Something Magic
Something Magic is the ninth studio album by the English rock band Procol Harum, released in March 1977.[1][2] It marks the group's first album recorded outside the United Kingdom, at Criteria Studios in Miami, Florida, and features a shift from the traditional Hammond organ to Yamaha keyboards and synthesizers played by new member Pete Solley.[2] The album was produced by the band alongside Ron and Howie Albert, with core personnel including pianist and vocalist Gary Brooker, lyricist Keith Reid, drummer B.J. Wilson, bassist Chris Copping, and guitarist Mick Grabham.[2] Its tracklist comprises six songs: "Something Magic," "Skating on Thin Ice," "Wizard Man," "The Mark of the Claw," "Strangers in Space," and the multi-part epic "The Worm & The Tree."[2] The latter serves as a concept piece, presenting an allegorical fable about life, death, and regeneration through spoken-word lyrics set to music, which distinguishes it as a notable but controversial element of the record.[2] Musically, Something Magic blends Procol Harum's signature orchestral rock style with atmospheric and grandiose arrangements, emphasizing melodic depth in tracks like "Skating on Thin Ice" while incorporating experimental synthesizer elements.[2] Critical reception was mixed, with praise for the album's melodies and overall grandeur but criticism directed at the spoken sections in "The Worm & The Tree," which some reviewers found overly pretentious.[2] The album has since been reissued multiple times on CD, reflecting its enduring appeal to progressive rock enthusiasts despite not achieving the commercial success of earlier Procol Harum works.[2]Background and Recording
Band Context in the Mid-1970s
Procol Harum, formed in 1967, initially gained fame through their psychedelic rock hit "A Whiter Shade of Pale," but by the late 1960s, the band began evolving toward progressive rock with more orchestral and sophisticated arrangements. Their 1969 album A Salty Dog exemplified this shift, incorporating classical influences and maritime themes that marked a departure from pure psychedelia toward art rock experimentation.[3] This progression continued into the 1970s, culminating in the ornate, jazz-inflected sound of Grand Hotel (1973), which featured lavish production and showcased the band's maturity as a progressive ensemble.[3] The album achieved commercial success, reaching number 21 on the Billboard 200 and earning a UK Silver Disc.[4][5] The mid-1970s brought significant challenges for Procol Harum, including declining commercial performance following Grand Hotel and persistent lineup instability. Guitarist Robin Trower, a founding member known for his bluesy style, departed in 1971 to pursue a solo career, leaving the band to navigate a more keyboard-driven sound.[3] Dave Ball replaced Trower but exited in 1972 amid internal tensions, further disrupting cohesion.[3] Bassist Alan Cartwright also left that year , prompting original member Chris Copping—previously on organ—to return to bass duties, stabilizing the rhythm section alongside drummer B.J. Wilson.[3] These changes, coupled with critical reviews of their live shows, such as a scathing 1975 The Times assessment of their London Palladium performance, highlighted the band's struggles to maintain momentum.[3] By 1976, Procol Harum had regrouped after intensive touring, deciding to record their ninth studio album, Something Magic, which would serve as their final release of the decade.[6] The lineup solidified with Gary Brooker at the helm as lead vocalist and pianist, providing the band's creative core, while lyricist Keith Reid continued his essential role in crafting words despite not performing onstage.[2] Guitarist Mick Grabham, keyboards player Pete Solley, Copping on bass, and Wilson on drums completed the ensemble, reflecting a renewed focus amid adversity.[2] This effort, recorded in Miami's Criteria Studios, represented a deliberate fresh start for the group.[6]Development and Studio Sessions
The songwriting for Something Magic primarily involved the longstanding collaboration between pianist and vocalist Gary Brooker, who composed the music, and lyricist Keith Reid, who provided the words for most tracks.[7] Guitarist Mick Grabham contributed to the songwriting by co-writing "The Mark of the Claw" with Reid, marking one of his notable inputs to the album's material.[7] Recording took place at Criteria Studios in Miami, Florida, throughout 1976, selected for its renowned facilities and track record of producing high-quality sounds for artists such as the Eagles and Bee Gees.[8] This marked Procol Harum's first studio sessions outside the United Kingdom, aiming for a fresh approach after years at London's Air Studios.[7] The band co-produced the album with brothers Ron and Howie Albert of Fat Albert Productions, who brought experience from working with acts like Crosby, Stills & Nash; the Alberts imposed a click track to ensure rhythmic precision but faced resistance from drummer B.J. Wilson due to his distinctive percussive style.[9] They also rejected several early tracks—out of 16 songs demoed, only six made the final selection—to refine the material and focus on stronger compositions.[10] Key events during the sessions included the arrangement of the epic "The Worm & the Tree" suite, which featured symphonic orchestration by Mike Lewis to enhance its progressive scope.[10] B.J. Wilson's contributions shaped the album's rhythmic structures, emphasizing his unconventional drumming that added depth to tracks like "Skating on Thin Ice."[9] Following the completion of recording, bassist Chris Copping departed the band, prompting the recruitment of Dee Murray—formerly of Elton John's band—for the subsequent promotional tour.[2] Technically, the sessions employed extensive multi-tracking to layer instrumentation and achieve the desired progressive rock density, complemented by symphonic elements that integrated orchestral swells into the core sound.[7]Composition and Musical Style
