Space Opera - Space Opera (Ripped From Vinyl) Full Album
The classic debut
album from
Texas Based Space Opera.
1.
Country Max
2.
Holy River
3.
Outlines
4.
Guitar Suite
5.
My Telephone Artist
6.
Riddle
7.
Prelude No. 4
8.
Lookout
9.
Blue Ridge Mountains
10.
Over and Over
Space Opera
One of
the true cult classic albums of the '70s! After woodshedding in the
Dallas/
Ft. Worth area during the '60s (and recording with high school buddy
T-Bone Burnett),
Scott Fraser,
David Bullock,
Phil White and
Brett Wilson landed as Space Opera in
New York, where the already-legendary
Clive Davis offered to
sign them on
Columbia. Much to the music biz's amazement, they turned him down, opting for more creative control by signing with
Epic's
Canadian arm, for whom they recorded this excellent but little-promoted album in
1972.
An inspired blend of
Frank Zappa, the
Band,
Steely Dan and especially the
Byrds, this record is still talked about in hushed tones by
12-string guitarists, as Scott Fraser's unique tuning technique (each string-pair is tuned to 5ths instead of octaves) resulted in a truly monumental sound. Add to that their ample harmonies, and you can hear why Space Opera is considered by some to be the Byrds' natural heirs, or at least their prog-rock cousins!
-
Collector's
Choice
An obscurity from day one, Space Opera is an overlooked classic-rock wonder. Three of the four members of Space Opera (
Philip White, Scott Fraser, David Bullock) had previously recorded a stellar country-folk gem in
Whistler,
Chaucer,
Detroit, and
Greenhill. As good as that record was, they were still green compared to the fully developed band (adding drummer Brett Wilson) they would become by 1972.
From
Forth Worth, Texas, but recorded in
Canada, Space Opera forged a familiar rock sound in an unheard context, combining blissful three part harmonies with searing guitar leads and righteous, intricate jams. The reissue is appropriately billed as “
12 string prog rock” and while references to the Byrds and
Zappa abound in other reviews, it behooves me to agree. Though it is a must; Space Opera combines these musical forces like nothing I have ever heard before. Still, if you have ever hankered for the sounds of local
FM radio rock, this is an album you won’t believe didn’t hit the airwaves.
Songs are well developed and near classical in form, developing into finely tuned suites. “Country Max” leads off as the clear “hit” record, remarkably recognizable, it’s the kind of record you feel like you’ve heard a million times. Moodier numbers like “Holy River” and “Riddle” jangle their way into your head with good craftsmanship and memorable refrains. “Guitar Suite” is the album’s instrumental centerpiece that successfully merges prog and country rock during every moment of sound; gnarly double-tracked harmonica and tape effects stealing the show. The recordings are so warm it’s as if the master tapes were filtered through a rainbow of vintage tape machines, and the flutes on “Outlines” even sound suspiciously mellotron-esque. Some of the beauty to this record must be owed to the warmth and grit that you just can’t get with modern digital technology.
More than pleased to discover one like this.
Beautiful songs that are truly unheard classics. These fellas clearly understood how to create rock music in a way more advanced than many better known contemporaries and are still awaiting their recognition.
Available from
It’s About
Music as a digital download or
Collectors Choice CD. The liner notes are actually halfway decent for a CC release, including a scan of the original
16-track channel assignments, revealing all sorts of uncredited instrument parts and the lyrics.