Sundance Mountain Bus
Original Release: 1971 Label: Good Records Cat #: G-101 Format: Vinyl
Reissue : 1998 (official) Label: Gear Fab Records Cat #: GF-115 Format: CD
Digital remaster by Roger Maglio from the original mastertapes at Studiomedia recording company, Evansville IL, 1998.
Reissue of the rare and great 1971 album by this Chicago band. Psychedelic country tinged rock, that has drawn comparisons with Grateful Dead, possibly for their own blissed out version of "I Know You Rider". Long jamming tracks with great spacey mid sections and liquid, twin lead guitar work... This reissue includes five bonus tracks and is taken from the master tapes... Great sound quality.
Tracks (original 1971 release) * Sing A New Song (3:49) * Rosalie (6:33) * I Don't Worry About Tomorrow (3:01) * Sundance (7:12) * I Know You rider (10:15) * Apache Canyon (2:50) * Hexahedron (9:10 (bonus) * The Bus Keeps Rolling [live] (%) * Six Days On The Road [live] (%) * Down In The Bottom (#) * Ticket In My Pocket (#) * Young Man's Blues (#)
(%) Previously unreleased live recordings from 1970 (#) Previously unreleased studio recordings from 1970
Review
Review (Stanton Swihart, AMG)
The fiasco of the lawsuit against Mountain Bus and Good Records by the people who represented Mountain really obscures the fact that the band created some fabulous, atmospheric and ambient music that at times bears a striking resemblence to the music being created by the Grateful Dead during the same period. Nothing, however, can obscure excellent songs, and Sundance is full of them. Like the Grateful Dead, Mountain Bus had a communal-like closeness and were part of a countercultural community, and like the Dead, their music was a composite of rock, country, bluegrass, folk and blues components, with perhaps a slightly more predominant country influence to the Dead's bluegrass. The two bands also had tremendous improvisatory playing capabilities in common, although Sundance might be a somewhat better example of a band getting their live dynamic down on tape in the studio than the Grateful Dead did on any of their early studio recordings before 1970. Most of the songs on the album are band-composed and are studies in shifting dynamics and laidback, loping playing that sounds, more than anything else, like good-time fun. "Rosalie" is a gentle, acoustic country swinger, with Tom Jurkens sounding so much like Jerry Garcia that even hardcore Deadheads would be hard-pressed to tell the difference between the two, but the songs also vary from succinct pop and country tunes to lengthy jams that can be otherworldly and soulful or can simply smoke, as they do on "The Bus Keeps Rollin'" and Willie Dixon's "(Meet Me) Down in the Bottom." It would be easy to label Mountain Bus derivative, yet Sundance doesn't feel like a pale imitation. Even if it were derivative, the album is so well composed and played that it is entirely capable of parading a listener away. The song-quality does vary, but overall Sundance makes the early termination of Mountain Bus a minor tragedy.
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