Released: January 30 1970
MELODY MAKER February 14, 1970
Here it is - the great one! The fantastic second Bond band that included Jon Hiseman and Dick Heckstall- Smith was about five years ahead of the rest, and it will be interesting for present day Colosseum fans to hear how the number developed. This hitherto unreleased cut (coupled with "Springtime In The City") thunders along with fiendish fury. Can't wait for the album.
Chris Welch (?)
NEW MUSICAL EXPRESS February 14, 1970
A Sizzling rocker that pounds along ferociously. Graham Bond's uninhibited vocal is carried along by swinging organ, honking sax and some near-berserk drumming. A raw and earth sound - which, a couple of years ago, we might have regarded as dated - but which today is highly topical. Excitement galore here!
RECORD MIRROR February 14, 1970
Good fat authoritative blues sound here, with a riff that hits hard. Exciting. Hmmm…. do try it.
GINGER BAKER'S AIRFORCE
"Man Of Constant Sorrow"/"Doin' It"
Polydor 56 380
Released: March 20 1970
MELODY MAKER March 28, 1970
God, how I'd like to see this make number one. A great, chaotic, anarchistic beautiful single! The band is as rough as hell, but immensely exciting as it builds great walls of sound behind Denny Laine's crying vocal. As you would expect from a rhythm section which includes Ginger and Phil Seaman it has a fantastic impetus and more you listen the more you get into all the sounds. Not only is it exciting music, it's also commercial with an arrangement by Ginger and Denny that instantly takes the imagination.
RECORD MIRROR March 28, 1970
Denny Laine featured vocalist here - and there's a whole lot of talent showing through all the way. Compact basic rhythm, some good wailing - a more-in-sorrow-than-anger reading of a tradition piece. Simple, yet complex - if you get the gist.
NEW MUSICAL EXPRESS April 4, 1970
Debut single by Ginger Baker's flexible 13-piece band, adapted by Denny Laine from a traditional song. Opens quietly, with maracas and guitar supporting the vocal - but the routine steadily builds, until everyone is either blowing like mad or wailing lustily behind the soloist. The melody is catchy and spirituallike, the beat is compelling, and the overall sound is attacking, vibrant and tingling. It's one of those discs that sends shivers down your spine as the excitement mounts! Airforce is not a mass-appeal outfit, but it's come up with an item that could well satisfy both the specialists and the more commercial-minded fans. And with all the publicity the group's had, it should do well.
GINGER BAKER'S AIRFORCE
Ginger Baker's Airforce
Polydor 2662 001
Released: May 5 1970
MELODY MAKER May 16, 1970
Ginger Baker has led a long tough career. He has worked hard, stuck to his musical guns at all times. When a young drummer shaking the London jazz scene with his rebellious style, he invoked equal degrees of interest and criticism. With his later involvement in the pioneering days of the British R&B movement, he found more acceptance and more freedom for expression. There were to be many years of slog, sweat and little financial reward. But his drumming remained uncompromisingly Ginger Baker - a style that was to influence practically every group drummer in Britain, whether they cared to admit it or not. In the same way Gene Krupa became the inspiration of an earlier generation of players, so Ginger became a hero of rock drummers and his name even filtered through to the proverbial "man in the street" who traditionally takes great pride in his ignorance. In many ways, the Air Force album is a personal triumph for Ginger. From his whole attitude since its inception, one can see pride and keenness in the project. Ginger has never played better than on the current hectic gigs with his team of hard-bitten personalities. There is a wild mixture of discipline and rebellion, of warmth and violence in their music. Different time signature, difficult arranged passages are complemented by free blowing riffs. There is the African tribal yelling of Remi Kabaka and the introspective, heartfelt singing of Denny Laine, a thunder of drums from Phil Seaman and Baker and the delicate flute of Harold McNair… Contrasts, with an underlying drive and enthusiasm that connected so happily with the audience at the Royal Albert Hall, where the Air Force double album, due to to be released shortly, was recorded last winter. The band is an ideal vehicle for Ginger's playing which is considerably more complex and subtle than many critics would allow. In the group that preceded Air Force, he had to