
A band fuelled by good musicianship and enthusiasm, Gravy Train really reached their pinnacle with their
eponymous debut album: none of their subsequent efforts could touch it. Still, (A Ballad of) A Peaceful
Man happens to be a very good album, easily enjoyable for any rock lover who loves something beyond
the usual standards of mainstream. The opener Alone in Georgia finds Gravy Train developing a serene
melodic sense, mostly based on Bob Dylan and Simon & Garfunkel with a touch of typical late 60s British
style (mainly due to the string arrangements). There is a ceremonious set of string layers that segue into
the namesake song, which initially portrays a prominently pastoral mood with an extra dose of
sophistication. When the interlude arrives, the lead guitar assumes the leading role, the whole ensemble
goes rocky and the flute stops being soft and turns aggressive in an Anderson-esque manner. The
interlude set up the overall scheme for the sung section, whose slow tempo makes the song preserve a
nostalgic mode. It is a pity that the interlude wasnt longer, since it would have helped the track to
augment its potential splendor it remains, all in all, underdeveloped. Jules Delight returns to a sonic
terrain related to American folk-pop. The orchestral arrangements set an attractive amalgam with the flute
lines. The albums second half starts with Messenger, a song that includes a jazz-flavored bucolic up-
tempo section that makes Gravy Train seem an Italian band (the Delirium type, for instance), plus an
exciting outro a-la Jethro Tull. Next are three rockers: the straightforward Can Anybody Hear Me?; the
RnB-inspired Old Time Box, which features Hughes sole sax intervention in the album and a percussive
interlude; Wont Talk About It, which sounds to me like Traffic-meets-Uriah Heep. All three songs are
catchy enough as to deliver a reasonable dose of excitement, but unfortunately they dont receive enough
expansive treatments. The closer Home Again brings a mid-tempo excursion of soft rock with an ethnic
twist (shades of early Jade Warrior can be referred here). So this is a good album, full of nice ideas that
go flowing well, yet devoid of the special mixture of psychedelic hard rock and jazz-rock that had made
the Gravy Train album so relevant for the maturation of avant-garde rock in the early 70s. (A Ballad of)
A Peaceful Man is the ballad of a band that gave up on their musical power too soon good but not great,
not excellent but nice.
by Cesar Inca
GRAVY TRAIN Music Online:
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