English vocals, Swedish vocals
International relevance: **
This is actually only half an album as it wasn't a standalone disc with a specific cover, but a bonus album to the 50th anniversary reissue of Art Of Music's sole, self-titled 1971 album. That album is already reviewed here, so this review is for bonus disc ”Sessions” only.
Art Of Music had existed for four years when their original album was recorded under primitive circumstances. Taped on a Tandberg reel-to-reel machine in their rehearsal space using sound-on-sound technique by Staffan Odlander, certified Beatles expert and owner of Buttercup Records who initially released the album on his label. It's now a massive collectors' item, better known than the subsequent Art Of Music seven-inches that followed in 1972, one of them a split disc with Swedish dance band Mattis (Buttercup's release plan – if there ever was one – was far from consistent).
When Odlander invested in better recording equipment including a mixer and a trusty Revox tape recorder and a mixer, fidelity got immediately better. The band too had matured and become tighter, and the songwriting here is a more focused in a post-Beatles vein (and there are even two Beatles covers). So ”Sessions” ought to be a better album than ”Art Of Music”, but truth is I think something got lost in the advancement. Despite all its inadequacies, I prefer the debut album for its vibe of underground secrecy. Imperfections don't always add to experience but rather spoil it (as exemplified by Axelsson or Prefix), but in the case of Art Of Music the insufficiencies intertwine with the experience and enriches it. There are of course some enjoyable moments here, especially the rather intense ballad evocatively entitled ”Today Is A Day Without Future”, but most of ”Sessions” sounds too mediocre and ordinary to my ears.
”Sessions” includes all tracks previously only released on singles, plus takes planned for a never issued 1974 EP along with other unreleased tracks. The ambition to present Art Of Music's complete recordings unfortunately also extends to leaving distracting studio chatter and broken down takes intact, a modus operandi I've never liked (and happening a bit too often these days with the flood of archival releases from everyone from Bob Dylan and The Beatles down to The Nowhereburg Nobodies).
That said, I'm happy the reissue exists because it's the only viable way to get the hysterically rare original album in your hands. That album is an entity of its own, and the bonus material doesn't lesser its impact. You simply don't need to play ”Sessions” except for a track or two, but stick to the real album. The liner notes are a nice feature too, sharing lots of information from both Odlander and the band.
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