Rating:
Genre:
Folk
Release Date: 12/08/2009
David Lewis is more known to collectors of late-'60s and early-'70s rock as the leader of the Northern Irish band
Andwella's Dream (later shortened to
Andwella) than as a solo artist. However, while that group was still going -- some sources give the year 1969, others 1970 -- solo
Lewis performances came out on a publisher's demo, issued more than 30 years later on a Japanese release. It's a mixed lot that gives the impression the tracks might have been recorded at separate times and/or separate sessions spaced at least a few months apart. Many of the cuts are solo piano performances that show some similarities to the work of early singer/songwriters like
Carole King,
Randy Newman,
Elton John, and perhaps even a bit of
David Gates. (Some of the melody of
"You Don't Know" certainly recalls
Bread's
"Make It with You.")
"On a Day Like Today," on the other hand, might bring to mind
Jesse Colin Young's mellower compositions for
the Youngbloods. There's a soul-gospel flavor to some of these that makes him sound a little like a singer/songwriter
Ray Charles, though you shouldn't get too excited by that comparison; the songs and vocals aren't on the level of
Charles or the other aforementioned artists. Yet there are also a couple tracks with full-band arrangements and orchestration that sound like they could have been placed on official late-'60s pop/rock releases. Whatever the case, they're only passable songs, though
Lewis is a decently soulful vocalist.
~Richie Unterberger, All Music Guide