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Pleasures of the Harbor

Phil Ochs

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Album Review

Going into the studio after Dylan's move into rock accompaniment and Sgt. Pepper's vast expansion of pop music, Ochs wanted to make a record that reflected all these trends, and he hired producer Larry Marks, arranger Ian Freebairn-Smith, and pianist Lincoln Mayorga — all of whom had classical backgrounds — to help him realize his vision. The result was Pleasures of the Harbor, his most musically varied and ambitious album, one routinely cited as his greatest accomplishment. Though the lyrics were usually not directly political, they continued to reflect his established points of view. His social criticisms here were complex, and they went largely unnoticed on a long album full of long songs, many of which did not support the literal interpretations they nevertheless received. The album was consistently imbued with images of mortality, and it all came together on the abstract, electronic-tinged final track, "The Crucifixion." Usually taken to be about John F. Kennedy, it concerns the emergence of a hero in a corrupt world and his inevitable downfall through betrayal. Ochs offers no satisfying resolution; the goals cannot be compromised, and they will not be fulfilled. It was anything but easy listening, but it was an effective conclusion to a brilliant album that anticipated the devastating and tragic turn of the late '60s, as well as its maker's own eventual decline and demise.

Customer Reviews

good to have him back

There are all sorts of particulars one can dislike about Phil Ochs; for many those stumbling blocks interfere with appreciation of his genius. He was a brilliant songwriter and more often than not a compelling interpreter of his own songs, as well as of his times and of the contradictions of both mainstream and dissident American life. This album, I believe, finds him at his most expansive and most lyrical, and I'm glad to see it available again. (Incidentally, to my ear the arrangement of "Crucifixion" is from its original release on this album, although the sometimes muddy vocal of that track may have been clarified a bit. The earlier reviewer may have first heard Ochs's later-recorded solo concert version, without the orchestration and indeed with a slightly different melody to the openig couplet of each verse.)

Some of the best imagery ever put to music

Och's earlier explorations into sound related (Poe) and narrative related (Noyes) poetry come together in a lyrical pastiche that he comes to own. The title track, "Pleasures of the Harbor," creates a mood and paints a picture not usually achieved in song. With it you feel yourself transported from wherever you are to a foggy wharf where sailors are feeling the strangeness of being on land after a long voyage. The music on the album can get pretty out there, but not on that song. The arrangement fits the words perfectly. On some of the other songs, like "Small Circle of Friends" and "Miranda," the musical settings sound like cliched relics from the past. "Crucifixion" is a mess. The rest of the songs enjoy sympathetic arrangements. "The Party" is a bad acid trip that you can't stop witnessing.

Who schmaltzed up Crucifixion?

What is this mashup orchestration on Crucifixion? This is not on the original version. I find it very offensive to Phil's clear vision. Could this be crucifiction?

Biography

Born: December 19, 1940 in El Paso, TX

Genre: Singer/Songwriter

Years Active: '60s, '70s

Phil Ochs is a figure both glorious and tragic who haunts the history of the 1960s folk revival and its aftermath. A topical singer and songwriter in the manner of Lee Hays, Pete Seeger, and Woody Guthrie from the previous generation, he was forever in the shadow of Bob Dylan in terms of the recognition for his music; but unlike Dylan — who, in retrospect, seemed to approach his work with overpowering facility and talent, but only occasional moments of...
Full Bio

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