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Oar (album)

Oar is the only studio album by American singer-songwriter Alexander "Skip" Spence, released on May 19, 1969, by Columbia Records. It was recorded over seven days in December 1968 in Nashville, and features Spence on all of the instruments.[5]

Oar
Studio album by
ReleasedMay 19, 1969 (1969-05-19)
RecordedDecember 3–12, 1968[1]
StudioColumbia, Nashville
Genre
Length44:38
LabelColumbia
ProducerAlexander Spence
Alternative cover
Cover of 2018 deluxe box set AndOarAgain

Background edit

Described as "one of the most harrowing documents of pain and confusion ever made",[6] the album was recorded after Spence had spent six months in Bellevue Hospital. Spence had been committed to Bellevue following a delusion-driven attempt to attack Moby Grape bandmates Don Stevenson and Jerry Miller with a fire axe.[5][7]

At the time of Spence's release from hospital, he had written a number of songs that he wanted to record. Producer David Rubinson suggested that Spence record at the Columbia studios in Nashville, where there was a particularly patient recording engineer, Mike Figlio. Rubinson instructed Figlio to keep the tapes running at all times, to record everything that Spence did. The majority of the tracks were recorded using a three-track recorder. Rubinson chose to stay away from the studio, concerned that Spence's recording activities would be distracted by the presence of a producer.[5]

According to Spence, the Nashville sessions were intended by him to only be a demo, which he gave to Rubinson with the intent that the songs would be fleshed out with full production for the actual album. Instead, Rubinson had the demo recordings released by Columbia.

Release and reception edit

Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic     [4]
Crawdaddy!(favorable)[8]
Rolling Stone(favorable)[9]
Robert ChristgauC−[10]

When first released, Oar was not promoted by Columbia Records, despite pleadings from Rubinson. It was at the time the lowest-selling album in Columbia Records history and was deleted from the Columbia catalogue within a year of its release.[5]

In June of 1968, Alexander "Skip" Spence was admitted into the Psychiatric Ward of New York's Bellevue Hospital in lower Manhattan, putting an end to a highly creative period of his life. Oddly, it also signalled the beginning of his most prolific writing cycle. Unbeknownst to everyone involved with his career at that point, Bellevue provided Spence the safety he needed and the time to create what was to become his best-known work.

— Andrew Lau, "Oar After 40 Years: Brilliant or Mere Ramblings?"[5]

As described by critic Ross Bennett:

Combining the ramblings of a man on the brink of mental collapse with some real moments of flippancy and laughter, Oar is a genuinely strange record. Unsurprisingly, the journey from "Little Hands"' Grape-esque guitar grooves to "Grey / Afro"'s terrifying nine minutes of mantric drone, isn't an easy one. Even when Spence builds his songs around a familiar sound (primarily minimalist country-folk) unsettling oddities and ominous modulations creep in.[11]

The album is viewed by critic Lindsay Planer as follows:

A common motif to this album is the presence of saints and demons. Even the straightforward narratives such as the love ballad "Broken Heart" or "Cripple Creek" — which feature vocal treatments reminiscent of folkie Fred Neil — are bathed in unusual chord sequences and lyrical double-entendre. The majority of the sounds on this long-player remain teetering near the precipice of sanity.[12]

The album is viewed by critic John Reed in the Boston Globe:

When former Moby Grape guitarist/singer Alexander "Skip" Spence died in April, it was another sad footnote in the unfruitful saga of one of rock's most multi-talented, but terminally inauspicious, bands. Spence's lone solo disc, Oar, is a quickly recorded document of songs he penned during a 6-month stay at Bellevue Hospital. The dour tone of that time in Spence's life may explain the album's large amount of nondiscernible lyrics. He seems at times to purposely muffle them, making him a pioneer of unintelligible vocal chic long before R.E.M. And Spence's guitar—once unbridled during Moby Grape sessions—is understated, yet ethereal enough to echo the pained state of his soul. "Weighted Down (The Prison Song)" is a seemingly distant cousin of "Hey Joe," with Spence jealously asking a mate, "Whose socks were you darning, darling, while I've been gone so long?" A generous 10 bonus tracks have been added to the original 12. Chronic health issues kept Spence from being creatively active as a solo artist, but overall, Oar is a radiant endeavor.[13]

Subsequent reissues have added ten more songs, in different stages of completion, to the original dozen. The original release ended with a fade out of "Grey / Afro". The 1999 Sony / Sundazed reissue appends "This Time He Has Come" to a fade-less "Grey / Afro", which reflects how the two songs appeared on the master tapes.

