If almost any group other than
the Yardbirds had released
Little Games, it would be considered a flawed but prime late-'60s psychedelic/hard rock artifact instead of a serious step backward, and even a disappointment. Not that it's a bad album -- it just lacks the cohesion and polish of the group's preceding album,
The Yardbirds (aka
Over Under Sideways Down aka
Roger the Engineer). And well it should -- although they were nominally the same group they'd been a year earlier, in reality
the Yardbirds had undergone a massive shift in personnel since the release of
The Yardbirds. The departure of original bassist
Paul Samwell-Smith in June of 1966 set off a sequence of personnel shifts, bringing guitarist
Jimmy Page into the lineup, first on bass and then on lead guitar in tandem with
Jeff Beck (while rhythm guitarist
Chris Dreja switched to bass), until
Beck's exit in November 1966 for a solo career left
Page as their lone guitarist. At the same time, the band was forced -- by the failure of its single "Happenings Ten Years Time Ago" -- to accept a new producer in the guise of
Mickie Most, who was currently enjoying huge success with
Donovan and had a formidable string of hit singles to his credit with
Herman's Hermits,
the Animals, et al.
The Yardbirds' blues roots and progressive tendencies clashed with
Most's pop/rock preferences, and the two sides never did reconcile, much less mesh for more than a few minutes on the finished album. To top it off, the bandmembers were finally seeing some serious money for their live performances (ironically, just as they were hanging on by their fingertips to a recording contract), courtesy of their new manager, Peter Grant, and so were committed to lots of stage work. The overall result was a hastily done and uneven LP with flashes of brilliance. Apart from the title single -- one of the better compromises between where the group had been and where
Most wanted to take them -- the two best cuts were "White Summer" and "Drinking Muddy Water," excellent showcases for the experimental and bluesy sides of the band, respectively; both, curiously, were also virtually thefts, "White Summer" lifted from
Davy Graham's arrangement of the 300-year-old "She Moves Through the Fair" and "Drinking Muddy Water" a rewrite of "Rollin' and Tumblin'," a blues standard usually attributed to
McKinley Morganfield (aka
Muddy Waters). The best of the rest included "Only the Black Rose," a strangely beautiful, moody acoustic psychedelic piece; "Stealing, Stealing," an unusual (for this band) pre-World War II-style acoustic blues complete with kazoo; and "Smile on Me," a hard, bluesy number that could have come from any part of the group's history. The attempt at a catchy rocker, "No Excess Baggage," however, needed more work and better involvement from vocalist
Keith Relf; the power chord-laden "Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Sailor" was a great piece of psychedelic pyrotechnics, but it also sounded more like
the Who than
the Yardbirds, though it did introduce
Jimmy Page's violin bow discourses on the guitar; and "Little Soldier Boy" was a silly psychedelic pop piece more appropriate to
the Monkees than
the Yardbirds. The album was unintentionally revealing, in hindsight, of the growing schism within the band, as
Relf and drummer
Jim McCarty's growing embrace of flower power and hallucinogenic drugs came to be reflected in the trippier numbers such as "Glimpses," whereas
Jimmy Page was starting to take his blues slower and flashier, and into wholly new territory with that violin bow. One more album or a proper concert might've sealed the deal for
the Yardbirds, but instead one more tour sealed the fate of the band.
Little Games has been reissued in vastly expanded form several times, starting in 1992. ~ Bruce Eder, All Music Guide