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Thursday, June 8, 2023

Lee Michaels - Carnival Of Life (1968) [US Original Stereo]

Lee Michaels - Carnival Of Life

Original 1968 USA stereo pressing
A&M Records SP 4140 (Discogs)
~ThePoodleBites rip at 96 kHz / 24 bit + full high-res scans!~

"WTF is that cover?" Now, don't be deceived; if you've never heard this album before, prepare for everything you thought you knew about Lee Michaels to be thrown out the window. "Lee Michaels, on UPV? Seriously?" Yes, I too had a couple of his '70s albums which ended up being donated to the Salvation Army in years passed, but this LP is truly a hidden gem. Disguised behind that stupid face are unexpected fuzz detonations with heroic-dosage-level songwriting, completely in line with other psych rock records of the era. You probably didn't know that Jimi Hendrix and Lee Michaels used to jam the blues together in the 'Electric Church,' nor that Lee Michaels used to share gigs at the Avalon and Fillmore in San Francisco with Country Joe & The Fish and Blue Cheer. Now you do.

Many thanks to my Dutch friend J.T. for turning me on to this great record,
and doubly thanks to the Record Phantom C.F. for his usual essential contributions!

The album begins with the bombastic opener "Hello," complete with blazing fuzz guitars, psychedelic carnie organ in full tremolo, and Michaels recanting lyrics which sculpt a psalm of happiness. For anyone with doubts about this album's greatness, this track should quickly appease them: anyone with functioning ears will immediately realize that this is a superb west-coast psych rock act that's tight, well-rehearsed, and excellently engineered. The second track, "Another One," is apparently a stream-of-thought poem from the acidified head of an elevated Michaels, complete with an instrumental 'inner trip' section of the journey. After the catchy dynamic track "Streetcar," the opening side closes with the sonorous "Love": in my head I am immediately transported to a live show at the Avalon in 1967, with guitars screaming distorted fuzztones, Michaels hollering along, the organ oscillating while drums thrash along in perfect time. What an experience it must have been to see this short-lived group do their live California stint in those days.

Lee Michaels in 1968
One flip and we're treated to five more excellent tracks ("all killer, no filler," as J.T. says). The tracks "Why" and "Tomorrow" are personal favorites, the former using a tack piano during the chorus to excellent effect; it sounds like a carnival indeed. I can't imagine what being at a carnival on acid would be like, going through an existential crisis of personality while half a million enticing lights merge with some clown dressed like a traveling salesman or perhaps something you'd expect out of a John Wayne movie, whirling around as you frantically grasp for a sliver of reality. What a hellish nightmare; it must be like that merry-go-round scene from Fear & Loathing In Las Vegas. This album has much, much better vibes: hope, happiness, youthfulness. It's not nearly as tripped out as what Pink Floyd was doing at this time, for example, but simultaneously that fact makes the Carnival Of Life much more approachable for the layman, yet still very casually enjoyable for the experienced journeyman.

The album continues with "Sounding The Sleeping," building up quietly to the blaring fuzz of before. C.F. pointed out that this song borrows its melodic line from The Mothers' "Let's Make The Water Turn Black," an obvious cue that Frank Zappa and company had influenced nearly every gigging band in the L.A. area. This track eventually fades away much the same way it appeared, before suddenly blasting into the album closer, "My Friends." Drenched in vintage analog reverb and complete with a number of charming backwards sound effects, one must wonder what songs like this sounded like when performed live, which they most certainly were; the closer is quite dreamy and trippy, but I could equally imagine it as a crowd-mover when these guys had their amps cranked up.

Blurb in Record World, November 11, 1967
The secret ingredient to this Lee Michaels debut, if indeed there is one, is probably guitarist Hamilton W. Watt, also known as Hamilton Wesley Watt, Jr., who later became the guitarist for Euphoria, a group that recorded one album for Capitol (A Gift From Euphoria) in the summer of 1968, half a year after Lee Michaels' album had already hit shelves nationwide. Watt's layered guitar tracks on Carnival Of Life were engineered by one Jim Messina (misspelled Mecina), better known for his association with Buffalo Springfield and as a founding member of Poco. Lee Michaels, a keyboardist, most often just sang with this band, while Gary Davis (later of The Comfortable Chair) covered organist duties. Session drummer Eddie Hoh (who worked with The Monkees, Tim Buckley, Kim Fowley, Harvey Mandel, The Flying Burrito Bros., and others) is credited on the album, although he only played on the closing track, with most of the drumming duties being performed by an uncredited David F. Potter, who later became drummer for the Texan psychedelic band Endle St. Cloud In The Rain, the band who shared a label with the Elevators. Bassist John Keski completed the ensemble, a (relatively speaking) little-known musician who played with some other recording artists in the late '70s.