The first CD reissue of Oar was released by Sony Special Products in 1991 and was totally remixed from the multitrack masters. This was the first release of the fadeless "Grey / Afro" along with four outtakes from the sessions. The newer Sundazed reissue uses the original 1968 mix master tapes for the first time and added a further six unreleased tracks.

In 1999, the Birdman label of Burbank, California released a tribute album titled More Oar: A Tribute To The Skip Spence Album. It featured covers of the original record's tracks by Robert Plant, Robyn Hitchcock, Tom Waits, Greg Dulli, Mark Lanegan, Beck, Diesel Park West, Mudhoney, and others.

In September 2018, another reissue, of a three-CD / three-LP boxed set, titled AndOarAgain was released by label Modern Harmonic. It included two discs / LPs of previously unreleased tracks; 36 tracks on discs 2 and 3 were previously unreleased at all.[14]

In 2019, for Record Store Day, a 7" single of "I Want A Rock & Roll Band" backed with a previously unreleased version of "I Got A Lot To Say / Mary Jane" was released by label Modern Harmonic.[15]

It was voted number 510 in the third edition of Colin Larkin's All Time Top 1000 Albums (2000).[16]

In November 2009, as part of his "Record Club" series, Beck began posting the videos of his complete version of Oar on his website (www.beck.com), recorded with members of Wilco, Feist, Jamie Lidell, James Gadson, Brian LeBarton, and others the previous June.[17]

In 2013, the album was listed at number 8 on Ballast's list of top 50 Canadian albums of all time.[18] The album was also included in the book 1001 Albums You Must Hear Before You Die.[19] In 1998, The Wire included Oar in their list of "100 Records That Set the World on Fire (While No One Was Listening)". The staff described the "brilliant" album as "a progenitor of both the loner/stoner and lo-fi movements", further writing that: "Recorded on three track(!), absolutely solo, Oar represents a type of internalized psychedelic exploration that would not find a real audience for decades."[20]

Track listing edit

All tracks composed by Alexander "Skip" Spence

  1. "Little Hands" – 3:44
  2. "Cripple Creek" – 2:16
  3. "Diana" – 3:32
  4. "Margaret/Tiger Rug" – 2:17
  5. "Weighted Down (The Prison Song)" – 6:27
  6. "War in Peace" – 4:05
  7. "Broken Heart" – 3:29
  8. "All Come to Meet Her" – 2:04
  9. "Books of Moses" – 2:42
  10. "Dixie Peach Promenade (Yin for Yang)" – 2:53
  11. "Lawrence of Euphoria" – 1:31
  12. "Grey/Afro" – 9:38

Extra Oar (1999 CD reissue bonus tracks)

  1. "This Time He Has Come" – 4:42
  2. "It's the Best Thing for You" – 2:48
  3. "Keep Everything Under Your Hat" – 3:06
  4. "Furry Heroine (Halo of Gold)" – 3:35
  5. "Givin' up Things" – 0:59

Unissued Oar

  1. "If I'm Good" – 0:47
  2. "You Know" – 1:47
  3. "Doodle" – 1:02
  4. "Fountain" – 0:34
  5. "I Think You and I" – 1:14

Or (2018 AndOarAgain CD2 reissue tracks)

  1. "Little Hands (Take 2)" - 3:40
  2. "Cripple Creek (Basic)" - 2:16
  3. "Diana (Take 3)" - 4:36
  4. "Furry Heroine (Halo Of Gold) (Alternate)" - 3:26
  5. "My Friend" - 2:49
  6. "War In Peace (Alternate)" - 3:46
  7. "Broken Heart (Voc & Acoustic)" - 4:44
  8. "All Come To Meet Her (Alternate 1)" - 2:14
  9. "I Want A Rock & Roll Band" - 3:10
  10. "Dixie Peach Promenade (Yin For Yang) (Alternate)" - 2:06
  11. "Lawrence Of Euphoria (Alternate)" - 2:01
  12. "Mary Jane / Steamboat" - 4:59
  13. "I Got A Lot To Say (Version 1)" - 1:50
  14. "Diana (Alternate 1)" - 2:38
  15. "War In Peace (Instrumental)" - 3:27
  16. "Diana (Alternate 2)" - 5:55

