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Previously Unavailable

Artist: Michael Franks
Label: Drg
Category: Music

List Price: $9.98
Buy Used: $2.99
You Save: $6.99 (70%)



New (1) Used (1) from $2.99

Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 8 reviews

Media: Audio Cassette

UPC: 021471521047
EAN: 0021471521047
ASIN: B00008EZWR

Release Date: February 11, 1993
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Tracks:

  • Can't Seem to Shake This Rock 'N' Roll
  • Just Like Key Largo
  • When Blackbirds Fly
  • Lovesick Lizzie
  • Life's Little Highway
  • King of Oklahoma
  • Dobro Ladies
  • Three Today
  • Little Sparrow
  • Born With the Moon in Virgo

Similar Items:

  • One Bad Habit
  • Burchfield Nines
  • Objects of Desire
  • Tiger in the Rain
  • Sleeping Gypsy

Customer Reviews:   Read 3 more reviews...

4 out of 5 stars Its still Michael   January 28, 2008
Lyn Wechsler (Rochester, NY USA)
After seeing Michael perform in Las Vegas last week, I went back and listened to some of his original work. Previously is somewhat overproduced and all over the music landscape but it's still Michael. There is enough here to interest either a new fan or someone who has followed him for over thirty years. br / br /Incidently, his show at Boulder Station was very well attended. Too bad they scheduled him at 8:00 PM before a rock re-creation band at 10:00 PM. He had only an hour and twenty minutes to entertain us. I was front row center. After all these years he still loves the music he wrote! The band was great. Just not enough time.


4 out of 5 stars Undiscovered Franks   October 12, 2006
Kurt Harding (Boerne TX)
1 out of 1 found this review helpful

Though I have been a fan of Michael Franks for going on 30 years now, I always ignored Previously Unavailable when I saw it in the bins. After all, my experience with "early" and "newly discovered old" recordings was that they had been buried in the archives for good reason. But after reading the mostly positive reviews here and seeing the price was right, I decided to hear it for myself. br /It took a few listens before I really liked much of it. But now that I know it from start to finish, I conclude that its not at all the schlock I feared. Some listeners heard a lot of California country-rock. I did not. While many stereotypically country instruments were used on some of the songs (dulcimer, mandolin, and banjo), I would not classify those songs as country-rock. Musically, about the closest comparison to this undiscovered Franks I can make would be to some of the work of Dan Hicks and His Hot Licks and to some of Ian Matthews Southern Comfort. Here are my favorites: br /1)Can't Seem To Shake This Rock and Roll: Lyrically just OK, but with some great instrumental passages. br /2)When Blackbirds Fly: a sweet romantic fantasy. br /3)Lovesick Lizzie: Very humorous and risque. Franks, often suggestive, is almost blatantly so here: "I'm a midnight milkman, no need to scream. I just came to deliver a pint of cream". br /4)Three Today-mildly blasphemous and a bittersweet look at the struggles and joys of life. Nice mandolin solo. br /5)Born With the Moon In Virgo-More blasphemy, lyrically excellent, and the jazziest cut on the CD. Great instrumentation is almost Deodato-like in the arrangement. And, along with Just Like Key Largo, the song that gives the best hints as to his future direction. br /If you are a Michael Franks fan and have avoided this CD for reasons similar to mine, avoid it no longer. Previously Unavailable is a delicious group of songs that stand tall with the rest of Franks' oeuvre.


5 out of 5 stars THIS GUY IS PHENOMENAL! A BREATHE OF HEAVENLY AIR!   July 10, 2006
Michael Love (Charlotte, North Carolina United States)
0 out of 2 found this review helpful

If there are any objections sustained on the standing up for the truth guidelines of Funk law and order, please be the first to fulfill the ignominy of such. Chief Sun Star Ali hears and feels the very essence of the far east coast connection, and some br /reel reel Mean Mugging. Prepare once again the sound system, for br /the "Deeper Prophecy is Clear!" Flick the lights, for the 'Last Dance' is near. br /In it's day this album must not be overlooked! br /


4 out of 5 stars A Pint Of Cream, Oh Yeah!   June 29, 2006
Mark D. Prouse (Riverdale (Bronx), NY)
1 out of 1 found this review helpful

As others have pointed out, Franks' debut is not the cool Brazilian-inspired jazz his fans have come to expect. However, I've been listening to Franks for a LONG time, and this was actually the second of his records I ever heard. I bought it in a cutout bin for a buck and it wasn't even that old at the time; the cover was different (the handsome photo of a young, long-haired Michael was partly what caught my attention, and it should have been used for the reissue, with the picture used here on the back; as a designer, that would have been my choice). Anyway, because of songs like "The Lady Wants to Know," "Down In Brazil," "The Eye Of The Storm," and "Antonio's Song (The Rainbow)" from SLEEPING GYPSY, I was already a committed Franks fan when I heard this. Okay, so this album is very different from any of his others, but it is not only fascinating for the varied styles he was trying out, it's clear that his witty writing style was already well developed. In fact there is more risque humor and daring philosophical commentary in these songs than on many of his later efforts, and this set is still one of my favorite MF albums. "Lovesick Lizzie" always makes me smile, and it, along with "Born With The Moon In Virgo," might raise eyebrows even now, given the ubiquitousness of an increasingly powerful conservative Christian movement (luckily, so far, we still live in free country, and few of those yahoos are likely to ever hear this CD). A singer who has recently resurfaced on a long overdue series of first-time-on-CD albums, Wendy Waldman, plays dulcimer and sings backup on a couple of tracks here, and there are also several well known sidemen from both the rock and jazz worlds helping out. Fans of the Michael Franks we all know and love today will notice that "Just Like Key Largo" proves that his present style had its beginnings here.