Carnival Of Life first debuted on the west coast around November 18, 1967, to much excitement in the local music press. A review in Record World hailed it simply as a "masterpiece." To put this date in context, well-known S.F. hard rockers Steve Miller and Quicksilver Messenger Service would sign their first record contracts with Capitol a month after this record had already hit California turntables. A nationwide release of Lee Michaels' debut came the following January, with positive reviews appearing in various publications over the next few months. Promo posters were created to hang in some record shops where the album was sold, but lack of psychedelic styling coupled with an ugly cover photo were unhelpful in promoting sales. Some generic "Winter Sköl from A&M Records" ads were placed in Billboard, Cash Box, and Record World that February, but no other promotion was done. Unfortunately, but not surprisingly, the record failed to chart.

Review in Record World, January 13, 1968
Review in Cash Box, March 16 & 23, 1968
 
Review in Billboard Magazine, 10 Feb 1968
Lee Michaels, it seems, was not discouraged; Carnival Of Life's pop-oriented producer Larry Marks, who also worked with Sagittarius and Harpers Bizarre, would be dropped as Michaels himself signed a producer contract with A&M in April 1968, a few short months after this album's release, and would move to self-produce his second album Recital later that year. Unfortunately for us, Michaels' sound immediately became quite different. Hamilton Watt was replaced by Drake Levin (later of Brotherhood), that is, on the one(?) track where any guitar appears at all. The rest of Recital was filled with material more in the singer/songwriter and pop-rock vein, and while he would experiment with hard rock later in his career, Michaels' style would never return again to the acid-influenced style found here.

1967 and 1968 were a tumultuous time in music as well as audio engineering, as record companies plotted the public execution of the mono format. At one point, the United States government even launched a probe to investigate the price difference between mono and stereo records as suspected collusion. Cue engineer Howard Holzer, with an invention he called the "compatible stereo generator" (CSG): by applying a relative phase rotation between the two channels of a stereo recording, Holzer claimed that his machine -- which record labels could rent at the mere price of $1000 per month, with a minimum year-long contract -- eliminated the need to make separate mono and stereo mixes, fixing the problem of bloated center channel information in stereo fold-downs. Atlantic (and its subsidiaries) were immediately keen to this, and started preparing new releases using the CSG system, as well as preparing remasters of their back catalog with the same system. A&M was slightly more modest in their approach, but they used this CSG methodology first on a mono version of this very Lee Michaels recording, to prepare a 45 RPM single ("Love" b/w "Sounding The Sleeping") for nationwide release. In the end, three different mono singles from this album appeared, as well as a very rare mono LP, all apparently using the CSG process: therefore, nothing too unique is found upon them. We are now left wondering what Carnival Of Life could have sounded like if an engineer like Jim Messina had been given the opportunity to make a dedicated mono mix for AM radio listeners, which is a question we shall never know the answer to. On the other hand, it makes one less thing for me to have to clean up, which is always a plus.

Original promo-only mono pressing. Above: front and back cover, below: labels


This album has been reissued from the master tapes before. The first digital reissue appeared in 1996 on One Way Records, and largely preserved the dynamic range of the original recording. However, the EQ is noticeably different from the original pressing, which sounds more laid-back and natural by comparison. The last two tracks also suffer prominent noise reduction, which damaged the treble response. A digital remaster has also recently appeared on various streaming platforms, including Qobuz and Deezer, which overall more closely approached the original's sound than the 1996 CD, but was vastly more compressed and dynamically limited. Therefore, despite the tapes of this release clearly still being available, I would argue that original pressings, now 55 years in age, still present the best available sound quality for this California acid excursion.

