Reel to Real (album)

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Reel to Real
Reeltorealcover.jpg
Studio album by
ReleasedDecember 1974
Recorded1974
Length34:05
LabelRSO
ProducerArthur Lee
Love chronology
False Start
(1970)
Reel to Real
(1974)
Out There
(1988)
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic3.5/5 stars[1]
Christgau's Record GuideB+[2]
Exclaim!5/10[3]

Reel to Real is the seventh and final album by the American rock band Love, released in 1974.

Background[]

Reel to Real was the first official Love album in four years, and bandleader Arthur Lee recorded the album with studio musicians after dismissing all previous band members. It follows the release of Lee's solo album Vindicator in 1972 and two different Love albums that had been recorded but never released.

Reel to Real featured the same musicians that played on the unreleased Black Beauty and was originally intended as part of a two-album deal with Robert Stigwood's RSO Records. A long-time admirer of Arthur Lee, Skip Taylor, approached the label and convinced Stigwood to give the previously commercially unsuccessful Lee the largest advance he would ever receive, followed by the biggest touring opportunity any incarnation of Love would ever embark on, opening for acts such as Lou Reed and Eric Clapton.[citation needed] The tour was a disaster due to Lee's increasingly erratic behavior.[citation needed]

The album was reissued by High Moon Records with new liner notes, archival photos and bonus tracks on CD and digital in 2015 and LP in 2016.

Critical reception[]

The 2015 reissue on High Moon Records received mostly positive reviews:

UNCUT: 8/10 "...a rich, varied and soulful album that captures an exuberant Lee on an all too-infrequent upswing".

PopDose: "A vitally important band – and performer like Arthur Lee – needs to be held in the light for their amazing catalog."

All Music: "An album with more than its share of great moments."

Writing about the 2015 reissue for Exclaim!, Daniel Sylvester noted that Lee "comes off sounding nothing short of subdued, toothless and aimless," adding that the record "is lovingly assembled and digitally enhanced, but nonetheless, shouldn't be mistaken for an essential release."[3]

Track listing[]

All tracks written and arranged by Arthur Lee, except where noted.

Side 1

1. Time Is Like a River

2. Stop the Music

3. Who Are You

4. Good Old Fashion Dream

5. Which Witch Is Which?

6. With a Little Energy

Side 2

7. Singing Cowboy (Lee, Jay Donnellan)

8. Be Thankful for What You Got (William DeVaughn)

9. You Said You Would

10. Busted Feet (Lee, Charles Karp)

11. Everybody's Gotta Live

Deluxe Edition Bonus Tracks

12. Do It Yourself [Outtake]

13. I Gotta Remember [Outtake]

14. Somebody [Outtake]

15. You Gotta Feel It [Outtake]

16. With A Little Energy [Alternate Mix]

17. Busted Feet [Alternate Mix]

18. You Said You Would [Single Mix]

19. Stop The Music [Alternate Take]

20. Graveyard Hop [Studio Rehearsal]

21. Singing Cowboy [Alternate Take]

22. Everybody’s Gotta Live [Electric Version]

23. Wonder People (I Do Wonder) [Studio Rehearsal]

Personnel[]

  • Arthur Lee - rhythm guitar, acoustic guitar, vocal
Additional personnel
  • Melvan Whittington - guitar
  • John Sterling - guitar
  • Sherwood Akuna - bass
  • Joe Blocker - drums
  • Bobby Lyle - keyboards
  • Gary Bell - synthesizer
  • Herman McCormick - conductor
  • Wilber Brown, Fred Carter, John Clauder, Alan DeVille, Clifford Solomon and Billy Sprague - horns
  • Venetta Fields, Jessica Smith and Carlina Williams - vocals
  • Robert Rozelle - bass (6, 7, 10)
  • Buzzy Feiten - lead guitar (3)
  • Art Fox - acoustic guitar (5)
  • Harvey "The Snake" Mandel - electric guitars (5)
  • Joe Deaguro - vocal, vibes (8)

References[]

  1. ^ "Love: Reel to Real" at AllMusic. Retrieved 27 September 2011.
  2. ^ Christgau, Robert (1981). "Consumer Guide '70s: L". Christgau's Record Guide: Rock Albums of the Seventies. Ticknor & Fields. ISBN 089919026X. Retrieved March 1, 2019 – via robertchristgau.com.
  3. ^ Jump up to: a b Sylvester, Daniel (November 25, 2015). "Love - Reel to Real". Exclaim!. Retrieved December 17, 2015.
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