The Battered Ornaments - Mantle-Piece

Mantle-Piece
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Album Details: Mantle-Piece

Release Date:11/01/1969
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Track List: Mantle-Piece

  1. Sunshades
  2. Then I Must Go
  3. Crosswords and the Safety Pins
  4. Staggered
  1. Twisted Track
  2. Smoke Rings
  3. My Love's Gone Far Away

Pro Reviews: Mantle-Piece

  • All Music Guide

    Battered Ornaments were credited as the backup band to Pete Brown on their first album, 1969's A Meal You Can Shake Hands With in the Dark. For the followup, however, they chucked Brown out of the band and released it simply as the Battered Ornaments. It's a disappointment after its flawed but worthwhile predecessor, mostly because of Brown's physical absence; although his presence is still felt as the writer or cowriter of most of the songs, his vocals were erased and rerecorded by other members of the band. Brown's gruff voice might not have been that great, or as accessible to the pop audience as many other frontmen's of the time, but it did have character, which is something you can't say for the merely functional replacement vocals by the other musicians. It's also true, however, that the material on this record isn't as good or imaginative as the songs on A Meal You Can Shake Hands With in the Dark, lacking some of the jazzbluespsychedelic colorings that made that prior LP intere...sting. The tunes are eclectic but disjointed, and while you can hear some of Brown's unusual and striking lyrical imagery bob up to the surface on some of the better numbers (especially "The Crosswords and the Safety Pins"), the anonymous vocals make their quality far easier to overlook. (The CD reissue on Repertoire adds two nonLP bonus tracks from 1969 singles, "The Week Looked Good on Paper" and "Living Life Backwards.") - Richie Unterberger, All Music Guide Read more Less

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Biography

Pete Brown

One of the key eccentrics of the Harvest stable and a successful collaborative lyricist for Cream ("I Feel Free," "Sunshine of Your Love"), poet/percussionist/vocalist/trumpet player Pete Brown was one of the many artists to arise from the British beat movement in the mid to late '60s. Like a lot of his peers, Brown's spin on progressive rock came from backgrounds in fo... Read more