The second long-player from It's a Beautiful Day is an exceedingly more
pastoral effort than the band's self-titled debut. As many of the Bay
Area groups most notably the Grateful Dead with Workingman's Dead
and American Beauty had begun to do, the band realigns its sound
from the dark psychedelia and proto-prog of its earlier works and into
a lighter and earthier country-flavored rock. Marrying Maiden does, however,
continue highlighting both the sextet's stellar instrumental proficiencies
as well as vocals featuring the entire band throughout.
"Don and Dewey," the album's opener, is a hot-steppin' spotlight
for David LaFlamme's classically trained violin work. Presumably, the
tune is an ode to the late-'50s/early-'60s R&B duo of the same name.
The track has distinct hints of the concurrent contributions that LaFlamme
had been making in an incipient incarnation of Dan Hick & His Hot
Licks. It likewise sets the tenor for the remainder of the disc's down-home
feel. The cover of folkie Fred Neil's "The Dolphins" is notable
for Fred Webb's honky tonk piano fills and LaFlamme's vocals, recalling
some of the earliest New Riders of the Purple Sage sides. One of the more
solidly unifying factors linking the NRPS and It's a Beautiful Day is
the guest appearance by Jerry Garcia, who is featured on two numbers.
As he had done on Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young's "Teach Your
Children," Garcia lends a few distinct pedal steel guitar riffs to
the perky "It Comes Right Down to You." The track also features
former Charlatan Richard Olsen on, of all things, clarinet. Another sign
of the times is the pickin' and grinnin' on the appropriately titled "Hoedown"
on which Garcia adds some fiery banjo fretwork.
(by Lindsay Planer, All Music Guide)