
Chris Hillman
The Asylum Years
(Omnivore)
Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
Thereโs little doubt that this remastered reissue of ex-Byrds/Manassas/Flying Burrito Brothersโ co-founder Chris Hillmanโs first two solo projects would have seen the light of day if not for his recent, well-received Tom Petty-helmed 2017 comeback. Hardcore Hillman fans likely donโt return to these slick, mid-’70s studio sets often and even the artist himself seems pretty unimpressed with them. The liner notes quote a recent interview saying โDoing these records was part of my growing process.โ Not exactly a ringing endorsement.
Those familiar with the West Coast singer/songwriter scene of the era will immediately recognize that these albumsโnow conveniently combined onto one platter– are a product of their time. Hillman was rebounding from the relatively disappointing โsupergroupโ Souther-Hillman-Furay and encouraged by Asylum boss Joe Smith to give it a go as a solo act, something he wasnโt entirely comfortable with at that juncture. But despite these impediments, there are enough keepers to make this worth at least a some of your time.
The first, 1976โs Slippinโ Away, is the better of the two. Hillman had stockpiled songs for a while, so this was his chance to finally record them. The high profile backing musicians include players from S-H-F and Manassas (pedal steel-man Al Perkins pianist Paul Harris, percussionist Joe Lala and drummer Jim Gordon). And with Ron and Howard Albert behind the boards, this was a professional if somewhat sterile production. Opener โStep On Outโ is an obvious aim at crafting a charting pop song. Itโs very much a continuation of his Souther/Furay association, powered by Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young-styled harmonies. Hillman records โWitching Hour,โ a Stills composition left over from his Manassas days with a sizzling slide solo from Donnie Dacus almost buried by overdubbed strings that reek of the time period, not necessarily in a good way. The overall quality of songs like the mid-tempo pop/rocker โMidnight Againโ and the low key title track is impressive, Hillman makes an affable enough lead singer and the closing rootsy bluegrass gospel โ(Take Me in Your) Lifeboatโ with Herb Peterson, Bernie Leaden and Hillman on mandolin is a highlight that shows where his musical heart really lies. Itโs also an early indication of 1985โs Hillman fronted Desert Rose Bandโs approach.
Next yearโs follow-up, Clear Sailinโ tries to replicate the formula, down to its title dropping a final โgโ replaced with an apostrophe. It also has a few winners, in particular a heartfelt if somewhat sappy version of Danny OโKeefeโs โQuits.โ But with such questionable choices as covering Marvin Gayeโs โAinโt That Peculiarโ as tropical funk, the affair resembles a weaker Loggins & Messina. Uninspired production, this time by Jim Mason (not surprisingly of the similar sounding Firefall), doesnโt quite sink it, but comes close.
Both albums get a pass due to retro charm and the sense that the talented Hillman and his backing players are giving it their best shot to land on the radio in the style of that time. But with a storied history like hisโa major player, even architect of folk rockโthey are disappointing reminders that even the most talented artists are led astray by the promise of creating commercial hits and generating forced crossover appeal that doesnโt align with their musical strengths.
