Happy Trails (album)
Happy Trails is the second album of the American band Quicksilver Messenger Service. Most of the album was recorded from two performances at the Fillmore East and Fillmore West, although it is not clear which parts were recorded at which Fillmore. The record was released by Capitol Records in 1969[1] in stereo.
Happy Trails | ||||
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Live album by | ||||
Released | March 29, 1969 | |||
Recorded | 1968 at Fillmore West, Fillmore East and Golden State Recorders | |||
Genre | Psychedelic rock, acid rock | |||
Length | 48:41 | |||
Label | Capitol | |||
Quicksilver Messenger Service chronology | ||||
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Album content
The first side of the album consists entirely of a live performance of Bo Diddley's song, "Who Do You Love?". In a self-deprecating poke at the rendition's extended length, it is listed as the "Who Do You Love Suite", with individually titled "movements" which give writing credits to the soloist on each segment. The performance of Bo Diddley's composition breaks down into a guitar solo by Gary Duncan in a style somewhere between jazz and rock (described as "Bloomfield-like"[2]) with a walking bass line by Freiberg. It then mellows down into some apparently improvised guitar and bass plucking and sliding, with feedback, handclapping and audience participation 'almost like a "found object" out of Dada.'[2] Solos by Cipollina and then Freiberg follow. Then comes a slower, quieter reprise of one verse of the Bo Diddley song, leading to a pianissimo ensemble vocal, and a finale in which Elmore changes to a back-beat, while Duncan and Freiberg still play the Bo Diddley beat and Cipolina plays a lead against the melody, resulting in a polyrhythmic rock sound.
The recorded live performance of the "Who Do You Love Suite" was almost 27 minutes long, and some of Gary Duncan's solo ("When You Love") was excised, perhaps due to the space constraints of LPs. At the end, Bill Graham announces, "Quicksilver Messenger Service." According to Mick Skidmore, Cipollina found the critical laud for "Who Do You Love?" baffling, saying "it was just a two-chord jam." (April 2001, Notes to Acadia CD "Copperhead")[3]
The second side of the album contains "Mona", another Bo Diddley song, and two instrumental compositions by Duncan, "Maiden of the Cancer Moon" and "Calvary", all of which segue. The three songs were originally parts of a single continuous live performance. Both Cipollina and Duncan take guitar solos on "Mona". The live recording of "Calvary" was abridged shortly after the end of "Maiden of the Cancer Moon" and a studio version was recorded and substituted. The ironic comment at the beginning of side two, "This here next one's rock 'n' roll," was also added in the studio.
The lead guitar on "Maiden of the Cancer Moon" is played by Cipollina. This is clearly a scored piece, as opposed to the improvisational guitar playing on "Mona."
"Calvary" was originally called the "F-Sharp Thing". It has been described as "acid-flamenco",[2] but it is definitely not flamenco music. It does resemble orchestral or symphonic music, and it is not readily classifiable as rock, jazz or blues. In the studio, Quicksilver took the themes of Duncan's piece and redid them with an extended introduction, a different cadenza by Duncan, guitar and bass feedback, a brief interlude that rises out of the feedback, and a closing melody, played staccato, that fades out. There are a variety of percussion instruments used besides the standard drum kit: tympani, a tam-tam, a whip, tubular bells, bar chimes (or perhaps the newly invented mark tree), a triangle or a bell, and güiro. In addition, Duncan lays down his electric guitar to play an acoustic guitar during the brief interlude, and then takes up the electric one again. The band also sings wordless vocals in harmony. Duncan shouts, "Call it anything you want!", and the track begins and fades out with "shhh" vocals. The album sleeve says that "Calvary" was recorded "live" at Golden State Recorders, meaning that none of this was dubbed. There was also substantial editing and additional overdubbing done at Golden State Recorders to both sides of the record.
As a coda, the band performs the theme tune from Roy Rogers' western television show, which lends its title to the album. "Happy Trails" has "clip-clop percussion, piano and drawling vocals by Elmore[.]"[1] There is no bass on this track; Freiberg plays a honky-tonk piano part.