Overall Sound and Influences
Something Magic is classified as progressive rock with prominent symphonic rock elements, characterized by a blend of classical orchestration, piano-driven melodies, and robust rock structures.[11] This genre alignment reflects Procol Harum's evolution within the progressive music landscape, incorporating elaborate arrangements that evoke a sense of grandeur and narrative depth.[12] The album continues Procol Harum's baroque-pop roots established in earlier works such as A Whiter Shade of Pale, while adopting more concise songwriting approaches common in 1970s progressive rock.[13] These influences manifest in the integration of classical motifs with rock instrumentation, drawing from the band's foundational blend of psychedelic and symphonic sensibilities.[14] Instrumentation features prominent piano and organ work by Gary Brooker, delivering melodic anchors and atmospheric textures, complemented by electric guitar solos from Mick Grabham that add soaring, dynamic layers.[12] B.J. Wilson's drumming provides rhythmic drive and intensity, while orchestral arrangements, often scored by Brooker or Mike Lewis, expand the music's epic scope through strings and synthesizers like the ARP Odyssey and Farfisa organ played by Pete Solley.[9] The production, handled by the Albert brothers at Criteria Studios in Miami, yields a polished, radio-friendly mix that contrasts the band's prior rawer aesthetic, achieved through the sessions' focus on clarity and compression.[7] This approach results in a sound that is clear and powerful, emphasizing the ensemble's maturity.[7] Structurally, the album follows a standard LP format totaling approximately 40 minutes, balancing shorter tracks under four minutes with extended compositions, culminating in the 18:35-minute closing suite The Worm & The Tree.[15]Key Tracks and Themes
The title track "Something Magic" opens the album on an upbeat note, with mystical lyrics by Keith Reid evoking wonder and illusion through esoteric imagery drawn from Kabbalistic lore and vegetation myths.[16] Gary Brooker's soaring vocals drive the song, building denser harmonies across verses that heighten tension, while a catchy chorus reinforces its theme of dark, non-virtuous magic opposing natural forces.[16] The structure features each verse in a progressively higher key by semitone, creating a sense of escalating enchantment, supported by a bombastic prelude of powerful octaves and a tritone for unease.[16] "Wizard Man," a short whimsical single clocking in at 2:38, centers on a magical figure with playful, fantastical lyrics that lend it a lighthearted tone.[17] Its pop accessibility stems from a simple three-chord pub-rock structure designed explicitly as a commercial hit, marking Procol Harum's only such intentional effort.[18] Mick Grabham's prominent guitar riff contributes to its groovy, handclap-driven rhythm, making it a standout for its uncharacteristic brevity and fun vibe amid the album's denser material.[19] "The Mark of the Claw," a co-write between Mick Grabham and Keith Reid, delves into dark, fantastical themes of fate and personal struggle, with lyrics portraying judgment errors and haunting reminders like a "dreadful sore."[20] The track builds rhythmic drive through heavy guitar work from Grabham and a grand, sinister piano introduction by Brooker, evolving into a powerful rocker with macabre synthesizer from Pete Solley.[21] Reid's hypnotic, obsessive poetry enhances the mystery, culminating in dramatic sound effects of footsteps, a door, and a scream for a chilling close.[21] "Strangers in Space" closes side one with an atmospheric feel, exploring themes of isolation through lyrics depicting fleeting connections—"strangers in space, travellers in time"—that evoke a spark of recognition amid vast emptiness.[22] Spacey effects, including echoing synth layers and mildly phased vocals, create a floating sensation, while extended instrumental sections feature languid bluesy verses in A minor shifting to a classical chorus, with live versions often expanding via guitar solos and organ cascades.[22] The muted drumming and high-lead bass underscore its tender, personal departure from the band's typical intensity.[22] The album's side-long suite "The Worm & the Tree" (Parts I-III), spanning 18:35, forms an epic narrative critiquing media intrusion, allegorizing the press as a worm devouring the tree of life in a fable-like progression from menace and occupation to resolution.[9] Structured with impressionistic music, spoken narration by Brooker, and leitmotifs unifying the tree and worm themes, it advances through tension-building sections to a heroic drum-driven climax and epic guitar solo.[9] Symphonic influences from Brooker's orchestral scoring enhance its thematic unity, blending romantic swells with rock elements for a morality-tale tone.[9] Recurrent themes across the album—magic, alienation, and societal critique—stem from Keith Reid's poetic style, known for its claustrophobic, hypnotic imagery that transforms personal and cultural tensions into surreal narratives.[21][23]Release and Promotion