More (2018 AndOarAgain CD3 reissue tracks)

  1. "Little Hands (Vocal Overdub)" - 3:47
  2. "Diana (Version 2)" - 1:10
  3. "Weighted Down (The Prison Song) (Rehearsal)" - 1:11
  4. "The Shape You're In" - 0:54
  5. "I Want A Rock & Roll Band (Instrumental)" - 1:47
  6. "It's A Hard Life (Version 1)" - 0:32
  7. "I Got Something For You" - 2:00
  8. "Diana (12 String Version)" - 3:58
  9. "I Got A Lot To Say (Version 2)" - 0:49
  10. "It Ain't Nice (Version 1)" - 1:16
  11. "She Don't Care" - 0:55
  12. "All Come To Meet Her (Alternate 2)" - 2:13
  13. "It Ain't Nice (Version 2)" - 1:04
  14. "It's A Hard Life (Version 2)" - 0:38
  15. "All Come To Meet Her (Rehearsal)" - 2:59
  16. "Diana (Overdub)" 4:01
  17. "War In Peace (Take 2)" - 4:16
  18. "Broken Heart (Extended Master)" - 4:36
  19. "War In Peace (Guitar Overdub)" - 4:45
  20. "Diana (Basics)" - 3:42

I Want A Rock & Roll Band (2019 Record Store Day 7" tracks)

  1. "I Want A Rock & Roll Band" - 3:27
  2. "I Got A Lot To Say / Mary Jane" - 2:02

Personnel edit

  • Alexander "Skip" Spence - vocals, acoustic guitar, electric guitar, bass guitar, drums
Technical
  • Charlie Bradley, Don Meehan, Mike Figlio - engineer
  • David Rubinson, Don Meehan - mixing

References edit

  1. ^ Black, Louis (17 December 1999). "The Memory of Music: Skip Spence's Oar". The Austin Chronicle. Retrieved 15 June 2011. According to producer David Rubinson, the actual recording period was seven days. See Alexander Lau.
  2. ^ Marchese, David (September 6, 2012). "Alexander "Skip" Spence – Oar". Spin. Retrieved 22 May 2023.
  3. ^ Unterberger, Richie. "The Top 25 1960s Folk-Rock Albums: A Subjective List of Personal Faves". Retrieved May 22, 2023.
  4. ^ a b Oar at AllMusic
  5. ^ a b c d e Lau, Andrew (24 November 2009). "Oar After 40 Years: Brilliant or Mere Ramblings?". Crawdaddy!. Retrieved 15 June 2011.
  6. ^ Brunner, Rob (23 July 1999). "Review of More Oar: A Tribute To The Skip Spence Album". Entertainment Weekly.
  7. ^ At the time, Moby Grape was in New York City recording its second album, Wow/Grape Jam, under the supervision of producer David Rubinson. It was Rubinson who called the police, in order to address Spence's threatening behaviors, while Miller and Stevenson swore criminal complaints, in order to facilitate Spence's arrest.
  8. ^ Williams, Paul. . Crawdaddy.wolfgangsvault.com. Archived from the original on 19 December 2007. Retrieved 3 March 2012.
  9. ^ Marcus, Griel (20 September 1969). "Records". Rolling Stone. No. 42. San Francisco: Straight Arrow Publishers, Inc. p. 37. Retrieved 10 February 2016.
  10. ^ "Robert Christgau: Consumer Guide (1): July 10, 1969".
  11. ^ Bennett, Ross (July 12, 2008). . Mojo. Archived from the original on 22 May 2011. Retrieved 15 June 2011.
  12. ^ Planer, Lindsay. "Review of Sundazed reissue of Oar". AllMusic. Retrieved 15 June 2011.
  13. ^ Reed, John. "Review of Sundazed reissue of Oar".
  14. ^ https://www.discogs.com/release/12279537-Alexander-Spence-AndOarAgain
  15. ^ https://www.discogs.com/release/13489274-Alexander-Skip-Spence-I-Want-A-Rock-Roll-Band
  16. ^ Colin Larkin, ed. (2000). All Time Top 1000 Albums (3rd ed.). Virgin Books. p. 178. ISBN 0-7535-0493-6.
  17. ^ See, and hear, for example, Beck's Record Club versions of "Books of Moses", "All Come To Meet Her", "Broken Heart" and "War In Peace"; www.beck.com.
  18. ^ Unger, Andrew (13 February 2013). . Ballast. Archived from the original on 18 February 2013. Retrieved 14 February 2013.
  19. ^ Dimery, Robert; Lydon, Michael (7 February 2006). 1001 Albums You Must Hear Before You Die: Revised and Updated Edition. Universe. ISBN 0-7893-1371-5.
  20. ^ "100 Records That Set the World on Fire (While No One Was Listening)". The Wire. No. 175. September 1998.

