard / Mitch Jayne)
- Yesterday (John Lennon / Paul McCartney
- Brother John (Herb Pedersen)
- Copperfields (Herb Pedersen)
- West Montana Hanna (Mitch Jayne / Herb Pedersen)
- Close the Door Lightly (Eric Andersen)
- Pictures (Rodney Dillard)
- Ebo Walker (Rodney Dillard / Mitch Jayne)
- Sundown (Herb Pedersen)
1970
The Dillards’ second album with rock-influenced arrangements was not as barrier-busting as 1968’s Wheatstraw Suite, and further removed from their bluegrass roots. However, it was a similarly eclectic and, for the most part, joyous romp through a fusion of bluegrass, rock, folk, and country, with a bit of pop and orchestration along the ride, and the group’s superb vocal harmonies being the main constant. “Touch Her If You Can” was the number with the most pop and orchestration, and worked extremely well, with its achingly sad melody. If anything The Dillards did on Elektra could have been a hit single, this would have been a likely candidate. Their unusual a cappella arrangement of the Beatles’ “Yesterday” caught some attention, and “Brother John” is another simultaneous detour and highlight, with its Dave Brubeck-influenced jazzy rhythms and guitar picking that recalled the Byrds’ psychedelic era. While other tracks, like the bluegrass tune “Old Man at the Mill” and Eric Andersen’s “Close the Door Lightly,” were more in the standard country-rock mode, they’re also good, with the musicians applying care and creative production to the material throughout the disc.
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