Happy Trails (album)

Happy Trails
Live album by Quicksilver Messenger Service
Released March 29, 1969
Recorded 1968
Genre Psychedelic rock, acid rock
Length 48:41
Label Capitol
Quicksilver Messenger Service chronology
Quicksilver Messenger Service
(1968)
Happy Trails
(1969)
Shady Grove
(1969)
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic[1]
Head Heritage(very favourable)[2]
Rolling Stone(positive)[3]
Sputnikmusic[4]

Happy Trails is the second album of the American band Quicksilver Messenger Service. Most of the album was recorded from two performances at the Fillmore East and Fillmore West, although it is not clear which parts were recorded at which Fillmore. The record was released by Capitol Records in stereo.

Side 1

The first side of the album is the "Who Do You Love Suite", a recorded live performance of the band's extended version of Bo Diddley's song, "Who Do You Love?" The movements of the suite are given separate titles and writing credits. This performance has received high praise:

Other reviewers have been less enthusiastic:

"[T]he ever-modest [John] Cipollina" said "'it was just a two-chord jam.'" (Mick Skidmore, April 2001, Notes to Acadia CD "Copperhead") [7]

Who Do You Love Suite

1. Who Do You Love? (Ellas McDaniel) (a.k.a. Bo Diddley) This is a straightforward rendering of the song in Quicksilver's rock/blues style.

2. When You Love (Gary Duncan) A guitar solo by Duncan in a style somewhere between jazz and rock (described as "Bloomfield-like" [3] ) with a walking bass line by Freiberg.

3. Where You Love (Quicksilver and Fillmore audience) Some apparently improvised guitar and bass plucking and sliding, with feedback, handclapping and audience participation 'almost like a "found object" out of Dada.' [3]

4. How You Love (John Cipollina) A rock guitar solo by Cippollina.

5. Which Do You Love (David Freiberg) A bass solo by Freiberg.

6. Who Do You Love? (Part 2) (Ellas McDaniel) A slower, quieter reprise of one verse of the Bo Diddley song, leading to a pianissimo ensemble vocal, and a finale in which "they hit it all at once, guitars harder and harder. Elmore pounding, voices screaming; everything working." [3] For this finale, Elmore changes to a back-beat, while Duncan and Freiberg still play the Bo Diddley beat and Cippolina plays a lead against the melody, resulting in a polyrhythmic rock sound.

The recorded live performance of the "Who Do You Love Suite" was almost 27 minutes long, and some of Gary Duncan's solo ("When You Love") was excised, perhaps because a side of an LP can contain approximately only 25 minutes of music. At the end, Bill Graham announces, "Quicksilver Messenger Service."

Side 2

Greil Marcus, writing for Rolling Stone, noted that the record has another side but "it took me two hours to even get to the other side." [3]

The second side of the album contains "Mona", another Bo Diddley song, and two compositions by Duncan, "Maiden of the Cancer Moon" and "Calvary", all of which segue. The three songs were originally parts of a single continuous live performance. Both Cippollina and Duncan take a guitar solo on Mona. Following them is a version of "Happy Trails", the theme of Roy Rogers's television show, written by Dale Evans. The live recording of "Calvary" was abridged shortly after the end of "Maiden of the Cancer Moon" and a studio version was recorded and substituted. The ironic comment at the beginning of side two, "This here next one's rock 'n' roll," was also added in the studio.

"Maiden of the Cancer Moon" is an instrumental written by Duncan. The lead guitar is played by Cipollina. This is clearly a scored piece, as opposed to the improvisational guitar playing on "Mona." One description of it says "attitude filled hard rock with that tough guy, slick style of guitar playing that makes you stomp your feet in the middle of class." [4]

Duncan's instrumental composition "Calvary" was called the "F-Sharp Thing" by the band.[8] This music has been described as "acid-flamenco",[3] but it is definitely not flamenco music. It's also been called an "Ennio Morricone-flavored Spanish instrumental[.]" [5] It does resemble orchestral or symphonic music, and it is not readily classifiable as rock, jazz or blues. In the studio, Quicksilver took the themes of Duncan's piece and redid them with an extended introduction, a different cadenza by Duncan, guitar and bass feedback, a brief interlude that rises out of the feedback, and a closing melody, played staccato, that fades out. There are a variety of percussion instruments used besides the standard drum kit: piano (apparently played by pressing all its keys simultaneously with a piece of wood or something), tympani, a tam-tam, a whip, tubular bells, bar chimes (or perhaps the newly invented mark tree), a triangle or a bell, and güiro. In addition, Duncan lays down his electric guitar to play an acoustic guitar during the brief interlude, and then takes up the electric one again. The band also sings wordless vocals in harmony, Duncan shouts, "Call it anything you want!", and the track begins and fades out with "shhh" vocals. The album sleeve says that "Calvary" was recorded "live" at Golden State Recorders, presumably meaning that none of this was overdubbed and it was played by the four members of the band only. There was also substantial editing and additional overdubbing done at Golden State Recorders to both sides of the record.

As a coda, the band sing the theme tune from Roy Rogers' western television show, which lends its title to the album. "Happy Trails" is also different from the other songs on the album. It has "clip-clop percussion, piano and drawling vocals by Elmore[.] " [2] It's "a sweet, slightly corny way to end things." [9] "It clears the sonic palette and also bids adieu to this particular fab foursome of psychedelia." [10] There is no bass played on this track; Freiberg plays a honky-tonk piano part.

Other reviews

Track listing

Side 1 – Who Do You Love Suite
  1. "Who Do You Love (Part 1)" (Ellas McDaniel) – 3:32
  2. "When You Love" (Gary Duncan) – 5:15
  3. "Where You Love" (Greg Elmore) – 6:07
  4. "How You Love" (John Cipollina) – 2:45
  5. "Which Do You Love" (David Freiberg) – 1:49
  6. "Who Do You Love (Part 2)" (McDaniel) – 5:51
Side 2
  1. "Mona" (McDaniel) – 6:53
  2. "Maiden of the Cancer Moon" (Duncan) – 2:54
  3. "Calvary" (Duncan) – 13:31
  4. "Happy Trails" (Dale Evans) – 1:29

Personnel

Awards and accolades

In 1992, the album was certified gold (over 500,000 copies sold in the US) by the Recording Industry Association of America.[12] In 2003, the album was ranked number 189 on Rolling Stone magazine's list of the 500 greatest albums of all time. It was #44 in Rolling Stone's "50 Coolest Records." [13] "Mona" by Quicksilver was ranked number 88 on the 100 Greatest Guitar Songs of All Time by Rolling Stone.[14]

CD Rereleases

"Happy Trails" was remastered and rereleased in audiophile versions of June 2012 (a “mini LP” on CD) and January 2013 (HQ vinyl). An English version came out in 2010. Japanese versions surfaced in 2008 and 2009. Capitol Records released a CD version in 1994.[15]

Album

Billboard (North America)

Year Chart Position
1969 Pop Albums 27
Singles

Billboard (North America)

Year Single Chart Position
1969 "Who Do You Love" The Billboard Hot 100 91

References

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