Savoy Brown - Jack the Toad 1973
Savoy Brown made the best of
Dave Walker's departure for
Fleetwood Mac by hiring
Jack Lynton as their lead singer. While
Lynton's voice can't match the warmth instilled by
Walker's, he does do a competent job at melding with
Kim Simmonds' guitar playing. His voice is sharp but not overly exciting, yet it still presents "Coming Down Your Way" with enough emotion to make it the album's standout track. The addition of
Ron Berg on percussion and
Stan Saltzman's saxophone are worthy instrumental extensions, helping to boost the album's energy level another notch. "Ride on Babe," "If I Want To," "Some People," and the title track are straight-sounding efforts, but they seem to lack the blues resilience of what the band is capable of. There's enough of
Simmonds' talent to keep die-hard fans fascinated, yet the provocative blues-rock character that has evolved from
Savoy Brown as a complete group has been slightly abandoned for the most part. Considering
Savoy Brown's past tribulations that have played out in such a short time span,
Jack the Toad can be labeled an adequate effort, but when paralleled to the quality of strut and swagger that
Simmonds has administered with his members in the past, it may be regarded as a little less than that. AMG.
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