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Present Tense

Present Tense

Product Type: Music

Product Price: $17.98

Manufacturer: Sundazed Music Inc.

Purchase

Description

Digitally remastered 1997 reissue on Sundazed of the debut by this trio comprised of Gary Usher, Glen Campbell & Bruce Johston. A pop/ psych masterpiece with true California soundmelodies first released on Columbia in 1968, it features theoriginal cover art and 20 tracks, including nine rare and/ or previously unissued bonus tracks: 'My World Fell Down' (Single Version), 'Artificial Light (Of All The Living Lies)', 'Get The Message', 'Mass #586', 'Love's Fatal Way', 'The Keeper Of The Games' (Demo), 'Lonely Girl', 'Sister Marie' (Instrumental) & 'Hotel Indiscreet' (Single Version).

Reviews

Rating: 4 / 5
Date: 2010-02-20
Summary: "Only get the Sundazed version."

SUNSHINE POP BAND REVIEW: Sagittarius [Los Angeles, California].
Don't be put off by my 4 star rating. I reserve 5 star rating for my most favorites, but this band should be high on anyones list!
This morning I decided to check some Sunshine/Psychedelic Pop bands and they popped up. What a revelation!

BOTTOM LINE: If you are into music from the Summer Of Love they are a band that you need to check out.

What you get is 20 songs, 53.1 minutes of music.
What I got was 12 songs, 31 minutes of above average songs, with 3 songs that are rated 5 star by me.

Someone on amazon's site recommended only getting the Sundazed-1997 version vs. the 2009 Rev-Ola version and I concur.
You most likely heard of the 'Loudness wars' and how they master it so the softest passages sound as loud as the loudest parts.
Yes you can argue that it helps when your in a loud environment i.e. car and have a point, but I like my music to have depth (soft to loud) at my disposal.

The three songs that stand out to me is:

My World Fell Down - 1967 - "AMG Pick. There is probably no better emulation of the Beach Boys circa the "Good Vibrations" period than Sagittarius' "My World Fell Down," which was a very modest #70 hit in 1967. Glen Campbell lead vocals."

You Know I've Found A Way - 1968 - "Good first impression on the vocal harmony. AMG Pick. Curt Boettcher and Lee Mallory wrote this song during The Summer Of Love."

Glass - 1968 - "Good first impression on this soft Psychedelic sitar song. Beautiful vocal harmony. Craig Brewer reportedly was not a professional singer, but just a friend of Boettcher's who wondered in."


Rating: 5 / 5
Date: 2010-02-02
Summary: "Steer clear of the Rev-Ola version / Get the Sundazed version :-)"

I wish to caution those of you considering the purchase of this wonderful album. I highly recommend the CD version released in 1997 by the label `Sundazed', as opposed to the recent 2009 version released by Rev-Ola. The reason is that the sound engineers who remastered the Rev-Ola release, chose to compress the audio to make it sound louder. In doing so however, they squeezed much of the audio dynamics out so that quiet passages sound nearly as loud as the loud ones. This practice of compressing audio to make it sound louder is very common in the recording industry today and is ruining music. The Rev-Ola release is a victim of today's "loudness wars". The Sundazed version, on the other hand, features the dynamics fully intact and it sounds wonderful! The sundazed version includes the same bonus material as the newly released Rev-Ola version.

The album was originally issued in 1968, and I would describe it as lighthearted psych-pop. It has that wonderful `Summer Of Love' sound and is very harmonious. At times it reminds me of the Moody Blues and The Association, among others. The melodies are very catchy and memorable. The song most will remember is `My World Fell Down', which was a hit in 1967. What makes this CD even more pleasurable is the inclusion of demo, unreleased, and single versions. Speaking of which, the single versions of `My World Fell Down' and `Hotel Indiscreet' are radically different from the LP versions, and I think they are far more superior and trippy! I personally find this album very fun and relaxing. It is packaged nicely with liner notes and photos.