Reception
Review scores | |
---|---|
Source | Rating |
AllMusic | |
Head Heritage | (very favourable)[1] |
Rolling Stone | (positive)[2] |
Encyclopedia of Popular Music |
While briefly remarking that all four songs on the second side are excellent, Greil Marcus devoted most of his review in Rolling Stone to extensive discussion of the side-long rendition of "Who Do You Love?", which he deemed "one of the best rock and roll recordings to emerge from San Francisco, a performance that captures all the excitement and grandeur of the great days of the scene in a way that is almost too fine to be real." He particularly noted that, "They use the infamous Bo Diddley rhythm not as a crutch, not as something for the rhythm section to play with while the lead takes it; Quicksilver finds dimensions of that 'bump buddy bump bump — bump bump' beat that no one has even suggested before, as they stretch it, bend it, move around it, as a motif or a bridge, as an idea rather than as a pattern."[2]
Retrospective reviews have also been highly positive. Head Heritage's Julian Cope strongly approved of the decision to have most of the album devoted to Bo Diddley covers, saying Diddley's "amplified cigar box and ever-shifting shuffle beat lent itself easily to interpretations of extended electric guitar-based improvisations". He found all the tracks to be effective, especially praising the interplay of Duncan and Cipolina's guitars, and insisted that "The entire album was recorded live at The Fillmore East and West" despite the sleeve clearly indicating that much of the album was recorded in the studio.[1] Lindsay Planer of AllMusic, while not questioning the partially studio setting for the recording, likewise found Happy Trails to be by far the most accurate recorded recreation of Quicksilver Messenger Service's "critically and enthusiastically acclaimed live performances." He lauded both the atmospheric and technical accomplishments of the jamming, and said the band has "the uncanny ability to perform with a psychedelic looseness of spirit, without becoming boring or in the least bit pretentious."[4]
Awards and accolades
In 1992, the album was certified gold (over 500,000 copies sold in the US) by the Recording Industry Association of America.[6] It was voted number 553 in Colin Larkin's All Time Top 1000 Albums 3rd Edition (2000). In 2003, the album was ranked number 189 on Rolling Stone magazine's 500 Greatest Albums of All Time,[7] maintaining the rating in a 2012 revised list.[8] It was number 44 in Rolling Stone's "50 Coolest Records."[9] "Mona" by Quicksilver was ranked number 88 on the 100 Greatest Guitar Songs of All Time by Rolling Stone.[10]
Track listing
No. | Title | Length |
---|---|---|
1. | "Who Do You Love Suite"
| 25:22
|
Total length: | 25:22 |
No. | Title | Writer(s) | Length |
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2. | "Mona" | McDaniel | 6:53 |
3. | "Maiden of the Cancer Moon" | Duncan | 2:54 |
4. | "Calvary" | Duncan | 13:31 |
5. | "Happy Trails" | Dale Evans | 1:29 |
Total length: | 24:47 |
Personnel
- John Cipollina - guitar, vocals
- Gary Duncan - guitar, vocals
- David Freiberg - bass, vocals, piano
- Greg Elmore - drums, vocals, piano, percussion
Releases
Happy Trails was remastered and rereleased in audiophile versions of June 2012 (a “mini LP” on CD) and January 2013 (HQ vinyl). An English version came out in 2010. Japanese versions surfaced in 2008 and 2009. Capitol Records released a CD version in 1994.[11]
Charts
- Album
Billboard (United States)
Year | Chart | Position |
---|---|---|
1969 | Pop Albums | 27 |
- Singles
Billboard (United States)
Year | Single | Chart | Position |
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1969 | "Who Do You Love" | The Billboard Hot 100 | 91[12] |
Notes
- The album cover credits "Quicksilver & Fillmore Audience" as the writers of this segment, apparently in acknowledgement of the audience participation portion, but the label on the original album instead credits Greg Elmore. BMI records (see BMI Work #1658037) confirm that the official writing credit belongs to Elmore alone, though it is not clear why, since Elmore was not a songwriter and does not perform a solo of any sort during the segment.
References
- The Seth Man (May 2002). "Quicksilver Messenger Service — Happy Trails". Head Heritage. Retrieved March 12, 2020 – via headheritage.co.uk.
- Greil, Marcus (3 May 1969). "Happy Trails | Album Reviews | Rolling Stone". rollingstone.com. Retrieved 24 April 2015.
- "John Cipollina Discography - Copperhead". mjckeh.demon.co.uk. Retrieved 24 April 2013.
- Planer, Lindsay. Happy Trails at AllMusic
- Larkin, Colin (2007). Encyclopedia of Popular Music (5th ed.). Omnibus Press. ISBN 978-0857125958.
- "Gold & Platinum". RIAA.com. Recording Industry Association of America. Retrieved 30 January 2017.
- "500 Greatest Albums of All Time". Rolling Stone. Archived from the original on January 1, 2012. Retrieved 30 January 2017.
- "500 Greatest Albums of All Time". Rolling Stone. 2012. Retrieved September 18, 2019.
- "Rolling Stone's 50 Coolest Records". Rolling Stone. 2002-04-11. p. 108 – via rateyourmusic.com.
- "Rolling Stone's 100 Greatest Guitar Songs Of All Time". stereogum.com. Retrieved 24 April 2013.
- Psychedelic Sight - 'Happy Trails’ finally feels the love 1/8/13)
- "Quicksilver Messenger Service chart history". Billboard.com. Retrieved 25 August 2017.