A year-and-a-half after the release of A Tale Untold: The Chrysalis Years 1973-1976, we get the remainder of 
Robin Trower's Chrysalis catalog in the three-disc 
Farther on Up the Road: 1977-1983. During this decade, 11 albums would appear under his name, six of them -- all studio recordings -- are available here, beginning with 1977's In City Dreams. 
Trower cut it and its follow-up, 1978's Caravan to Midnight, while living in Florida; they are heavily influenced by funk with drummer 
Bill Lordan and bassist 
Rusty Allen (both of whom had played on 
Sly & the Family Stone's 
Small Talk), as well as former and future 
Trower bassist 
James Dewar taking lead vocals. Both were produced by R&B ace 
Don Davis. The former album is a largely unheralded standout in 
Trower's catalog, with its funky vamps and backbeats melding with his brand of post-
Hendrix blues-rock. 
Dewar's vocals are the most soulful of his career. The latter album suffers a bit from a dearth of ideas, though as an extension of In City Dreams, it works well. Victims of the Fury was a return to the power trio with 
Dewar back on bass. It also featured former 
Procol Harum bandmate, lyricist 
Keith Reid, as 
Trower's songwriting partner. It is the heaviest of the albums here, though far from the best. 
Trower and 
Lordan enlisted former 
Cream bassist and vocalist 
Jack Bruce for B.L.T. While it's a somewhat studied record, it contains plenty of spark, fire, and potential -- realized on Truce, which brought back drummer 
Reg Isidore from 
Trower's first two albums, Twice Removed from Yesterday and Bridge of Sighs. The ideas here were more complex although they don't stray far from hard, post-psych blues rock. 
Bruce's songwriting in particular and his interplay with 
Isidore are remarkable. The final album is Back It Up, with two alternating drummers -- Bob Clouter and Alan Clarke -- bassist 
Dave Bronze, and 
Dewar back in a vocal capacity. It's an uneven record with some very atypical, rave-up big chorus-type numbers ("River") and vies with Victims of the Fury as the least successful effort here. That said, given the fact that most 
Trower fans will have this material already, the two bonus cuts -- a single edit of "Bluebird" and the B-side "One in a Million" -- and truly excellent sound will entice them to grab this volume anyway. ~ Thom Jurek