back up and produce the occasional showcase. Air Force, when they thunder through "Aiko Biaye" in six-eight spur Ginger on to new patterns and directions. And on "Da Da Man" one can hear the Baker capable of phrasing with a band, adding accents and goading a soloist in the big band tradition. Most are familiar with the Baker climax of tom-toms pilling on bass drums like a rotary combustion engine. But there is also the tremendous sense of time and an electrifying "feel" bringing forth surges of power in his accompaniment. There is also excitement and a sense of something alive and growing, and it is hoped that band will survive, stabilize and most essential - continue to have a lot of fun. Here is a break-down of tracks. "Da Da Man" is a fast Harold McNair composition with hard-hitting snare drum phrasing by Ginger, and solos by Graham Bond on alto and Denny Laine on guitar. Phil Seaman can be heard rattling "the dreaded log" a piece of rhythmic African timber on the work song "Early In The Morning" long a favourite with the Graham Bond Organisation of yesteryear. Listen for Ginger's mighty roll in the coda and wailing violin from Ric Grech. There are two tracks to each side which means most of the concert survives intact and naturally all the drum solos are included. The first is on "Toad" which follows the slightly uncomfortable changes of "Don't Care". "Toad unites Phil and Ginger in a tremendous percussion outing. The two men work beautifully together and give a unique display of inter-related influences, feeding each other phrases. Phil has the more melodic, flowing style and Ginger is more direct. "Aiko Biaye" in six-eight is Remi Kabaka's African rave-up with vocals by Remi and Jeanette Jacobs with solos from Chris Wood, Denny Laine and Harold McNair. Ginger, Phil and Remi have a ball in a bouncing, battling drum bash. Causing quite a diversion and one of the surprises of the concert was Denny Laine's performance of the meaningful "Man Of Constant Sorrow", now one of the most popular numbers in the bok and an example of the many facets of Air Force. Ginger's main solo comes on Stevie Winwood's tune for Blind Faith "Do What You Like" and this also features Steve, now absent from the group. At the concert Ginger's fast and furious drum finale drew a huge response from the crowd and there had to be an encore. This was the repetitive but cheerful "Doin' It", which sums up Mr. Baker's philosophy of getting on with it. Organising a rock workshop like Air Force isn't easy. Audiences have in the main grown out of the "super star" but, so have the musicians. It's now down to hard work for a solid future. And Air Marshall Baker is the man to keep 'em flying!
Chris Welch
NEW MUSICAL EXPRESS May 16, 1970
Their first album, a double set recorded live at the Royal Albert Hall in January, is for the main part something of a disappointment. The co-ordination one would expect from such experienced musicians is so often lacking, sometimes alarmingly so, and there are occasions when the deluge of sound renders the solos ineffective. It seems strange - since Air Force according to Denny Lane, recognize they had shortcomings at the start but say they are now over them - to put out a live set recorded on what was their second gig! Anyway, this is what they've chosen to give us: they at the time of recording being Ginger Baker, Steve Winwood, Jeanette Jacobs, Denny Laine, Chris Wood, Rick Grech, Remi Kabaka, Graham Bond, Harold McNair and Phil Seaman. There are eight tracks, two per side, with Mc Nair's Da Da Man kicking off the set to az frustrating start, the powering back line swamping out the front men on a number which cries out for studio technique. Early In The Morning, with extended flute passages from McNair and Chris Wood, is better. Don't Care is the first to suggest Air Force can gear themselves to expectations. Stevie Winwood's organ and the saxes taking it in turns to pilot their paths over the throbbing rhythm. African drummer Remi Kabaka's tribal rock Aiko Biaye, alternating between his native and Western influences, has it's stirring ,moments but it isn't until the final side of the four that the band really begins to satisfy. Here, on Baker's Do What You Like, Air Force lead the charge for Ginger to show his worth on a drum solo as fine as he'll ever do, and the closer Doin' It they fuse as a unit to suggest that time is all they need. Trouble is, I can only see this album alienating those who would love to see Ginger's squad succeed. Like myself. Other titles: Toad, Man Of Constant Sorrow.
