Pampered Menial was the first album from Pavlov's Dog, a band produced by
Murray Krugman and
Sandy Pearlman, the duo behind
Blue Oyster Cult. The seven men in this group are revealed in the gatefold holding "Horace," a dog, while three engravings from 1849 by artist
Robert Vernon make up the front, back and inside cover. Those paintings are striking, and though the music, mostly written by vocalist
David Surkamp, tries hard, it just isn't as captivating as the package which surrounds it.
Surkamp sounds like a chick singer, something that wasn't quite in vogue yet --
Journey and the
Mickey Thomas Starship wouldn't happen for another four years, not until 1979, and even
Thomas' hit with the
Elvin Bishop Group was a year away, male vocalists were singing in lower registers at this point. With song titles like "Theme From Subway Sue" and "Of Once And Future Kings" the identity that a
Blue Oyster Cult maintained was missing here. "Subway Sue" sounding very much like the 80s version of
Mott, the band after
Ian Hunter took his leave. If you thought
Mott's high pitched vocals were out of place and annoying, check out
Surkamp's strange warbling. The band itself isn't half bad. "Episode's mellotron, courtesy of
Doug Rayburn and
Siegfried Carver's violin, provide more than adequate sounds.
Carver's sole composition, "Preludin," comes off as one of the best tracks, perhaps because it is an instrumental version of progressive rock that
Triumvirat and early
Journey were exploring, But when
David Surkamp's vocals kick in again on the next tune, like Pavlov's experiments, it makes the listener want to break things, including this record. "Julia" is a mediocre lyric and ok melody, just destroyed by the vocalist who composed it. If this were an instrumental group, the music would be much easier to take. The band provides elegant rock, majestic drums by
Mike Safron, additional keyboards by
David Hamilton augmenting
Rayburn's mellotron and flute, and solid 70s production from
Krugman and
Pearlman. Lead guitarist
Steve Scorfina co-writes a beautiful piece with vocalist
Surkamp in "Late November," but its perfection is marred by the whining sounds of the frontman. It is really sad, as there seems to be much potential here, drummer
Michael Safron's "Song Dance" another highly creative number. A & R man
Mark Spector had some kind of ears, what he was thinking here is anyone's guess. The solid riffs, the wonderful blend of sounds, all destroyed by
David Surkamp's forced vocals which sound like some experiment by Pavlov gone awry. The
Mott band from
Shouting & Pointing infamy should have been put on a stage with Pavlov's Dog to see which act could clear the room first. "Fast Gun" is another solid progressive tune, but without the polish of a
Brad Delp or
Steve Perry, it just didn't stand a chance. Columbia Records should re-issue an instrumental version of this disc via their Legacy series, the music deserves it.
AMG Review by Joe Viglione
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