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CHARITY BALL
Reprise RS6456, July 1971
Charity Ball
(June Millington, Jean Millington, Alice de Buhr)
Fanny’s second album blasts off with the title track and
major hit single! An infectious shuffle plays home to
some Beatle-esque ‘Oohs!’, some real rock ‘n’ roll piano
and a barrelful of energy. (See video in Gallery for a
TV performance of this song.)
What Kind of Lover
(Nickey Barclay)
This album contains some of Nickey’s most consistent
writing and this track is a good starting point. Funky
and playful, it cries out for some inventive playing
from the band and boy does it get it. Everybody
contributes and demonstrates a real musical progression
since the debut album. |
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Cat Fever
(Nickey Barclay)
Another consummate rocker from Nickey which powers along
under the auspices of Alice’s machine gun drumming,
Nickey's own rocking piano and Jean’s riffing bass.
There is some real excitement generated here which
sounds more like a live take than a studio track.
A Person Like You
(Nickey Barclay)
A bit of a Nickey specialty this one. It’s a sort of a
funky ballad underpinned by some military drumming from
Alice and containing some Elton John style piano from
Nickey. A gliding slide guitar solo from June adds the
cherry to the cake.
Special Care
(Stephen Stills)
Fanny takes Buffalo Springfield’s rather tame version of
this song and tramples all over it. Jean’s bass holds
the stop-start rhythm together and she provides one of
her characteristically gritty vocals. June’s minimalist
solo and a thrilling instrumental jam at the play out
complete this satisfying cover.
What’s Wrong With Me?
(Jean Millington)
A short, delicate acoustic song from Jean showing off
some inventive harmony singing in the chorus.
Soul Child (Nickey
Barclay, June Millington, Jean Millington)
The atypical writing partnership of Millington,
Millington and Barclay produces a rather bleak tale of
life off the rails against a hard rocking backdrop.
Inventive organ work from Nickey and more expert rhythm
from June add to the taut atmosphere hinted at in the
lyric.
You’re the One (June
Millington, Jean Millington)
This moderate rocker exhibits an unusual melody built
around Jean’s loping bass riff and Alice’s rock solid
drumming. As always, great ensemble playing building the
song to one of June’s maximum distort solos.
Thinking of You
(June Millington)
One of June’s most reflective and accomplished ballads
full of plaintive major 7th chords and her own yearning
vocal building to a fulfilling climax in the middle
section and culminating with a well constructed solo.
The lull before the storm going into…
Place in the Country
(Nickey Barclay)
The album’s killer track – a must for any anthology.
Built very simply around a two-chord harmony, this is a
wonderful bluesey romp features some mega bass runs from
Jean and master class rhythm playing from June. Edgy
lyrics complete the slightly tense feeling to this
track, which just bubbles with energy.
A Little While Later (Nickey Barclay)
The album ends with the sort of rock ballad that The Who
excelled at. Nickey’s rhythmically complex song starts
out simply but then just builds and builds to a
mesmerizing climax capped by June’s howling solo and
then cuts to a deceptively simple harpsichord play out. |