Nick Logan
RECORD MIRROR May 30, 1970
A vey heavy double album from Ginger Baker' Airforce - complete with Ginger, of course, Steve Winwood, Jeanette Jacobs, Denny Laine, Chris Wood, Rick Grech, Remi Kabaka, Graham Bond, Harold McNair and Phil Seaman. Recorded live at London's Royal Albert Hall, sometime in January, it was the band's second outing - and it shows on the record with a mammoth dependence on percussion. The first track, "Da Da Man" drives along pretty well. A long instrumental piece with a constructive use of the horn section, but the drums are very dominant. Track two, "Early In The Morning" has a slow, horns and drum beginning building up to Winwood's straining voice. And all goes well until the middle when it gets a little messy with not the brightes ever violin from Rick Grech. There follows a long instrumental section ending up where it started - with Winwood and some very nice singing. The first track on side two is "Don't Care" - a slightly faster number with Stevie Winwood and Jeanette Jacobs harmonizing. The backing is complete with the horn section blaring away… again. But the song again falls into the almost rigid pattern of a little singing to begin, a long instrumental interlude with a quick burst of vocalizing to finish up with. The next track is the Toad - well known to lovers of Cream' "Wheels of Fire" album. It is a showpiece for Baker's drumming skills and it goes on and on and on… The drumming is not relieved by Remi Kabaka's African track, "Aiko Biaye" - a long (why are they all so long?) thumping African piece with all the sublety of a TV coffee commercial. It comes as a pleasant relief to get back to Denny Laine's singing of "Man of Constant Sorrow". The last side begins with Winwood singing beautifully and playing a very nice organ. And then comes Baker again with a long solo. The last track of all, "Doin' It" has an almost Indian use of the horn section. And drums blaring away. After so much drums your reviewer had a headache. The album is probably great for drum-freaks. But otherwise it's a little hard on your lugholes.
R.P.
GRAHAM BOND
Solid Bond
Warner Bros. WS 3001
Released: May 29 1970
Disc May 30, 1970 
Graham Bond shows how he created heavy stars
Graham Bond, like Mayall, is a father-figure of the current music scene - because some of the most highly rated musicians today started in either the Bond or Mayall stables. "Solid Bond" is a double album of early Bond things, featuring Jack Bruce on bass, Dick Heckstall-Smith (alto and soprano sax), John McLaughlin on guitar, Ginger Baker drumming on early recordings and Jon Hiseman on later ones. Graham plays variously organ, alto, piano and does vocals. Three tracks in mono were recorded live at Klooks Kleek (alas now defunct) as far back as 1963, and although they're musically gems, very jazzy, the recording isn't too hot. The rest consists of things recorded at Olympic studios in 1966. Everyone raves about Blood Sweat and Tears as the greatest innovators of a style, but as this sleeve note points out, this album shows that this Bond band was there years earlier.
NEW MUSICAL EXPRESS June 6, 1970
Graham Bond is also starred on this double LP, which also has Jack Bruce, Ginger Baker, Dick Heckstall-Smith, Jon Hiseman and John McLaughlin featured. Only 12 tracks, three of them - Grass Is Greener, Doxy and Ho Ho Country Kicking Blues - go back to Klooks Kleek in 1963, recorded mono. The others, in stereo, are produced by Jon Hiseman at Olympic Sound in 1966. Good music, specially on Green Onions, Last Night and Walking In The Park.
