This
John Mayall set,
Live at the Marquee 1969 is a reissue of the 1999 disc of the same music. Eagle Rock, in its genius, put this out with a companion double-disc volume The Masters as a way of celebrating the 1969 documentary film, The Turning Point. The film is named for the album of the same name and chronicles the change
Mayall's
Bluesbreakers underwent after making
Blues from Laurel Canyon with future
Rolling Stones' guitarist
Mick Taylor.
Mayall apparently heard the volume wars in bands like
Black Sabbath,
Led Zeppelin, and
Cream and figured another aesthetic was needed for the subtleties of the kind of blues he wanted to write and play. He fired everybody but bassist
Steve Thompson. He then hired acoustic guitarist
Jon Mark, and reed and woodwind master
Johnny Almond.
Mayall plays the electric guitars by himself and there is no drummer whatsoever. The band appears here in a ramp up to the album that would become
The Turning Point a couple of months later. These even feel like live rehearsals. While it's not pristinely recorded by any means, it is nonetheless well worth hearing and fares far better than some of the dodgy crap that passes for "recordings of historical importance." There are seven cuts here that total just under an hour; all of the tunes are originals. Interestingly, "Room to Move," an obvious performance choice it would seem since it became the hit single from
The Turning Point, isn't here. It doesn't matter. From "Can't Sleep This Night," "So Hard to Share," "I'm Gonna Fight for You JB," and the two elongated takes of "California." are all stunners. This acoustic and drummer-less quartet was quite an experiment at the time -- though the brilliant
Siegel-Schwall Band had previously tried it in Chicago to less acclaim -- and it led eventually to
Mayall's classic LP
Jazz Blues Fusion with trumpeter
Blue Mitchell. One theory that hasn't been put forth in either the critical literature surrounding this band or by
Mayall himself was the influence of Laurel Canyon itself in the late '60s. It was so profound that
Mayall wanted to make it his permanent home. With all of the post-hippie folk music and singer/songwriters living there --
Joni Mitchell,
Mama Cass Elliot,
David Crosby,
Jackson Browne,
Neil Young,
Linda Ronstadt,
Gram Parsons,
Stephen Stills,
Van Dyke Parks, et. al -- it would seem that this shift to the quieter side of the blues was influenced at least in part by that initial journey to record
Blues from Laurel Canyon the year before. That said,
Live at the Marquee is a fascinating set of classic
Mayall from a very transitional period in his sound, and it stands alone without the film. [A special edition of the CD was released in 2008.] ~ Thom Jurek