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Pavlov's Dog lead singer
David Surkamp was everything that was wrong with the band's Columbia debut
Pampered Menial. Tempered here by
Blue Oyster Cult producers
Murray Krugman and
Sandy Pearlman, who also recorded the first disc, the sound is more appealing to the ear. The question is, where was it going? Too pop for progressive rock, and too progressive for Top 40, the music is driving and more focused the second time around. There are some heavy guests to add to the festivities,
Roxy Music's sax player
Andy McKay along with drummer
William Bruford and Arista sax player
Michael Brecker, though the tracks they appear on are not designated. "Valkerie" has a great hook, of "bring back the good old days," and the production here is cleaner than the first time around, but there is something very left field about this group, extremely non-commercial, even on a pretty ballad like "Standing Here With You (Megan's Song)." The music isn't as artsy as
the Mothers of Invention, and certainly not as on target as
Blue Oyster Cult, making one wonder if A&R man
Mark Spector was just being courteous to producers
Krugman and
Pearlman?
Mark Spector had produced
Bob Segarini's 1975 effort with
Dudes on Columbia, and went on to manage
38 Special, his pop leanings make this signing all the more mysterious. That being said, this outing is actually more pop oriented, or at least as poppy as this style and singer may want to be. "Try to Hang On" is light and listener friendly, one of the best tracks on the album; it is followed by "Gold Nuggets" which is almost a continuation of "Try to Hang On." "She Breaks Like Morning Sky" interrupts the flow a bit, driving a little harder, but the performance is still light years beyond the previous album. The producers have brought the music up in the mix, and the skillful playing of
Pampered Meniel is brought a few notches up. "Early Morning On" is a superior track, musically, and though
Surkamp is more subdued, it is still his voice which throws the monkey wrench into this affair. The cover concept with model
Michael Mantel dressed as the Hunchback of Notre Dame and swinging upside down from bells is very cool, while the mascot from the previous album's cover, the 1849 artwork/engravings by
Robert Vernon, appears again on the record sleeve/lyric sheet. At the risk of sounding cruel to the lead vocalist/writer/co-writer of all the songs, both albums would work better as instrumentals --
David Surkamp's voice a little too grating for the elegant and complex music inside these grooves. Adventurous and meaningful,
The Sound of the Bell is a great concept and musical experience that falls short. Have to give them A for effort, though.
AMG Review by Joe Viglione
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