BEAT INSTRUMENTAL June(?) 1970
The amount of musical talent to pass through the various Graham Bond groups is truly amazing. On Solid Bond we have four sides of previously unavailable material by two of the Bond combinations; the first has Bond on alto, with McLaughlin, Bruce and Baker as sidemen; the second is the famed trio of Hiseman, Heckstall-Smith and Bond, by this time playing organ and piano as well. The quartet was recorded live at Klooks Kleek in 1963, and takes up one and a half sides with three tracks. The music is easy blowing jazz, hardly comparable with the later work of the Bond Organisation, or of Cream, two of whose members play here. It does, however, explain what Bruce is up to these days, and is solid enough to appeal to rock fans. But the trio is where it's all happening - the demonic threesome that could sound like a six piece outfit, even outside the recording studio. They were evidently in fine form when they cut these tracks (1966), and it's still a delight to hear a band blow as spiritedly as they do here, with Hiseman's drumwork particulary stunning, and Bonsd rasping out the vocals. Numbers include Walking In The park and Neighbour Neighbour, there are some intelligent liner notes, and Warner Reprise present us the whole package at a special cheap price.
RECORD MIRROR June 13, 1970
A rather schizoid double album from one of Britain's formative groups of the sixties. Some of the tracks - particularly John McLaughlin's "The Grass Is Greener" and Bond's "Walking In The Park" - are really well worth having. But then there are the copies of American originals such as "Green Onions" which add very little to the songs. The album includes contributions from Jack Bruce, Ginger Baker, Dick Heckstall-Smith, Jon Hiseman and John McLaughlin and dates back as far as 1963. There's some stunning playing interspersed with some really dull tracks. Well worth having, though as a memorial to one of the bands which started it all going in the early sixties.
R.P.
ROLLING STONE December 12, 1970
Graham Bond, Jack Bruce, Ginger Baker, John McLaughlin. Superstars in heavy, heavenly collaboration? Nope. Even Warner's hype squad can't goose this flimsy, tepid collection into any such distinction. The badly recorded live tracks from 1963 (mono only) contain a string of wobbly solos in jazz contexts possibly interesting as juvenalia. Period. Nobody's sayin' nuthin'. McLaughlin is at least fluent, but Bruce sounds like just another bass player and Baker's drumming is a revelation. Don't ask what kind. The 1966 studio tracks are not much better. Uninspired, riff-heavy blues. The foot taps out of habit, but the mind and feelings quickly wander. Bond's vocals are sorry imitiations of superior black originals. His organ is lively and competent, but falls on every imaginable cliché and the alto playing is plain bad. Running time for four sides is under 65 minutes, and scarely a minute of it is worthwhile (except for Jon Hiseman's drumming on the studio date). Why WB went after this largely dismal material is a mystery, unless someone sold them on the idea of an audience of scholars out there who, like most scholars, would be turned on simply by the fact that it all happened and couldn't care less whether it was bad or good.
GINGER BAKER'S AIRFORCE
Airforce 2
Polydor 2383 029
Released: December 18 1970
NEW MUSICAL EXPRESS December 19, 1970
It couldn't be any worse than the first which, I'm sure, did more harm than good for a band that started with so much promise and appeared to lose itself in a bad dream. Air Force 2 is much more like it and if it doesn't fulfil all that initial promise, it meets the compromise hopes forced upon us by Air Force 1. Though it's been dished out in abundance by Santana and their impersonators, the use of tribal-like rhythms by Ginger's mighty line up, played like only musicians of their caliber can, is a joyous sound to the ears. Speedy Acquaye's African drums and the Baker dynamo, with the girl singers Diane Stewart and Aiki Ashman chorusing and chanting to great effect, provide an interesting and colourful basis over which the soloist can rise. Graham Bond wrote one track, 12 Gates To The City, and arranged another, Let Me Ride, while the number Ginger wrote for Cream, Sweet Wine, on the riffs neatly transposes the girl singers for Eric's guitar. Bond takes the solo in the oddly-titled Do U No Hu Yor Phrenz R? (Do You Know Who Your Friends Are? If you can't work it out), and is joined by soloists Steve Gregory (tenor) and Bud Beadle (baritone) on We Free Kings. Today is an 8 minute drum outing, with the set completed by Denny Laine's workout of the old Drifters/Moodies song I Don't Want To Go On Without You. Altogether a much more hopeful selection.
Nick Logan