From
allmusic (3.5/5; don't let the rating dissuade you from this one):
" Nowadays Chris Harwood is being touted as Britain's great lost female folksinger. That's understandable -- her sole record,
Nice to Meet Miss Christine, launched the tiny indie Birth label in 1970. The album disappeared soon after, probably because most listeners were unable to get beyond the first track, the exceedingly self-righteous, anti-racist "Mama," whose justified anger doesn't exonerate the song's lack of melody. Or maybe it was due to the fact that
Nice wasn't really a folk album at all, as the guest musician roster makes clear. Guitarist
Peter Banks was a founding member of
Yes, pianist/organist
Tommy Eyre would soon be joining
Rainbow, brass and woodwind player
Ian McDonald hailed from
King Crimson, drummer
Pete York came from
the Spencer Davis Group, and guitarist
Mike Maran would eventually become Britain's top musical arranger. Not a folkie in sight, but one hell of a lineup, expanding the sound of what one assumes was Harwood's own group -- guitarist
Dave Lambert, bassist
Roger Sutton, and drummer
J. Kay Boots. Thus the songs sound phenomenal (even if the transfer to CD creates a hollowness at the center), the musicianship is flawless, and the set is as eclectic as one would imagine with these players on board. Jazzy fusion, jammy prog rock, pomp rock, revved-up R&B, and combinations of all of the above swirl across the set. The musicians are so busy showboating that melodies are mostly ignored, most spectacularly on the covers of
Dave Mason's "Crying to Be Heard" and
Crosby, Stills & Nash's "Wooden Ships," a situation Harwood does little to resolve. She's best showcased on the sultry blues of "Flies Like a Bird," but elsewhere too often slides into waspishness or worse -- harangues. A musical Margaret Thatcher is no good thing, but that's how Harwood comes across, all hectoring tones and wagging finger, even on the love songs. It's no surprise, then, that the iron chanteuse never made another record, but if you can ignore her, the backing is sensational."
Get it here.
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