album, only, studio, album, american, singer, songwriter, alexander, skip, spence, released, 1969, columbia, records, recorded, over, seven, days, december, 1968, nashville, features, spence, instruments, oarstudio, album, alexander, spencereleasedmay, 1969, 1. Oar is the only studio album by American singer songwriter Alexander Skip Spence released on May 19 1969 by Columbia Records It was recorded over seven days in December 1968 in Nashville and features Spence on all of the instruments 5 OarStudio album by Alexander SpenceReleasedMay 19 1969 1969 05 19 RecordedDecember 3 12 1968 1 StudioColumbia NashvilleGenrePsychedelic folk 2 folk rock 3 psychedelic rock 4 Length44 38LabelColumbiaProducerAlexander SpenceAlternative coverCover of 2018 deluxe box set AndOarAgain Contents 1 Background 2 Release and reception 3 Track listing 4 Personnel 5 ReferencesBackground editDescribed as one of the most harrowing documents of pain and confusion ever made 6 the album was recorded after Spence had spent six months in Bellevue Hospital Spence had been committed to Bellevue following a delusion driven attempt to attack Moby Grape bandmates Don Stevenson and Jerry Miller with a fire axe 5 7 At the time of Spence s release from hospital he had written a number of songs that he wanted to record Producer David Rubinson suggested that Spence record at the Columbia studios in Nashville where there was a particularly patient recording engineer Mike Figlio Rubinson instructed Figlio to keep the tapes running at all times to record everything that Spence did The majority of the tracks were recorded using a three track recorder Rubinson chose to stay away from the studio concerned that Spence s recording activities would be distracted by the presence of a producer 5 According to Spence the Nashville sessions were intended by him to only be a demo which he gave to Rubinson with the intent that the songs would be fleshed out with full production for the actual album Instead Rubinson had the demo recordings released by Columbia Release and reception editProfessional ratingsReview scoresSourceRatingAllmusic nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 4 Crawdaddy favorable 8 Rolling Stone favorable 9 Robert ChristgauC 10 When first released Oar was not promoted by Columbia Records despite pleadings from Rubinson It was at the time the lowest selling album in Columbia Records history and was deleted from the Columbia catalogue within a year of its release 5 In June of 1968 Alexander Skip Spence was admitted into the Psychiatric Ward of New York s Bellevue Hospital in lower Manhattan putting an end to a highly creative period of his life Oddly it also signalled the beginning of his most prolific writing cycle Unbeknownst to everyone involved with his career at that point Bellevue provided Spence the safety he needed and the time to create what was to become his best known work Andrew Lau Oar After 40 Years Brilliant or Mere Ramblings 5 As described by critic Ross Bennett Combining the ramblings of a man on the brink of mental collapse with some real moments of flippancy and laughter Oar is a genuinely strange record Unsurprisingly the journey from Little Hands Grape esque guitar grooves to Grey Afro s terrifying nine minutes of mantric drone isn t an easy one Even when Spence builds his songs around a familiar sound primarily minimalist country folk unsettling oddities and ominous modulations creep in 11 The album is viewed by critic Lindsay Planer as follows A common motif to this album is the presence of saints and demons Even the straightforward narratives such as the love ballad Broken Heart or Cripple Creek which feature vocal treatments reminiscent of folkie Fred Neil are bathed in unusual chord sequences and lyrical double entendre The majority of the sounds on this long player remain teetering near the precipice of sanity 12 The album is viewed by critic John Reed in the Boston Globe When