Since this package apparently had a release on the west coast which preceded its appearance nationwide, one might assume that the Monarch pressings of this LP were the earliest ones on the market and thus have superior sound. The Monarch plant is well-known by audiophiles for their pressings, which were often the best that appeared for many of the California bands (yet people ignore the plethora of terrible styrene 45s that appeared from this facility). This album, in any case, is an outlier. A white-label promotional copy pressed at the Monarch plant was lent to me by the Record Phantom for ripping, which I quickly discovered had high levels of background noise from the use of inferior vinyl. The mono copy pictured above was also from the Monarch plant, and suffers from the same problem. Due to this issue, I purchased a mint-minus stock copy pressed at the Terre Haute plant, which turned out to have superior sound to the other discs I auditioned.

I maintain hope that someday Lee Michaels, perhaps after reading this blog post, will make available flat, high-resolution transfers from the master tapes for all to enjoy. Until that day, this remains the truest available representation of the Carnival Of Life.

Original promo poster which would have hung in record shops at the time of release

Link includes the artwork and various Lee Michaels paraphernalia from this period which I've been able to uncover. The rare promo poster above was scanned in full high-resolution 1200 dpi / 24-bit color, but has been down-sampled for the purposes of this post. If you would like the original 12 GB .psb file, or if you find more Lee Michaels material which is in need of high-resolution scans, please contact me using the email address listed on the side of this page.

Promo photo with paisley and beads, circa 1968
Performers:
- Lee Michaels: piano, organ, harpsichord, vocals
- Hamilton Watt: lead guitar(s)
- Gary Davis: organ
- John Keski: bass guitar
- David Potter: drums (tr. 1-8)
- Eddie Hoh: drums (tr. 9)

Engineered by Jim Messina
Produced by Larry Marks
Album photography by Guy Webster

Vinyl condition: M-
Dynamic range: DR 12

Track listing:
1) Hello -- 4:29
2) Another One -- 4:12
3) Streetcar -- 3:39
4) Love -- 5:12
5) Carnival Of Live -- 3:06
6) Why -- 3:26
7) Tomorrow -- 4:37
8) Sounding The Sleeping -- 4:15
9) My Friends -- 2:42

Equipment Lineage:
– Audio-Technica VMN40ML stylus on AT150MLx dual moving-magnet cartridge
– Audio-Technica AT-LP1240-USB direct drive professional turntable (internal stock preamp/ADC removed)
– Pro-Ject Phono Box S2 Ultra preamp with dedicated Zero Zone linear power supply
– Focusrite Scarlett 6i6 MkII (96kHz / 24bit)
– Adobe Audition CC 2022 (recording)
– iZotope RX 10 audio editor (manual declicking, EQ subtraction, additional adjustments)
– Audacity 3.3.x (fades between tracks, split tracks)
– Foobar2000 v1.6.16 (tagging, dynamic range analysis)


Thanks for taking the time to read my posts and check out my blog. I'd greatly appreciate it if you leave a small comment below. Notes from my readers are what inspire me to keep going. Thanks! 
MEGA: https://mega.nz/folder/ipYUkIzb#uCfo8E2WqK97dV0CMksFHg

Enjoy the Carnival, it's a wild ride!  :)
 

Sexualized teenage hotspot in Fifteen Magazine, June 1968 


Post-Recital feature in Phoenix newspaper A Closer Look, June 1, 1968

28 comments:

  1. TPB, Been a fan of Lee Michaels since I was a kid and have been always disappointed with the sound of all CD reissue (including A&M Japan & the 2010 Manifesto box) so I know that your treatment is going to be a treat to my ears ! Maybe you can take a look at his "5th" some day ? Many thanks for "Carnival of Life".

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    1. Great, enjoy! Unfortunately '5th' falls outside the scope of this blog.

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  2. By the way, if you ever run across the mono CGS processed singles and need to have them decoded you should contact Prof. Stoned. He decoded the Cream's "Wheel of Fire" tracks that used that process using the Polydor DSD flat transfer SHM-CD that all of the reissues & remasters failed to decode.

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    1. The 45s are all mono. They cannot be 'decoded' by anyone. But as written above, there is thankfully no need...

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  3. Glorious fuzz indeed! Thanks a lot for sharing this.

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  4. Thank you for your service! I know "My Friends" from Fading Yellow vol. 7, but have often wondered what the rest of that album sounds like. Now I get to find out.

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    1. Wonderful, enjoy! I hope you'll find the whole album is just as good (or better).

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  5. Quite a great album. This is definitely a keeper. Thanks for sharing it.

