Review Robin Trower- Bridge of Sighs (1974) *** 1/2

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Catfish

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Classic Rock Album of the Day- Robin Trower - Bridge of Sighs- (1974) *** 1/2

I have seen quite a few great blues/rock guitarist in my life, including , SRV, Johnny Winter, and Billy Gibbons, and several others. But one in particular I want to recognize that has someone been lost in the sands of times is the great Robin Trower. There was a period of time in the early to mid 1970's that record companies and their execs would hype the "New Hendrix". Trower fresh from Procol Harum fame, was the latest installment in that process.

Robin Trower is definitely in that elite class, but when was the last time while listening to classic rock stations, do you hear any of his classic works especially from his second album (this one) or the subsequent one "For Earth Below". For me to pick one of these two was tough. Almost a coin toss. The only reason I chose Bridge, was because the best 3 from this one, is just a tad better than the latter. I also gave this one a nod, in that the solos seem more intense and technically tight. There were some crazy innovative ways that Trower made his Strat sing like no one had done since the man himself (Hendrix).

One thing that is a great sign of the power of a band, is its ability to create a wall of sound that mimics 5 vs 3. Even though this band is no way similar to ZZ Top in that respect, one very interesting similarity is its empcompassive feel that no note or moment is wasted. In fact, if you allow yourself to immerse yourself into the listen, you will get that same virtuoso vibe as you would during an intense Hendrix or SRV blues itineration. In any case, I am thankful that he left Procol Harum, and unleashed some fantastic rock/blues fused masterpieces.

Fun Fact- Band had zero platinum albums, which I kind of found odd, considering how big he was back in the day

Side 1-
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Day of the Eagle- Marvelous blend, and marriage of blues and hard rock. Trower did a great job of picking of bassist James Dewar (from somewhat obscure band- Stone the Crows) for vocals. This is maybe the most rocking and less blues-ish number until the decrescendos the tune into a fading sun like decompress. Excellent. 2

Bridge of Sighs- Title Track intentionally channels RT's inner Hendrix. Song allows some nice peripheral percussion and a has that majestic feel in what feels like a slow mo, blowing, and I mean slow rolling blues classic. I had almost forgotten how good this album was. 4

In this Place- Song has a foundation that has tinges of the modern Soundgarden sound. Good one, but lower tier in the preference on the album. Listen to Black Hole Sun, and feel the similarity. Or maybe it's my imagination. 7

The Fool and Me- Another smoking blues tune, that RT absolutely has that Stratocaster singing. I've always stuck with my Gibsons for playing around (SG/LP), but songs like this make me want go out and binge on another ax. This is vintage Robin Trower. 5

Side 2-
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Too Rolling Stoned- Side 2 opens like a sledge hammer. I consider this easily one of the top 5 rock/blues tunes of the 1970's. You will swear you are hearing a 3 headed monster channeling Hendrix/SRV/RT, if you take in the final few minutes. This is transcendental blues at its best. And why this one doesn't get airplay on modern Classic Rock radio is a mystery. If you only have time to listen to one song on the album, this is the one. 1

About to Begin- This song has the misfortune of having to follow RT's greatest classic. And though it might appeal to the softer bluezy, and almost torch-lighting jazzy feel, it just doesn't check the boxes for me. 8

Lady Love- Strange add, as this more of a standard rock song of the era, versus what is in RT's roundhouse. Not bad, but out of place. 6

Little Bit of Sympathy- RT's takes a bit of an off tangent. He goes full bore with hard rock, with a crazy mix in that kind of Electric Ladyland territory. From a technique standpoint, this might be one of the most difficult work he did. I know I would have cramps in my hand if I could play this. The tonal drops along the frets are crazy good. 3








 

dr wu

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Excellent lp....my favorite solo from Trower.
He left Procol Harum in 1971 after Broken Barricades which has many Trower like moments and feel to it.
He started a band called 'Jude' with James Dewar and Clive Bunker but for some reason Isidore then Lordan became drummer instead of Bunker and the name changed to Robin Trower band.
I read a short piece by Bunker but it didnt say why he left Jude/Trower but he did join Blodwyn Pig (Mick Abrahams) a few years later.ri8rcE4.jpg
Jude never recorded anything but demos which apparently were never released anywhere.
 
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E-Z

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Yeah I would like to hear the demos of Jude if they ever surfaced in the next few years before I die??.

Robin Trower is one of my top 5 all time favourite 1970s rock guitar stars period.

My Favourite Trower albums that I still occasionally listen to a couple of times during a year which are mainly his 1970s and early 1980s albums on the Chrysalis label in particular and are-

1. Twice Removed From Yesterday 1973
2. Bridge of Sighs 1974
3. Robin Trower Live 1975
4. Caravan to Midnight 1978
5. Victims of the Fury 1980
6. Back it Up 1983
7. Beyond the Mist 1985

And below these are all still very good albums but I rarely listen to them anymore these days although I did listen to Long Misty Days a couple of months ago-

8. For Earth Below 1975
9. Long Misty Days 1976
10. In City Dreams 1977 *
11. B.L.T. with Jack Bruce on bass 1981
12. Truce with Jack Bruce on bass 1982
13. Passion 1986

After Passion I don't bother after that album.

Both Beyond the Mist & Passion were released on independent record labels in 1985 & 1986 respectively.

* Apparently In City Dreams is Robin's favourite album.
 
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E-Z

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I am writing this post from a FED-Ex courier place that has 5-computer terminals and is about a 5 minutes walk from London's Oxford Circus in the west end where AIR Recording studios once were at the top of the building overlooking Oxford Circus from the early 1970s until the later 1980s and where Robin, Jimmy & Reggie recorded Bridge of Sighs back in 1974.

I met Robin once only back stage at The Night of the Guitars II back in 1991 in a 'all star guitar slinger' gig at the Town And Country Club in Kentish Town in north London and we chatted for about 5-minutes before he disappeared back into the dressing room with the other guitarists such as Rick Derringer, Ronnie Montrose (Montrose) Jan Akerman (Focus) Laurie Wisefield (Wishbone Ash & Tina Turner) and several others.
 

Catfish

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Fascinating story. Living history as it happened, because I doubt that ensemble got together that often.

When I was young, I often how it would be to meet Page. And watch the fret work from a few feet away.
 
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E-Z

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Fascinating story. Living history as it happened, because I doubt that ensemble got together that often.

When I was young, I often how it would be to meet Page. And watch the fret work from a few feet away.
Apparently that was one of the benefits that I read of watching the Led Zeppelin movie The Song Remains The Same from 1976 because at that time it was quite impossible to actually see the band live in the USA due to the high ticket demand so the actual film footage of 'the boys' in that movie performing are shot fairly close up on stage and is what many rock fans never got to see unless you happened to be lucky enough to be in the first 8 or 9 rows in front of the stage!.

Getting back to Robin Trower and the Bridge of Sighs album I recently bought the 40th anniversary cd box-set of the album that contains the original album plus various rare tracks and outtakes from the albums sessions which are all very interesting to listen to and that 40th anniversary box-set was bought in the HMV record store near Oxford Circus just a 5-minutes walk along Oxford street from where AIR studios once were where Bridge of Sighs was recorded back in 1974 so the significance of that connection between the 40th anniversary box-set and the nearby AIR recording studios didn't pass me by as I descended the subway staircase onto subway at Oxford Circus in the west end of London.
 
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