Fred Neil's two classic
Elektra records albums assembled together on one CD, with new biographical notes supported by lots of photos, too. The CD is slightly uneven as a listening experience, mostly by virtue of the songs off of
Tear Down the Walls, a hybrid work that has moments of inspired, heavyweight brilliance from
Neil, compromised by the lighter-textured voice of
Vince Martin, who almost always seems like he's trying hard to keep up with
Neil and measure up to what his partner is doing. There are some brilliant songs, as the two slip into a serious
blues groove on
"Weary Blues"; soar together on the exultant, extended duet of
"Baby" (which plays like an Indian
raga with vocals); the darker-toned
"Morning Dew"; and the driving, crunchy
"Linin' Track," which leads into
"Wild Child in a World of Trouble." Interspersed among those splendors, however, are some more retro (even for 1964) and forced commercial efforts, including the title tune, the kind of optimistic early-'60s
folk number that might've found its way into the repertory of the
New Christy Minstrels or the
Serendipity Singers, and
Vince Martin's
"Toy Balloon," a song aimed at the subsidiary
folk market for children's songs (and which might've worked very nicely in the hands of
Peter, Paul & Mary). The 13 tracks off of
Bleecker & MacDougal that follow are brilliant through and through, dark, serious, mostly
blues-influenced originals that hold up infinitely better four decades later than anyone had a right to expect --
Bleecker & MacDougal is easily among the best records EVER issued by
Elektra, and perhaps the best
folk record ever put out by the label. It's all essential listening, and by themselves easily justify the $20 price of this European import -- the digital remastering is spot-on perfect, and the packaging and annotation give these two albums the treatment they've always deserved. ~ Bruce Eder