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  6. Thank you very much

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  7. Thank you for the love you've shown this album. Its a good one and deserves much more respect. Lee sounded great with a full band!

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  8. Thank you for all your work. I slept on this record for so long.

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  9. Thanks for all your work. This record has never sounded better. I've been enjoying this forgotten classic thanks to you.

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  10. First of all I would like to say thanks for ripping and uploading this album. I honestly had always thought this was a comedy LP...I mean the cover is quite deceiving. This is actually a nice LP, like you said lots of 'fuzz' guitar. Thanks for the exposure!!

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  11. Thank you -- always enjoy your wonderful work here!

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  12. Many thanks for another fantastic post, your rips are really outstanding !

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  13. I enjoyed your thorough review and rare graphics. I have a mint copy of this LP as well, but I look forward to listening to your work. I never considered that the dopey album cover may have contributed to the lackluster sales. At any rate, thanks for shining the spotlight on Lee Michaels. He was very much a part of the Bay Area psychedelic scene and shows up on many concert posters beginning in 1966. He went in a different direction, as you indicate, with his follow up album, though I see that in more of a baroque pop, quasi progressive vein than a singer-songwriter. I think A&M wished he was a singer-songwriter, but he was definitely not. At any rate, my understanding of this band is that it was assembled for the album. While he performed these songs with a group at the various Bay Area venues and beyond, the musicians in that group were not the people on this album. I could be wrong about that. I will need to dig up the reference. Whatever the case, it's a shame no live tapes have ever surfaced from this era. He did keep Hello and Streetcar in his live repertoire when he switched to organ-drums configuration and they are quite good in that stripped down version.

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    1. Thanks for the nice comment! If you find that reference, please share indeed.

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    2. Circus Magazine April 1972. "[Lee Michaels] cut his first album with a newly-gathered group, but was sick of the record before it had even come out. 'That first album was not me, so three weeks after the album, I got rid of the group.'" In the same publication, January 1971, an article about him indicates that he had a group for a year and a half before signing with A&M. Once he signed, he spent six months writing the album and then assembled a new group that rehearsed the material for five weeks and cut the album. In an interview in the book Rock Keyboard (Bob Doerschuk, 1985), he explains that he was mainly singing at the time of this album and that Gary Davis was playing organ. "We did that album in five days---three days recording, two days mixing. We sounded exactly like that album onstage; the only overdubs were the solos." So, it's not totally clear how long this group played together. He may have exaggerated when he said he dissolved it in three weeks. I know that David Potter quit drums while the album was being made and I doubt that studio replacement Fast Eddie Hoh was gigging with him, but who knows. There are many concert posters from late 1967 when this album was cut and late 1968 when the next one came out. I can say that in October 1968, he played at the San Francisco International Pop Festival and there's a very short audience that that circulates from that show. It has about 2 minutes of Lee Michaels and he is playing organ with only a drummer, who I believe was Frank Davis (who appeared on his sophomore album along with Johnny Barbata). So, that's what I know. Probably more than you wanted to know! But I'm a big fan of Lee's and have amassed an archive. He was an early influence on my own playing.

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    3. Excellent information, thanks for sharing this! I will have to track down some copies of those mags for scanning.

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  14. Greatly appreciated! Thank you so much!

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  15. Thanks! I don't think I've ever heard this record before. I had kind of written him off as the material I heard on some of his later records were not my cup of tea. I'm enjoying this one a lot and really am happy that you brought it to our attention.

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  16. Auch fantastisch in stereo! Danke sehr, Pudl!

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  17. Thank you for turning me onto another great album from the '60s!

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  18. Played with the Sons Of Adam towards the end of their career.

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  19. Love this album and Thanks for the fresh rip of this. I’ve had this album on my hard drive for god knows how long, and recently added it to my iPhone for when I go walking. I must have searched for info about him after hearing Friends on Fading Yellow.

    I was surprised to realise that Streetcar is the same song that’s on the Hamilton Streetcar LP, another album I love.

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  20. Thanks for the upload. Unfortunately this LP does nothing for me and I find it quite dull and boring, which still doesn't change my opinion that Lee was a one-hit wonder. None of the tracks stand out and I forget what I heard about 5 minutes after listening to it.

    But I appreciate the opportunity to hear it, all the same. Thank you.

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  21. Really very different from his later albums – and very enjoyable.

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