Sons of Champlin:
Live
By Derk Richardson
Grateful Dead
Records; (800) Cal Dead; http://www.dead.net/
We can all
come up with examples of '60s rock bands who should have hung up their
rock and roll shoes before their once-fresh hits landed on "classic rock"
radio-and certainly before they could embarrass themselves with unwitting
self-parodies on overblown, overpriced tours of the world's football stadiums.
On the other hand, there is the rare example of San Francisco's beloved
Sons of Champlin, who retired in 1977 before they could wear out their
welcome, and reassembled 20 years later for the Northern California concerts
that yielded this 13-track live reunion. Although the horns could have
been mixed with more punch, the rhythm section of bassist David Shallock,
drummer Jim Preston, and keyboardist/vibist Geoff Palmer plays with jazz-inflected
drive; guitarist Terry Haggerty proves himself one of the underrated masters
in a long Bay Area history of string-benders; and soul-inspired singer
Bill Champlin redeems all those years with pop megagroup Chicago.
Mar/Apr 99
This article
can be found online at http://www.yogajournal.com/views/412_1.cfm