The Cryan Shames - Synthesis (Reissue) (1968/2002)
Artist: The Cryan Shames
Title: Synthesis
Year Of Release: 1968/2002
Label: Sundazed Music
Genre: Sunshine Pop, Psychedelic Rock
Quality: Mp3 320 / Flac (tracks, .cue, log)
Total Time: 57:48
Total Size: 172/388 Mb (scans)
WebSite: Album Preview
Title: Synthesis
Year Of Release: 1968/2002
Label: Sundazed Music
Genre: Sunshine Pop, Psychedelic Rock
Quality: Mp3 320 / Flac (tracks, .cue, log)
Total Time: 57:48
Total Size: 172/388 Mb (scans)
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:
1. Greenburg, Glickstein, Charles, David Smith And Jones (Isaac Guillory, Jim Fairs) - 2:16
2. Baltimore Oriole (Hoagy Carmichael, Paul Francis Webster) - 4:30
3. It's All Right (D.P. "Dad" Carter) - 2:11
4. Your Love (Lenny Kerley) - 3:28
5. A Master's Fool (Isaac Guillory) - 3:38
6. First Train To California (Jim Fairs) - 2:57
7. The Painter (Isaac Guillory) - 2:52
8. Sweet Girl Of Mine (Lenny Kerley) - 2:26
9. 20th Song (Lenny Kerley) - 2:07
10. Let's Get Together (Dino Valente) - 3:27
11. Symphony Of The Wind (Isaac Guillory) - 3:20
Bonus Tracks:
12. A Master’s Fool (45 Version) (Isaac Guillory) - 3:37
13. First Train To California (45 Version) (Jim Fairs) - 2:57
14. Greenburg, Glickstein, Charles, David Smith And Jones (45 Version) (Isaac Guillory, Jim Fairs) - 2:16
15. Your Love (45 Version) (Lenny Kerley) - 2:53
16. 20th Song (45 Version) (Lenny Kerley) - 2:10
17. Let’S Get Together (Mono Version) (Dino Valente) - 2:31
18. Bits and Pieces (Lenny Kerley) - 2:34
19. Rainmaker (Harry Nilson, B. Martin) - 2:19
Line-up::
Tom Doody - Vocals
Jim Pilster - Vocals, Percussion
Alan Dawson - Drums, Vocals
Dave Carter - Vocals, Guitar
Isaac Guillory - Vocals, Guitar, Bass, Keyboards
Lenny Kerley - Vocals, Bass, Guitar
Synthesis is an apt name for an album that, like its predecessor, A Scratch in the Sky, proved the Cryan' Shames to be among the most versatile mainstream pop/rock groups of the late '60s. Versatile does not mean great, though, or especially interesting, and can also mean an absence of a solid identity. This record is more eclectic than it is exciting, though the material is well arranged and the group were accomplished harmony singers in particular. On "Greenburg, Glickstein, Charles, David Smith & Jones" they get heavy; with the cover of Hoagy Carmichael's "Baltimore Oriole," they get jazz/folk-rock progressive; on "It's All Right," it's jaunty country-rock; on "First Train to California," there's an almost-self-conscious straining for an MOR AM radio hit. The segueing together of tracks and occasional insertion of spacy instrumental and production flourishes indicate that they wanted to leave the impression of making a progressive statement. But it sounds for the most part like 1960s AM radio filler trying to get hipper with a touch of the far-out, the problem being that 1960s AM radio filler intrinsically cannot get too hip or far out. The 2002 Sundazed CD reissue of this odd mix of sunshine pop and mild pop-psychedelia adds eight bonus tracks. No less than six of them are single versions of tracks from the LP; the other two present both sides of their 1969 single, "Bits and Pieces"/"Rainmaker," which matched a country-rock original with a Harry Nilsson cover.