The Tremeloes apparently regard
Master as their best album. It marked the point where they tried to redefine themselves in a much heavier guise. In place of covers of
Four Seasons material and rousing singalong-type numbers, the group delivered a dozen originals that were close in spirit to
Crosby, Stills & Nash, steeped in
singer/songwriter-style personal lyrics and self-consciously heavy playing, and a very serious attitude. The result is something akin to the kind of music that
Badfinger was starting to do at the time, though perhaps still lacking the identifiable personalities that
Pete Ham and
Tom Evans brought to their work. The playing, especially by guitarists
Alan Blakley and
Rick West, is often quite beautiful, and as are many of the melodies -- the major exception to the latter statement is the most self-consciously pretentious track on the album,
"Boola Boola," a protracted
Jimi Hendrix-style guitar jam. Both that track and the
Elvis Presley-inspired
"Baby" fail to mesh with the rest of what's here, but most of
Master is above average melodic
hard rock. ~ Bruce Eder