4 out of 5 stars Background and Roots for the True MF Fan   January 17, 2005
Sir Charles Panther (Alexandria, Virginny, USandA)
10 out of 10 found this review helpful

This is a must-have recording for the confirmed Michael Franks fan, the devotee keen on completing the collection, and it should come at the end of your acquisition, although most definitely in front of the corporate-regurgitated "best of" and "love song" releases. The sound here is not the samba-infused, ultra-romantic and smooth of Abandoned Garden, and it's not the playfully poetic and highly imaginative jazz of The Art of Tea, nor is it the rocking guitar-fusion of The Camera Never Lies. The sound is heavily early 70s country-rock California. The work does communicate a general theme, that of a young artist leaving home and making his way, wary yet confident in his abilities and direction, focused, finding his voice and themes, and both the distractive and comforting contexts in which it all occurs. This is relatively raw stuff, yet to my mind still an excellent effort, and a solid addition to the library of the true Michael Franks listener. br / br /This collection does show us the maturing Michael, and we've got a number of the themes and shading that came to really define his later work. You can hear his signature lyrical wordplay and imaginative lyrics emerging. The singularly imaginative and playful, cinema- and tropics-influenced lyrics aren't prominent or as developed as in later albums, but there are the indications of things to come. There are name checks on Fred Astaire, Coltraine, Shakespeare, Bogey and Bacall, Ravel. You've got the nod to Key Largo, the anti-Los Angeles, "earthquake town" riffs. br / br /There are 10 tracks at a total of 37:43, with an average track length of 3:47. The longest is "Born With the Moon in Virgo" at 6:13, and the shortest "Dobro Ladies" at 2:46. br / br /The opener, "Can't Seem to Shake This Rock N' Roll" is a fascinating tune. It's an over-the-top mix of under-arranged horns too in front of the mix, with a sax solo, a Shaft-like highly fuzzed-out guitar swinging in and out of the mix on rhythm, and a violin solo a la Jean-Luc Ponty. It's an interesting song that appears to me to be cramming way too much into 4:18. br / br /There's a great deal of the country-rock sound and influence in this work, and it comes through on a number of tracks, with fiddle highlights in "Just Like Key Largo," and clearly coming through on "Dobro Ladies." You've got the lyrical nod to the dulcimer on "When Blackbirds Fly." All of "Life's Little Highway" rings with heavy country influence, with a lot of fiddle responding to each verse and banjo concluding the verses, and even the junebug-like thrum of a Jew's harp behind the smooth fiddle, taking the tune out. Of course, you've got the ode to down-home familiarity and rejection of the rat race with "King of Oklahoma." br / br /"When Blackbirds Fly" is an interesting diversion, opening as a simple ballad about getting away with the lady, the longing to be together alone and just make music. But then Michael sings of her making bread while he makes beer. Then he's singing a refrain about making babies on Mars and being "the Adam and Eve of Mars." It's lyrical fantasy, and the imagery is interesting if a bit far from the opening bars, but it fits into the rhyme just fine. br / br /"Lovesick Lizzie" is a horn-heavy tune finding Michael asserting early "I'm no Christian" and wanting to "milk (her) cow." He's the strutting "midnight milkman" who's "come to deliver a pint of cream." It's a serious yet also mild rocker with a pseudo-New Orleans theme, an ode to a shotgun-toting tease driving him nuts. The theme is classic dirty blues, but the up-tempo delivery takes a bit away from the, ahem, thrust of the tune. br / br /"King of Oklahoma" is heavily country rock, a rejection of California ambition and the joy of returning home, where things are simple, where you're known valued truly. There's a guitar bridge and solo that in its orchestration and modulation sounds like it was lifted right out of the solo from the Eagles' "Take It Easy." br / br /My personal favorite is "Three Today." It opens close to blasphemous, with "I used to believe in Jesus, but I don't anymore/Is it booze or rouge that makes his cheeks so red?" There's the verse of admission that he was a failure as an athlete, not living up to the achievements and by implication the expectations of his father. There's the disgust with LA and the hard frustration of trying to make it as a musician. But at the end of each confessional verse comes "And my little son is three today/I bounced him on my knee today/He told me loved me." That's the entire refrain and, of course, that's all he needs to say. As Dad to a young son, this is song grabbed on the first listen. It's a fantastic, simple tune, an homage to the wonder and beauty of a little man, to any child, and that innate power to keep you grounded, focused, and tuned in to what really matters in the world. br / br /In conclusion, if you're new to Michael Franks hold off getting this release. Buy The Art of Tea, One Bad Habit, Abandoned Garden, Blue Pacific, Skin Dive, or The Camera Never Lies first (in that order). These will give you a solid grounding in the mature, highly produced and poetic Michael Franks, his signature sound and themes, his "hits" and the classics beloved by his fans. If you enjoy each of these CDs and choose to call yourself a true fan, then you may be ready to step into the Wayback Machine to the very beginning of his career and hear where he's come from, where his roots lie.