Before
Steppenwolf hit with "Born to Be Wild," there was a blues band out of Canada called
the Sparrow. Not only is the future growl of
John Kay subdued on this record, so are the bellowing sounds that became organist
Goldy McJohn's trademark. The
John Kay composition "King Pin" has an almost jazz piano playing against the harp. With drummer
Jerry Edmonton,
McJohn, and
Kay, this is three-fifths
Steppenwolf, and it comes off as
Steppenwolf lite. Guitarist
Dennis Edmonton, the drummer's brother, composes or co-writes five of the songs, where
John Kay wrote four.
Dennis Edmonton's "Chasin' Shadows" is psychedelic pop, very British sounding, and gives indications of the trippy style he would develop. When he left the band he became
Mars Bonfire and penned "Born to Be Wild,," released on his own CBS album
Faster Than the Speed of Life. "Green Bottle Lover," written by both
Edmonton brothers, is even more psychedelic and rocking. The liner notes are terrible, giving little information about this historic disc, leaving it to the music. Where
John Kay's "Twisted" starts off the festivities with the boogie-woogie blues that seems indicative of
the Sparrow, the final track, "Isn't It Strange" by
St. Nicholas and
Dennis Edmonton, goes full throttle with the psychedelia. A very interesting collection of sounds exhibiting two musical sides, only hinting at what they would develop when they hooked up with producer
Gabriel Mekler to eventually crank out about a half a dozen Top 40 hits on Dunhill.
–
Joe Viglione, Rovi