Recorded around 1974 in Maui and showing traces of a Hawaiian musical influence,
Mu's second and final album wasn't released until 1982. It was reissued as End of an Era in 1988 and then as
The Last Album in 2003, by which point it had accumulated eight bonus tracks. It features a relatively mellow and conventional brand of psychedelic folk-rock compared to their debut album or
Jeff Cotton's work with
Captain Beefheart, for example. Nonetheless, it's an appealingly low-key effort with catchy songs such as "Make a Joyful Noise" and "On Our Way to Hana" and
Cotton's tasty slide guitar playing. It will be easier to enjoy the lyrics if you have an affinity for mystical and sci-fi themes; this is also true for the first bonus track, an interview with Lew Irwin in which the band discusses alien visitations. Most of the remaining bonus tracks fit comfortably with the preceding songs. However, the final two bonus tracks are respectable but unremarkable straight-up blues-rock cover versions of songs previously recorded by
Jimi Hendrix: "All Along the Watchtower," recorded 2002 by the trio of
Merrell Fankhauser, Yoriko Hongo, and Art Dougall (and incorrectly credited to
Hendrix as the songwriter); and "Red House," recorded live in June 1991 by
Merrell Fankhauser, Tim Fankhauser,
Nicky Hopkins, and
Frank Paredes. ~ Todd Kristel