Sony Music and Sundazed Music certainly have gotten a lot of mileage out of
Spirit's outtakes. Sundazed head
Bob Irwin served as digital producer of
Time Circle (1968-1972), a 1991
Spirit compilation issued by Sony's Legacy reissue division, and for that disc he dug up some previously unreleased recordings the band made for its score to the 1969 film Model Shop, which never produced a soundtrack album. (Some of the Model Shop material turned up on
Spirit's 1969 album,
Clear.) More of this music appeared on Legacy's
Irwin-produced 1996 CD reissues of
Clear and the 1968
Spirit album
The Family That Plays Together, as well as on Sundazed's 2000 rarities LP
Eventide. Now, writes annotator
Mick Skidmore, "thanks to the discovery of a master that contained the actual mono-mixed soundtrack," this album has been compiled to reconstruct what a soundtrack album might have sounded like if one had been issued in 1969. Although all the material has been heard before, seven of the 12 tracks are previously unissued takes or demos, and the whole disc is in mono.
Spirit fans, who in any case have had ample opportunity to encounter the music before, will recognize it as representing the jazzier, more contemplative side of the band. Much of the music sounds, if not completely improvised, at least loosely structured, and it is largely instrumental, although the songs "Now or Anywhere," an outtake from
The Family That Plays Together, and "Aren't You Glad," that album's closing song, presented in a previously unreleased demo version, have vocals. For the most part, the music features only the band jamming, but "Model Shop II" has a string arrangement, presumably done by
Marty Paich, the film's music director, who also did such arrangements for
Spirit's albums of the period.
Model Shop gathers together in one place
Spirit material previously spread across several albums, but it is only a minor addition to their catalog and should mark the end of the exploitation of this portion of their music.