Rick Hayward's early-'70s solo album was split between a British folk-rock singer/songwriter approach (particularly on the vocal numbers) and a more folk-oriented sound (particularly on the instrumentals) emphasizing his guitar skills. His guitar picking, especially on the more acoustic-geared tracks and instrumentals, was much like the folk-jazz-blues-influenced styles of British virtuosos such as
Davy Graham and
Bert Jansch (or, for that matter,
Paul Simon in his
Graham-
Jansch-influenced days) -- not as good as those legends, certainly, but quite respectable. Other songs with full rock arrangements, however (especially "Find Yourself Sometime"), were much in the mold of laid-back British folky rock at the time, and most everything had a slightly moody and resigned air. One feels bad criticizing an album like this because the flaws aren't blatant;
Hayward's a more than competent instrumentalist (if only an adequate singer), and his oft-minor-keyed material has an agreeable British brooding quality. The songs and singing just aren't too exciting, however, making one feel that
Hayward might have been better cast in a support role than as a featured performer, or that he could have stood to work up some more interesting tunes before committing to a full LP. The 2007 CD reissue on Sunbeam adds historical liner notes by
Hayward himself and 11 previously unreleased tracks, of slightly lower fidelity than those on his official LP, that he recorded shortly after the
Rick Hayward LP for an unissued second album. All of those previously unreleased cuts are instrumental, again putting his considerable talents for folk-blues-jazz-ragtime guitar picking (with a pinch of classical) at the fore. ~ Richie Unterberger