former Moby Grape guitarist singer Alexander Skip Spence died in April it was another sad footnote in the unfruitful saga of one of rock s most multi talented but terminally inauspicious bands Spence s lone solo disc Oar is a quickly recorded document of songs he penned during a 6 month stay at Bellevue Hospital The dour tone of that time in Spence s life may explain the album s large amount of nondiscernible lyrics He seems at times to purposely muffle them making him a pioneer of unintelligible vocal chic long before R E M And Spence s guitar once unbridled during Moby Grape sessions is understated yet ethereal enough to echo the pained state of his soul Weighted Down The Prison Song is a seemingly distant cousin of Hey Joe with Spence jealously asking a mate Whose socks were you darning darling while I ve been gone so long A generous 10 bonus tracks have been added to the original 12 Chronic health issues kept Spence from being creatively active as a solo artist but overall Oar is a radiant endeavor 13 Subsequent reissues have added ten more songs in different stages of completion to the original dozen The original release ended with a fade out of Grey Afro The 1999 Sony Sundazed reissue appends This Time He Has Come to a fade less Grey Afro which reflects how the two songs appeared on the master tapes The first CD reissue of Oar was released by Sony Special Products in 1991 and was totally remixed from the multitrack masters This was the first release of the fadeless Grey Afro along with four outtakes from the sessions The newer Sundazed reissue uses the original 1968 mix master tapes for the first time and added a further six unreleased tracks In 1999 the Birdman label of Burbank California released a tribute album titled More Oar A Tribute To The Skip Spence Album It featured covers of the original record s tracks by Robert Plant Robyn Hitchcock Tom Waits Greg Dulli Mark Lanegan Beck Diesel Park West Mudhoney and others In September 2018 another reissue of a three CD three LP boxed set titled AndOarAgain was released by label Modern Harmonic It included two discs LPs of previously unreleased tracks 36 tracks on discs 2 and 3 were previously unreleased at all 14 In 2019 for Record Store Day a 7 single of I Want A Rock amp Roll Band backed with a previously unreleased version of I Got A Lot To Say Mary Jane was released by label Modern Harmonic 15 It was voted number 510 in the third edition of Colin Larkin s All Time Top 1000 Albums 2000 16 In November 2009 as part of his Record Club series Beck began posting the videos of his complete version of Oar on his website www beck com recorded with members of Wilco Feist Jamie Lidell James Gadson Brian LeBarton and others the previous June 17 In 2013 the album was listed at number 8 on Ballast s list of top 50 Canadian albums of all time 18 The album was also included in the book 1001 Albums You Must Hear Before You Die 19 In 1998 The Wire included Oar in their list of 100 Records That Set the World on Fire While No One Was Listening The staff described the brilliant album as a progenitor of both the loner stoner and lo fi movements further writing that Recorded on three track absolutely solo Oar represents a type of internalized psychedelic exploration that would not find a real audience for decades 20 Track listing editAll tracks composed by Alexander Skip Spence Little Hands 3 44 Cripple Creek 2 16 Diana 3 32 Margaret Tiger Rug 2 17 Weighted Down The Prison Song 6 27 War in Peace 4 05 Broken Heart 3 29 All Come to Meet Her 2 04 Books of Moses 2 42 Dixie Peach Promenade Yin for Yang 2 53 Lawrence of Euphoria 1 31 Grey Afro 9 38Extra Oar 1999 CD reissue bonus tracks This Time He Has Come 4 42 It s the Best Thing for You 2 48 Keep Everything Under Your Hat 3 06 Furry Heroine Halo of Gold 3 35 Givin up Things 0 59Unissued Oar If I m Good 0 47 You Know 1 47 Doodle 1 02 Fountain 0 34 I Think You and I 1 14Or 2018 AndOarAgain CD2 reissue