The Broughtons' fifth album has never been as well-regarded as its predecessors, although that has more to do with timing than with the record itself -- by 1973, after all,
the Broughtons' brand of post-hippie revolution was feeling just a little tired, particularly in the face of the glam scene that had emerged all around, and no matter how strong the songwriting and performances remained, there was still a sense of too little, too late. Which was colossally unfair. No,
Oora isn't a patch on either
Wasa Wasa or
Sing Brother Sing. But it was an improvement on the previous year's
Inside Out, and a handful of its contents -- notably "Exhibits from a New Museum/Green Lights" and "Roccococooler" -- could rub shoulders alongside any of the band's earlier, better-feted material. Indeed, the sheer diversity of
Oora flies defiantly in the face of anybody hoping to pigeonhole the band with its past reputation, as
Oora reveals a tight, concise, and extraordinarily melodic band whose members had clearly been listening to
Neil Young as much as
the Mothers of Invention, and weren't afraid to prove it. AMG.
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