Angel Air continues to sweep up the furthest flung crumbs of the
Ray Russell canon for reissue, and now they've finally swatted the
Mouse onto CD. This quartet, comprising
Russell, drummer
Alan Rushton, keyboardist
Jeff Watts, and singer
Alan Greed released their sole album on
EMI in 1973.
Russell jokes in the booklet that "attempts to make a single were forgotten about an hour into the first session," but even so the compulsive
"Electric Lady," a throbbing rocker or alternately, the bouncy
pop-flecked
"We Can Make It" both fit that bill. And even if
"Going Out Tonight" was a little too quirky for singledom, it was still the perfect set opener on-stage or on record. Given free rein, however, the band were all to free to explore the byways of their own obsessions.
"All the Fallen Teen Angels," for example, is proof positive that you really can put a
reggae beat to any kind of music, even pompous, synth-driven
pop/rock and it certainly is startling, but would you really want to hear it twice?
"Asher Besher," in contrast, delves deep into
Black Sabbath territory,
"The Happening to Me and You" dips into
psychedelia, while
"Just Came Back" returns from
Delta blues. But even with all its musical meanderings, this is a more commercial album than
Russell lets on, and if only producer
John Acock had exerted a bit more control, squashing the occasional over-long intro and more tightly focused the songs,
Lady Killer would have made a killing in the charts. As is, it's still a fine set of '70s
rock in a supple and subtle
experimental mode. ~ Jo-Ann Greene