Pete Brown's debut album may not have been as accessible as those of
Cream (for whom he often helped write material) or even the early
Jack Bruce (for whom he continued to collaborate as a songwriter). There are similarities, however, though more to
Bruce's solo work than to
Cream. For one thing, there are those lyrics, which are of a far higher standard than heard on most rock songs, ranging from ominous impressionism to take-out-the-piss political satire. Then there's
Brown's voice, which rather resembles a gruff
Jack Bruce, and is effective though certainly not as smoothly melodic as
Bruce's vocals. And then there's the music, which grew out of the same jazz-blues-rock community that gave birth to
the Graham Bond Organisation,
Cream, and
Colosseum. In fact, two other alumni of that scene,
Bond (on organ) and
Dick Heckstall-Smith (on saxophone), are among the supporting players, as is a young
Chris Spedding. There are also unusual psychedelic and Middle Eastern accents here and there in the arrangements, though tasteful and subdued. Because there aren't the pop hooks of the songs
Brown had a hand with in
Cream, and because
Brown's voice is not that of your average rock frontman, it's not something that ever got a wide audience. But it has its rewards for those looking for something a little more avant-garde and intellectual than much late-'60s psychedelic-prog rock, including the fairly grooving "Dark Lady" (which musically resembles
Graham Bond's work), "Station Song" (where the likeness to some of
Jack Bruce's more mysterious tracks is highest), and the beguiling downward-spiral melody of "Rainy Taxi Girl." Some of the bluesy tunes are more functional, but the 12-minute "The Politician" -- not the same as the
Cream classic "Politician" penned by
Brown and
Bruce, though there are similarities -- is a highlight, as a very witty and scathing anti-establishment spoken word poem segueing into an off-kilter blues-rocker that exposes the "politician" for the lecherously hypocritical geezer he is. ~ Richie Unterberger, All Music Guide