Main Street

Main Street Artist: Roy Wood & Wizard
Label: Edsel Records UK
Category: Music


Average customer rating: 4 out of 5 stars
Format: Import
Media: Audio CD
Number Of Discs: 1


UPC: 740155162627
EAN: 0740155162627
ASIN: B00004RGL8


Release Date: 2000-05-02

Main Street


Related Categories:

General General
Categories | Pop | Styles | Music
Pop Rock Pop Rock
Categories | Pop | Styles | Music
General General
Categories | Rock | Styles | Music
Progressive Rock Progressive Rock
Categories | Progressive | Rock | Styles | Music
General General
Categories | Hard Rock & Metal | Styles | Music
Hard Rock Hard Rock
Categories | Hard Rock & Metal | Styles | Music
Album-Oriented Rock (AOR) Album-Oriented Rock (AOR)
Categories | Classic Rock | Styles | Music
Glam Glam
Categories | Classic Rock | Styles | Music
General General
Categories | Pop | Indie Music | Stores | Music
Pop Rock Pop Rock
Categories | Pop | Indie Music | Stores | Music
Rock Rock
Categories | Imports | Stores | Music

Tracks:

  1. Main Street
  2. Saxmaniax
  3. The Fire In His Guitar
  4. French Perfume
  5. Take My Hand
  6. Don't You Feel Better
  7. Indiana Rainbow
  8. I Should Have Known

Similar Items:

  1. Wizzard Brew
  2. Mustard
  3. Exotic Mixture: Best of Singles A's & B's
  4. The Wizzard!: Greatest Hits & More - The EMI Years
  5. Harvest Showdown

Album Description

Previously unreleaed, long lost 1976 album. Displaying Wood's eclectic range of influences, from the Beach Boys to Django Reinhardt to out-and-out jazz. Rejected by Jet Records after the single 'Indiana Rainbow' failed to chart the album is finally released with Roy's full cooperation (the mastering, annotation & artwork are all by Roy himself.). 2000 release. Standard jewel case.

Customer Reviews:

2 out of 5 stars Progressive mistep; WIZZO got better!.......2005-04-23

I've been such a huge fan for Roy Wood in all his incarnations for so long... yet getting my hands on this was SUCH a disappointment. I admit, I'm more into "top-40 pop" structured songs, and tend to get into the "experimental weird stuff" if such artists will meet me halfway first. Roy has done some extremely "strange" records over the years, including LOOKING ON, ELECTRIC LIGHT ORCHESTRA and WIZZARD'S BREW. All of them grew on me over time. For whatever reason, this one just isn't.

I DO love "Indiana Rainbow", and even included it in a personal custom Roy Wood comp. But the rest? (sigh)


This "new" sound that mixed jazz with rock didn't end here, however. 1977's SUPER ACTIVE WIZZO ("new improved formula!") turns out to have been a SERIOUS step up from this. I initially ranked it along with the other "strange" albums I mentioned above, with only 6 songs, 2 of them over 11 minutes long, but while it's STILL one of his most "out there" albums, it did work its way into my psyche (even if it took quite a while). Sadly, this was never released in the US, and has yet to be reissued on CD. (I just transferred it to CD for my own listening TODAY... what are the actual record labels waiting for?)

Equally overdue for CD reissue is the follow-up to SUPER ACTIVE, Roy's ON THE ROAD AGAIN. On that, he took the same sound heard on the previous 2 albums and put them to use on top-40 rock & pop tunes. THAT's been one of my top fave Wood albums since it came out in August '79!!!

If these 2 albums were available, I'd give SUPER ACTIVE 3 stars, and ON THE ROAD AGAIN-- 5! (Yeah!)

5 out of 5 stars Who knew?!.......2004-01-03

There are times when I get a bit irritated with Amazon for all the continual "suggestions" about other albums I might buy. But this is one of the times I couldn't be happier, for I almost certainly never would have run across MAIN STREET any other way.

Popular as they were in England, Wizzard were as little known by casual listeners here in the US as their predecessors, The Move. It was the nuclear decay of The Move that transmutated that band into the earliest incarnation of ELO, and then the fissioning of ELO's leadership that left us with Jeff Lynne's incarnation of ELO and Roy Wood's Wizzard. But who in the States knew what amazing things The Move and Wizzard had done? I was as clueless as most. All the more, who *anywhere* would ever have known that there was an entire album by Wizzard that had never been released? Only a handful of insiders, I expect.

So, thank you to the Edsel label for taking a chance on this "untouchable" but wonderful bit of history, and thank you Amazon for plugging it!

Other reviewers have described the individual songs quite well. I can only add my praise to theirs, and wonder how it might have been if Jet Records had issued the title track as a single to test the waters, rather than "Indiana Rainbow." Let's face it, that's not a very promising title. Nothing wrong with the song, mind you, but it's not all that representative. It belongs (and is best understood) as an internal component of the album. The "Main Street" track would have made a much stronger single.

Roy Wood himself acknowledges it would be better for the sound to remix from the original multitrack masters if they had been available. But don't let that discourage you. The stereo mixdown simply didn't receive the same elaborate treatment as, say, ELO's NEW WORLD RECORD, released that same year. Whatever this recording lacks in electronically enhanced ambience or trickery of stereo staging, it more than makes up for in musicianship! If you don't mind just a slight excess in the saxophone arrangements (I don't think Roy has ever been noted for under-utilizing any good discovery), then you'll likely find this album full of great ideas, authoritatively executed, still sounding new and full of surprises yet today.

