REVIEWS FROM MY VINYL COLLECTION

Tag: focus

FOCUS – At The Rainbow

I was quite happy when I saw that Music On Vinyl were remastering this live album, albeit with a different cover to the original copy that I already had. It’s quite hard to believe now, but back in the distant past Focus appeared on Top Of The Pops with the singles Hocus Pocus and Sylvia. I know it feels like being in a parallel universe because now there is seemingly no decent music played by humans that inhabit popular music at all. Not that Focus were ever a pop band, they were a Prog band and sat perfectly alongside Genesis, Yes, and King Crimson but with a niche sound all of their own.

The wonderful Answers? Questions! Questions? Answers! Is a sprawling meandering beast of a tune that feels as though the band are just jamming with some great playing, especially from Jan Ackerman. The supercharged and seemingly speeding out of control version of Hocus Pocus is just a riot, and highly enjoyable.

Focus are a wonderful nostalgic part of my musical discovery and I will forever remember them fondly.

8.5/10 from The Grooveman.

FOCUS – 3

Focus, the band that made yodelling fashionable thanks to barking mad band leader, Thijs Van Leer. Focus are another band from my youth, thanks to their singles Sylvia and Hocus Pocus. They both made the British charts and had had appearances on Top Of The Pops, where a very impressionable me was transfixed. Although Dutch natives, this was recorded in England at Olympic Studios in ’73. They have a very distinct sound that his theirs, and theirs alone, no one sounds like Focus.

As far as instrumental albums go, this is a very diverse album of styles. The album starts with a serious jazz/prog workout, which is mainly instrumental apart from a fairly inaudible vocal. Love Remembered is next and features Van Leer’s flute playing to the max. The aforementioned single, Sylvia, follows. The main groove of the song is Akkerman’s guitar, which plays what would be the vocal line. Side 1 ends with Carnival Fugue, and has the patented Focus jazz/prog vibe throughout- apart from the lounge lizard section.

Over to Side 2, which has just the two tracks. The title track, Focus 3, is a very slow piece that gives way to the Answers? Questions! Questions? Answers! 14 minutes of prog instrumental heaven. A very seventies sounding piece, but I really like it. Just to say, vocals are the last thing I focus on when listening to a record for the first time. The music always comes first.

Over to Side 3 and the longest track, Anonymous 2 Part 1, which clocks in at 19 minutes. Lots of organ and flute playing start the piece off, and if I’m honest, is probably a tad over indulgent.

Over to Side 4 we go, and Anonymous 2 the conclusion, which is mostly a drum solo. Very weird. The last two songs are short(er) Ackerman pieces, Elspeth Of Nottingham and House Of The King. The first of which is a baroque folk mandolin driven piece. The last track was chosen as a theme song to an ITV programme called Don’t Ask Me, and Saxondale with Steve Coogan.

That’s that, and another great 70’s Prog album.

7.5/10 from The Grooveman.