LINER
NOTES
FOR THE ASSOCIATION'S INSIGHT OUT
By
Richie Unterberger
The
Association's second
album, late 1966's Renaissance
(also reissued on CD by Collectors' Choice), had been a relatively
disappointing seller in the wake of their debut Top Ten LP And Then...Along Comes the Association.
Their third long-player, 1967's Insight
Out, rode on the wings of the massive hits "Windy" and "Never My
Love" (both included on the record) to give them their second Top Ten
album. Such success was inevitable for an album containing two of the
most-played AM smashes of the late '60s. As usual, though, beyond the
two lead singles, the record was characteristically eclectic, running a
gamut from pounding folk-rock and one of the best obscure P.F. Sloan
covers to downright experimental anti-war protest.
<> A couple of
key
changes were
in order for the sessions. Lead guitarist Jules Alexander had left the
band (though he would return in 1969), to be replaced by Larry Ramos.
"I think Jules really inspired the avant-garde side of us," muses the
Association's Jim Yester. "Larry was much more pop- and
R&B-oriented, so I think that side probably came out a little
more." Also pushing the band in a slightly more commercial direction
was Bones Howe, the group's third producer in as many albums. Howe,
established as one of Hollywood's top engineers on hits by the Mamas
& the Papas, Johnny Rivers, and others, had recently started to
produce as well, most notably with the Turtles.
"That was more the record company and our manager
than us," says Yester of the decision to enlist Howe. "Our manager
really pushed us that way, because he was very blown away by the first
Mamas & Papas album. He loved the sound of what the Mamas &
Papas did, and that was mainly attributed to Bones's work on the
engineering side." Though the Association had played everything on Renaissance, Howe helped assemble
luminaries from the A-list of Los Angeles session cats to play on Insight Out, including drummer Hal
Blaine, bassist Joe Osborn, keyboardist Larry Knechtel, guitarist Al
Casey, and guitarist/sitarist Mike Deasy. The vocal arrangements were
handled by Clark Burroughs of jazz-pop singers the Hi-Lo's; Burroughs
had already worked with the band, helping them rehearse their
arrangement of Bob Dylan's "One Too Many Mornings," the song that got
them their deal with Valiant Records.
Songs don't come any more commercial than "Windy" or
"Never My Love," and "Windy," written by Ruthann Friedman, was the
first of the pair to strike gold, topping the chart for no less than
four weeks running in July 1967. "It had to have been considered for a
single right off the bat because it was one of the first things
recorded," says Yester. "Most of the stuff she wrote was really
avant-garde and very outside. She said, 'I've written this very
commercial thing that I think you guys might be interested in,' sat
down and played it for us in the kitchen, and we all went, 'Oh God,
that's really kind of neat. Let's take it and show it to Bones.' Which
we did, and Bones really heard something for it. What's really funny is
what most people don't know, is the song was actually written for a
guy. He was kind of like a free spirit, had taken a little too much
acid."
"Never My Love" composers Don and Dick Addrisi had
recorded as the Addrisi Brothers, and by the mid-1960s were working for
Valiant as staff writers, penning the B-side of the group's previous
smash "Cherish" ("Don't Blame It on Me"). "They would always submit
stuff to us," recalls Yester. "Some of the stuff that we didn't pick of
theirs, I kind of wish we had. There were some other tunes that were
absolutely phenomenal." In fact they did cut another of the Addrisi
Brothers' songs on Insight Out,
the ultra-cheery "Happiness Is," which according to Yester was
considered as a single. "But when we even got just the basic track done
for 'Never My Love,' I mean, everybody freaked out," he adds.
"Everybody, including the wives and girlfriends. They were the ones
that were saying, 'Oh, this is it. It's so romantic!' I think my
ex-wife used to say, 'Oh, it makes me want to swoon!'" he laughs. She
wasn't alone, of course; "Never My Love" went to #2 and became one of
the most oft-played standards of the twentieth century, both on radio
and at weddings.
"Never My Love" and "Windy" inevitably overshadowed
the other nine songs on Insight Out,
some of which rated among the group's finer work. "On a Quiet Night,"
sung with great delicacy by Yester, was one of the best little-known
ballads by hit L.A. pop-folk-rock songwriter P.F. Sloan, and brought to
the band by Howe, according to Jim. "Wantin' Ain't Gettin'" was pitched
in by session man Mike Deasy, who also played sitar on the track. With
Brian Cole on lead vocals, the band gave an uncharacteristically rough
treatment to Tim Hardin's "Reputation." "I was one of the ones who
pushed for that song," notes Yester, "because the Modern Folk Quartet
[with Yester's brother Jerry, who produced the Association's second
album] was doing it, and their version was so great. Ours was totally
the different direction. When the powers that be agreed to do the song,
I was really pumped. Then when I heard what they wanted to do with it,
I was horrified. I hear the song more like Timmy did it, and more like
the MFQ did it, as a really down blues instead of a frantic freakout. I
think Brian pushed it in that direction."
The album's most ambitious piece, "Requiem for the
Masses," closed side two. More than any other song, it demonstrated
there was more to the Association than good-time pop-rock, with its
martial beats, Latin mass background vocals, and downbeat anti-war
commentary. Explains Yester, "Terry [Kirkman] was wanting to put a
thing together kind of like 'Who Killed Davey Moore?' [an obscure early
Bob Dylan song about the death of a boxer that Dylan never released on
record in the '60s]. We were very into Dylan. He wanted to do something
kind of like that, with some mass parts, and then wound up coming up
with that whole other idea. My brother arranged all the Latin parts,
the vocal arrangement on all those.
"It was very much an underground hit [in fact it
even made #100 as the B-side of 'Never My Love']. I had guys years
later that had been in 'Nam come up and shake my hand, and they
couldn't even talk. It was just tears. Some guys would say, 'Hey man,
thanks, you got us through.' Feedback like that is mind-blowing." --
Richie Unterberger
unless otherwise specified.
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