If you want to hear a wildly creative genius achieving musical maturity--a rather rare thing to find--you owe it to yourself to get MAIN STREET and play it frequently.

4 out of 5 stars Wizzard Grows Up And Is Thrown In The Closet For 25 Yrs!.......2001-08-12

I first learned of the existence of this album from a Trouser Press article about Roy Wood by Ira Robbins ("Whatever Happened To Roy Wood?") in November 1979. According to Mr. Robbins, this release was entitled "Wizzo", and was shelved after the failure of the "Indiana Rainbow"/"Saxmaniacs" single to chart. Twenty five years later, the album is finally released, under its new title "Main Street", with both CD cover art and commentary by Roy Wood. "Main Street" features a great collection songs and arrangements that shows Roy Wood and his fellow bandmates willingness at that time to follow directions previously explored on the B-sides of the band's 45 r.p.m. singles. The musical styles run the gamut and show Mr.Wood's maturation as a songwriter, arranger and producer. Alongside the proto heavy jazz fusion metal of "The Fire In His Guitar", we also find wonderful gems such as the Beach Boys Sunflower-era influenced "Main Street" with Carl Wilson-like harmonies and dreamy sax and horn trade-offs powered along by a chugging piano rhythm, the sweet Django guitar jazz cum heavy pop of "French Perfume" (a lost single there!) and a track that would feel right at home on the group's debut album, "Wizzard's Brew", the down and dirty workout of "Don't You Feel Better". This release also features the single that announced to the public and Mr.Wood's management his new musical intentions, "Indiana Rainbow", a driving, rhythmic jazz fusion number, a million miles away from the pop bombast and fifties rock'n'roll cliches that previously defined Wizzard and proved to be way more mature than radio programmers, the record buying public and Mr. Wood's record and pop management could accept at the time. Had Jet Records not had a failure of nerve, at the time, and released and heavily promoted this album and the band, Mr.Wood and his co-horts may have continued following this muse, perhaps becoming the next Steely Dan... (and what's wrong with that?)! As a long time fan of Roy Wood's music, I highly recommend this album to other Fans of "The Woodmeister" as one of the high marks in his long musical carrer, something they can hold up to such other releases as "Boulders", "Shazam", and the eclectic collection,"Exotic Mixture". To casual listeners unfamiliar with this man's work, I would definitely push this release into their hands, before recommending they listen to anything else. "Main Street" is a great listening experience for the uninitiated and shows a muti-talented songwriter arranger and producer at the peak of his craft before corporate know nothings pulled the rug out from beneath his feet, making a talented man doubt what he knows best musically and have him second guess himself for years to come.

4 out of 5 stars Lost Treasure Found!.......2000-07-30

Brian Wilson...Stevie Wonder...Lindsay Buckingham...Prince... Jeff Lynne...Paul McCartney...Roy Wood. Roy Wood? Like these other, better known stars, Roy Wood is a multi-instrumentalist/producer who can rightfully be called an artistic genius. MAIN STREET was originally recorded with his band Wizzard in 1976, but was way too advanced to be accepted by thick-headed record company excecutives. It has taken nearly one-quarter of a century for "the powers that be" to realize the great significance of this work, and thank goodness, now we can judge for ourselves. The title cut is a joyous celebration that sounds like one of the lost tracks from the Beach Boys' album SMILE. "The Fire in His Guitar" would have made Jimi Hendrix stand up and take note. "French Perfume" is a lovely retro pop tune. One of my favorites is "Take My Hand," which sounds a lot like the band Roy founded in 1971, the Electric Light Orchestra. The single from this album, "Indiana Rainbow," is a breezy, bossa nova-ish bit of brilliance. The grand finale', "I Should Have Known," should have been a contender. There's a bit of Steely Dan in that one. Beach Boys? Steely Dan? Hendrix? Antonio Carlos Jobim? ELO? Fred Astaire? Trying to label this album is impossible, which is probably why the record companies had a hard time with it back in '76. BUT...their loss is our gain today.

5 out of 5 stars

Music Album:

  1. Live ~ Leo Sayer
  2. 37 Secrets I Only Told America ~ Bikeride
  3. Brand New Day ~ Sting
  4. Hell's Session ~ Livin' Blues
  5. Wolfe
  6. Lies ~ Blodwyn Pig
  7. Let Me Explain Something to You About Art ~ Kramer
  8. Mellow ~ Meja
  9. Great Dumbening ~ Grndntl Brnds
  10. Fumbling Towards Ecstasy ~ Sarah McLachlan

Music Album

Music Album

Music CD

Art of Swing ~ Gregg Field

Tomorrow's Reflections

Hear Sense and Feel ~ The Awakening

Anthony Braxton ~ Anthony Braxton

I Love a Gershwin Tune/Smoove' and Juicy Covers ~ Tom Keane

Ta Onira Malonoun ~ Katerina Kouka

Cesaria ~ C%C3%A9saria %C3%89vora

Cheiro de Festa ao Vivo ~ Banda Cheiro de Amor

Un Pecado Nuevo ~ Zozaya

Celtic Passion: The Songs of Roy Orbison ~ Various Artists