THE GREATEST SONGS OF THE 1960s THAT NO ONE HAS EVER HEARD
1,957) The Baby — “Michael Blues”
Here’s a delightful music hall romp, a “lighthearted blues/pop hybrid, the sort of thing that feels like it wants to be a discarded McCartney song” (jhendrix110, https://rateyourmusic.com/music-review/jhendrix110/the-baby/heartbreaker-michael-blues/224622582) from the Sutherland brothers (Gavin and Ian) and Christopher Kemp and John Wright, all formerly of the New Generation (see #1,792). Not that there’s anything wrong with that! Hey, I’d love to be a discarded McCartney song, even one Paul only ever sang in the shower.
Vernon Joynson tells us all things Sutherland:
[The New Generation] scored a minor hit with “Smokey Blues Away” and the flip side “She’s A Soldier Boy”. . . . The brothers signed to Island in 1972 and recorded two albums of melodic folk-based pop. . . . They . . . wrote and recorded as their second single “Sailing”, which . . . became a million-selling record for Rod Stewart. Their second album was made with the help of session musicians and their search for a permanent backing group resulted in them amalgamating with Quiver in 1973 to form The Sutherland Brothers and Quiver. . . . Their first album . . . was well received and they had a US hit with their first 45 “You Got Me Anyway”. . . . When Rod Stewart achieved his massive hit with “Sailing” the band was signed by CBS and soon registered a Top 5 hit with the wimpy pop ditty “Arms of Mary”. They also enjoyed two hit albums . . . .
The Tapestry of Delights Revisited
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