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If
Juicy Lucy's debut album ranks among the most haunting, haunted blues-rock albums of the late 1960s, its follow-up only illustrates how damaging the last six months had been for the band. Fully half the band had been replaced, including vocalist
Ray Owen and guitarist
Neil Hubbard, and with them went much of the evil electrics and swamp-conscious blues that gave
Juicy Lucy its most scintillating shivers. The players who replaced them -- former
Zoot Money singer
Paul Williams, ex-
Jeff Beck drummer
Rod Coombes, and guitarist
Micky Moody -- were no slouches, of course, and the interplay between
Glenn Ross Campbell's steel and
Chris Mercer's sax is as chilling as ever. But songs like "Built for Comfort," "Thinking of My Life," and even a cover of
Frank Zappa's "Willie the Pimp" owe more to a premonition of
ZZ Top than a bad dream in the bayou, while the rest of
Lie Back and Enjoy It found the group pursuing a distinctly country-rock flavored direction. Even the first-album era "Changed My Mind, Changed My Sign" sounded more like the
Dils than
Dr. John, and
Lie Back and Enjoy It emerged a distinctly unenjoyable disappointment, at least by the standards
Juicy Lucy once held so high. AMG.
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