tracks Little Hands Take 2 3 40 Cripple Creek Basic 2 16 Diana Take 3 4 36 Furry Heroine Halo Of Gold Alternate 3 26 My Friend 2 49 War In Peace Alternate 3 46 Broken Heart Voc amp Acoustic 4 44 All Come To Meet Her Alternate 1 2 14 I Want A Rock amp Roll Band 3 10 Dixie Peach Promenade Yin For Yang Alternate 2 06 Lawrence Of Euphoria Alternate 2 01 Mary Jane Steamboat 4 59 I Got A Lot To Say Version 1 1 50 Diana Alternate 1 2 38 War In Peace Instrumental 3 27 Diana Alternate 2 5 55More 2018 AndOarAgain CD3 reissue tracks Little Hands Vocal Overdub 3 47 Diana Version 2 1 10 Weighted Down The Prison Song Rehearsal 1 11 The Shape You re In 0 54 I Want A Rock amp Roll Band Instrumental 1 47 It s A Hard Life Version 1 0 32 I Got Something For You 2 00 Diana 12 String Version 3 58 I Got A Lot To Say Version 2 0 49 It Ain t Nice Version 1 1 16 She Don t Care 0 55 All Come To Meet Her Alternate 2 2 13 It Ain t Nice Version 2 1 04 It s A Hard Life Version 2 0 38 All Come To Meet Her Rehearsal 2 59 Diana Overdub 4 01 War In Peace Take 2 4 16 Broken Heart Extended Master 4 36 War In Peace Guitar Overdub 4 45 Diana Basics 3 42I Want A Rock amp Roll Band 2019 Record Store Day 7 tracks I Want A Rock amp Roll Band 3 27 I Got A Lot To Say Mary Jane 2 02Personnel editAlexander Skip Spence vocals acoustic guitar electric guitar bass guitar drumsTechnicalCharlie Bradley Don Meehan Mike Figlio engineer David Rubinson Don Meehan mixingReferences edit Black Louis 17 December 1999 The Memory of Music Skip Spence s Oar The Austin Chronicle Retrieved 15 June 2011 According to producer David Rubinson the actual recording period was seven days See Alexander Lau Marchese David September 6 2012 Alexander Skip Spence Oar Spin Retrieved 22 May 2023 Unterberger Richie The Top 25 1960s Folk Rock Albums A Subjective List of Personal Faves Retrieved May 22 2023 a b Oar at AllMusic a b c d e Lau Andrew 24 November 2009 Oar After 40 Years Brilliant or Mere Ramblings Crawdaddy Retrieved 15 June 2011 Brunner Rob 23 July 1999 Review of More Oar A Tribute To The Skip Spence Album Entertainment Weekly At the time Moby Grape was in New York City recording its second album Wow Grape Jam under the supervision of producer David Rubinson It was Rubinson who called the police in order to address Spence s threatening behaviors while Miller and Stevenson swore criminal complaints in order to facilitate Spence s arrest Williams Paul Blogs Crawdaddy Paste Crawdaddy wolfgangsvault com Archived from the original on 19 December 2007 Retrieved 3 March 2012 Marcus Griel 20 September 1969 Records Rolling Stone No 42 San Francisco Straight Arrow Publishers Inc p 37 Retrieved 10 February 2016 Robert Christgau Consumer Guide 1 July 10 1969 Bennett Ross July 12 2008 Disc of the Day Alexander Spence Mojo Archived from the original on 22 May 2011 Retrieved 15 June 2011 Planer Lindsay Review of Sundazed reissue of Oar AllMusic Retrieved 15 June 2011 Reed John Review of Sundazed reissue of Oar https www discogs com release 12279537 Alexander Spence AndOarAgain https www discogs com release 13489274 Alexander Skip Spence I Want A Rock Roll Band Colin Larkin ed 2000 All Time Top 1000 Albums 3rd ed Virgin Books p 178 ISBN 0 7535 0493 6 See and hear for example Beck s Record Club versions of Books of Moses All Come To Meet Her Broken Heart and War In Peace www beck com Unger Andrew 13 February 2013 The 50 Greatest Canadian Albums of All Time Ballast Archived from the original on 18 February 2013 Retrieved 14 February 2013 Dimery Robert Lydon Michael 7 February 2006 1001 Albums You Must Hear Before You Die Revised and Updated Edition Universe ISBN 0 7893 1371 5 100 Records That Set the World on Fire While No One Was Listening The Wire No 175 September 1998 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Oar album amp oldid 1178206702, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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