Rating: 4 / 5
Date: 2006-02-26
Summary: "Sagittarius - 'Present Tense' (Sundazed)"

Originally released in 1967,this was the first of just two releases that Sagittarius had put out. Best described as psychedelic pop. On this CD reissue, you get the album's original eleven tracks, with nine unreleased bonus cuts tagged on for good measure. Something I just discovered, is that this short-lived band was one of Glen ("Rhinestone Cowboy")Campbell's early works. Never would've guessed. Line-up: Gary Usher-producer&vocals, Glen Campbell-guitar&vocals and Bruce Johnston-vocals, from what I could find. Might appeal to fans of The Turtles, The Association, Lovin' Spoonful, Beach Boys and Yellow Balloon.


Rating: 5 / 5
Date: 2005-07-14
Summary: "California dreaming sunshine pop masterpiece"

This extraordinary collection of recordings is perhaps the jewel in the crown of two legendary California singer-songwriter-arranger-producers: Gary Usher and Curt Boettcher. While it was released as an album (all of whose 11 original tracks are included here), its confluence of original sources makes this something of a collective, rather than a group album.

The roots of these recordings lay in Usher's overflowing fountain of creativity. Having written, produced and recorded dozens of albums in a short period of time (often alone or with studio musicians and pals), he found his role as a top producer at Columbia (Simon & Garfunkel, The Byrds, etc.) to be limiting. He began to spend off-hours in the studio creating new works, and after failing to pitch Chad & Jeremy on the song "My World Fell Down" (previously recorded by the UK's Ivy League), decided to record it himself. Usher gathered elements of the legendary Wrecking Crew, along with Beach Boy Bruce Johnston and touring Beach Boy Glen Campbell (who sang lead) to wax what would become a #70 hit.

Interestingly, modern day listeners probably know "My World Fell Down" more from its inclusion on Lenny Kaye's original "Nuggets" compilation than they do from the original single or album release. The relative success of the single did bring a demand from label head Clive Davis for more, and Usher quickly began assembling material from the fictional Sagittarius (named after his astrological sign), eventually in conjunction with up-and-coming star Curt Boettcher.

Boettcher's early work with the group Ballroom yielded several tracks for the album, including the original recordings of "Would You Like To Go" and "Musty Dusty, as well as several more songs ("Another Time" "Song to the Magic Frog" and "Keep of the Games") that were re-recorded. It's a mark of Usher and Boettcher's synchronicity that the previously-recorded works fit the Sagittarius album so perfectly. Though produced a bit less lushly than the multi-voiced orchestrations they'd purpose-build for the album, the tone matched the album's slightly-high autumnal pop. At turns this is mindful of Brian Wilson's more complex works, the intense vocal arrangements that Boettcher pioneered with The Association, and the bubblegum psychedelia of The Lemon Pipers and Strawberry Alarm Clock.

What began as a downtime hobby for Usher turned into a full-blown collaboration with Boettcher, and an album with an extraordinary ratio of latter-day-collectability versus at-the-time-purchase. Sundazed's masterful CD reissue augments the original album with nine bonus tracks, seven of which are previously unreleased. Most importantly, the original single versions of "My World Fell Down" and "Hotel Indiscreet" display the odd bridges that Usher was forced (by Columbia) to edit away for the album. The former's middle part is a melange of bullfight music, baby cries and alarm clocks, while the latter includes an unusual spoken-word passage from Usher's then-recent label signing, The Firesign Theater. Firesign's Peter Bergman turns up again (as he did on many Usher productions of the era) on "Mass #586." Also of great interest is Boettcher's demo of "The Keeper of the Games," highlighting his singing in a setting that is much less ornate than usual for his finished works.

Dawn Eden's liner notes are terrific, and additional song notes flesh out some of the compositional and recording history. The original engineering of Roy Halee and Tom May has left us with sparkling clean tapes of a California masterpiece.


Rating: 5 / 5
Date: 2005-06-29
Summary: "Great! /Almost as good As Mamas And Papas"

This album is terrific...problem is....you don't know if you are listening to the Mamas And Papas...or Saggitarius. Far, Far too similar but enjoyable to listen to.