Ramshackled

Ramshackled
Studio album by Alan White
Released 1975
Recorded May 23–25, 1975
Genre Jazz Fusion, Pop-Rock, Soul
Length 38:56
Label Atlantic, Wounded Bird
Producer Alan White, Bob Potter

Ramshackled is the debut solo album by Alan White, drummer for British progressive rock band Yes. It was released in 1975 on Atlantic Records, during a period when all five of the Yes band members (Jon Anderson, Chris Squire, Steve Howe, Patrick Moraz and White) released solo albums.

Contents

About the album

White had worked with Pete Kirtley and Kenny Craddock in the Alan Price Set and Happy Magazine. White, Kirtley, Craddock and Colin Gibson then worked together in the short-lived Griffin in 1969.[1] In the early 1970s, White, Kirtley, Craddock, Gibson and Bud Beadle played together in unsigned band Simpson's Pure Oxygen. For his debut solo album, White brought Kirtley, Craddock, Gibson and Beadle back together.

Fellow Yes members, Jon Anderson and Steve Howe, guested on "Spring: Song Of Innocence". Gibson and wind player Bud Beadle also appeared on Steve Howe's own solo album from the same period, Beginnings. Although he does not appear on the album, Patrick Moraz has a cameo in the promotional video.

Yes subsequently toured in 1976, with initial dates of the tour including material from the members' solo albums, including "One Way Rag", but these were soon dropped.

Track listing

  1. "Ooh Baby (Goin' To Pieces)" (Peter Kirtley) 5:33
  2. "One Way Rag" (Colin Gibson, Kenny Craddock) 4:07
  3. "Avakak" (Craddock, Gibson, Kirtley) 6:54
  4. "Spring-Song of Innocence" (lyrics: William Blake, music: Kirtley) 5:02
  5. "Giddy" (Craddock, Gibson) 3:13
  6. "Silly Woman" (Kirtley) 3:15
  7. "Marching Into A Bottle" (Craddock) 2:00
  8. "Everybody" (Craddock, Gibson, Kirtley) 3:14
  9. "Darkness, Pts. 1-3" (Craddock, Gibson) 5:32

Production

Personnel

Charts

Year Chart Position
1976 Billboard Pop Albums 209
1976 UK Albums Chart 41

Reception

Professional ratings
Review scores
Source Rating
allmusic [2]

Allmusic's Alex Anderson found the album highly uneven and noted that the album's hodgepodge of popular styles failed to appeal to the progressive rock fanbase White had gained with yes. He concluded "Although Ramshackled isn't terrible, most of the Yes fans who bought it agreed that their money hadn't been well spent."[2]

References

  1. ^ The Story of Skip Bifferty (2003, Castle Music) liner notes
  2. ^ a b allmusic review

External links