Gene Clark's 1971 platter, with its stark black cover featuring his silhouette
illuminated by the sun, was dubbed White Light -- though the words never
appear on the cover -- and if ever a title fit a record, it's this one.
Over its nine original tracks, it has established itself as one of the
greatest singer/songwriter albums ever made. After leaving the Byrds in
1966, recording with the Gosdin Brothers, and breaking up the Dillard
& Clark group that was a pioneering country-rock outfit, Clark took
time to hone his songwriting to its barest essentials. The focus on these
tracks is intense, they are taut and reflect his growing obsession with
country music. Produced by the late guitarist Jesse Ed Davis (who also
worked with Taj Mahal, Leon Russell, Link Wray, and poet John Trudell,
among others), Clark took his songs to his new label with confidence and
they supported him. The band is comprised of Flying Burrito Brothers'
bassist Chris Ethridge, the then-Steve Miller Band-pianist (and future
jazz great) Ben Sidran, organist Michael Utley, and drummer Gary Mallaber.
Clark's writing, as evidenced on "The Virgin," the title cut,
"For a Spanish Guitar," "One in a Hundred," and "With
Tomorrow," reveals a stark kind of simplicity in his lines. Using
melodies mutated out of country, and revealing that he was the original
poet and architect of the Byrds' sound on White Light, Clark created a
wide open set of tracks that are at once full of space, a rugged gentility,
and are harrowingly intimate in places. His reading of Bob Dylan's "Tears
of Rage," towards the end of the record rivals, if not eclipses,
the Band's. Less wrecked and ravaged, Clark's song is more a bewildered
tome of resignation to a present and future in the abyss. Now this is
classic rock.
(by Thom Jurek, AMG)
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