Something Magic

Something Magic

by Procol Harum
Something Magic

Something Magic

by Procol Harum

CD(Expanded / Remastered)

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Overview

When Procol Harum's ninth studio album, Something Magic, was released in March 1977, it sold poorly and was largely dismissed, with the group breaking up at the end of the promotional tour for it. With this reissue more than 30 years later, annotator Roland Clare argues it is "in need of outright reappraisal." He doesn't actually make that case, but he does explain the circumstances that led to the debacle. After its previous album, Procol's Ninth, produced by Jerry Leiber and Mike Stoller, Procol Harum might have been expected to go back to a more conventional approach; instead, the group hired the hot studio of the day, Criteria in Miami, and its hot resident producers, Ron and Howie Albert. When the band arrived in Florida and played the songs intended for the album, the Albert brothers threw half of them out. That left half of an album to fill, which led singer/pianist/composer Gary Brooker to turn to a parable-like poem written years earlier by his lyric partner Keith Reid, "The Worm & the Tree," and -- in a move anticipating This Is Spinal Tap -- writing a musical suite around it to fill up side two. He then recited the poem rather than actually setting it to music, creating a pretentious work just at a time when critics and fans were tiring of peers like Jethro Tull and Yes doing much the same thing. It didn't help that the songs making up side one were relatively minor Procol Harum. None of this has changed in the ensuing decades, but Clare's explanation is interesting to read; the remastered sound is terrific; and the album boasts three bonus tracks including not only the instrumental B-side "Backgammon," which has appeared elsewhere, but also previously unreleased live versions of two of the songs the Alberts rejected, "You'd Better Wait" and "This Old Dog." They do not suggest that Something Magic could have been a great or even good Procol Harum album. But they do add to an understanding of one of the more confusing chapters in the band's history. ~ William Ruhlmann

Product Details

Release Date: 10/30/2020
Label: Esoteric Recordings
UPC: 5013929474086
Rank: 65854

Album Credits

Performance Credits

Procol Harum   Primary Artist
Chris Copping   Bass
Mick Grabham   Guitar (Electric)
Gary Brooker   Piano,Vocals
B.J. Wilson   Drums
Peter Solley   Organ,Synthesizer

Technical Credits

Roland Clare   Sleeve Notes
Bruce Meek   Design,Artwork
Chris Copping   Orchestration
Keith Reid   Composer,Lyricist
Chas Chandler   Project Manager
Ron Albert   Engineer,Producer
Rob Keyloch   Digital Transfers
Procol Harum   Producer
Nick Robbins   Mastering
Mick Grabham   Composer
Gary Brooker   Composer
Howard Albert   Engineer,Producer
Matthew Fisher   Composer
Jack Nuber   Assistant
Chris Cooke   Project Manager
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