Pete Dello and Friends (Honeybus) – Into Your Ears (1971) (24-Bit/96Khz) (Vinyl Rip)


Pete Dello and Friends (Honeybus) – Into Your Ears (1971)

Vinyl rip @ 24/96 | FLAC | Artwork | 1065mb
Pop/Rock, Baroque Pop | 1989 reissue | See For Miles SEE 257

After tasting success in 1968 with the single “I Can’t Let Maggie Go,” Honeybus founder Pete Dello left the band to pursue a more settled lifestyle. His distaste for the rigors of touring left him with a surplus of un-recorded material that would eventually steer him back into the studio to record his first and only solo record. Into Your Ears features 14 songs, each under three-and-a-half minutes long, that prosper through a winning combination of goofy psychedelia and Beatlesque beauty. The sweet melodies and gentle harmonies of “It’s What You’ve Got” and “Taking The Heart Out Of Love” are timeless, devoid of irony, and begging for placement in a Wes Anderson film. “Do I Still Figure In Your Life,” which has since been covered by the likes of Joe Cocker, conveys the same irresistible form of melancholy that permeates a great Randy Newman or Harry Nilsson recording, and more than makes up for the wince-inducing “Uptight Basil” and “Harry The Earwig (the latter inspired the horrific Roger Dean cover art). Dello’s voice is sweet and clear, with only a tinge of the British folk throatiness that ruled the era. The songs, while never complex, benefit from strategically placed string arrangements that rarely disappoint, and crisp production as exemplified on the set closer “Arise Sir Henry.” Also included are the Magic Valley versions of “Taking The Heart Out Of Love” and “Uptight Basil,” which differ only in sound quality (poorer) from the album renditions, and provide collector’s with the definitive edition of this highly sought after (almost) masterpiece. James Christopher Monger, allmusic.

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