Original Release Details
Something Magic was released in March 1977 by Chrysalis Records in both the United Kingdom and the United States.[2][15] The album marked Procol Harum's return following their 1975 release Procol's Ninth, with Chrysalis positioning it amid their roster of progressive rock acts during the label's expansion in the genre throughout the 1970s.[2][24][25] The original release was available in vinyl LP and cassette formats, featuring gatefold packaging designed by Bruce Meek with artwork that evoked the album's mystical and surreal themes through eerie, fantastical imagery.[26][9] The standard edition contained six tracks with no bonus material, totaling a runtime of approximately 40 minutes.[11] The album's launch coincided with Procol Harum's 1977 world tour, which showcased the updated lineup following bassist Chris Copping's departure, including Dee Murray on bass alongside Gary Brooker, Mick Grabham, Pete Solley, and B.J. Wilson.[27] This tour supported the record's distribution and helped reintroduce the band's progressive rock sound to live audiences.[27]Singles and Marketing Efforts
The lead single from Something Magic, "Wizard Man" backed with "Backgammon", was released in the United Kingdom on February 18, 1977, just prior to the album's debut, with the intent to secure radio airplay and introduce the band's evolving sound to a broader audience.[28] Despite its concise, accessible structure designed for AM radio, the single failed to achieve significant chart placement, peaking outside the top 100 in the UK and receiving minimal traction elsewhere.[29] Marketing efforts centered on positioning the album as a bridge between Procol Harum's progressive rock heritage and more contemporary appeal, with advertisements in publications like Billboard emphasizing the title track's melodic hooks alongside the ambitious multi-part epic "The Worm & The Tree" to attract longstanding prog enthusiasts.[30] These campaigns highlighted Gary Brooker's songwriting and vocal prowess as a "return to form" following the band's lineup changes and previous experimental detours, framing Something Magic as a resilient creative statement.[2] Promotional activities included integrating key tracks like "Something Magic" and "Wizard Man" into the band's 1977 tour schedule, which encompassed dates across the United States, Europe, and the UK to build momentum around the February release.[31] Press interviews during this period focused on the group's endurance amid industry shifts, with Brooker discussing the album's thematic fable and orchestral elements as emblematic of their adaptive spirit. However, these strategies faced headwinds from the burgeoning punk rock movement, which dominated airwaves and critic attention in 1977, resulting in limited radio support for the single and album amid perceptions of progressive rock as outdated.[32]Reissues
2000 Repertoire Edition
The 2000 Repertoire Edition of Something Magic was released by Repertoire Records in Germany as a compact disc reissue targeted primarily at European markets.[33] This edition featured digitally remastered audio, enhancing the original recordings' clarity, strength, and overall power through over 6 dB of compression compared to the mid-1970s production.[34] The remaster presented the album omitting "Wizard Man" from the main sequence (resulting in seven tracks: "Something Magic," "Skating on Thin Ice," "The Mark of the Claw," "Strangers in Space," and the three parts of "The Worm & The Tree"), with the original artwork, while adding two bonus tracks: "Wizard Man" (2:39) and the instrumental B-side "Backgammon" (3:24), both sourced from Procol Harum's 1977 single release.[33] Packaged in a gatefold digipak, it included a new 12-page illustrated booklet with previously unpublished band photos and fresh liner notes by music journalist Chris Welch, who contextualized the album's recording at Criteria Studios in Miami during 1976 and its release amid shifting musical trends in 1977.[34] This reissue formed part of Repertoire Records' early 2000s series of Procol Harum catalog remasters, including titles like Procol's Ninth and Grand Hotel, aimed at revitalizing interest in the band's progressive rock legacy.[35] Availability was centered in Germany with limited international distribution through retailers like Amazon in the UK and US.[36] The 2009 Salvo edition later expanded on similar remastering foundations with additional content.[34]2009 Salvo Remaster
In 2009, Salvo Records released a remastered edition of Procol Harum's Something Magic as part of the band's 40th anniversary series, marking it as a deluxe CD reissue in digisleeve format (SALVOCD029). This UK and European pressing built upon the foundation of the 2000 remaster by incorporating additional enhancements and bonus material drawn from the original 1976 recording sessions at Criteria Studios in Miami. The edition was remastered by engineer Nick Robbins, who focused on improving audio clarity to reveal previously obscured instrumentation and subtle nuances in the mix, such as layered keyboards and percussion details that were buried in earlier versions.[37][11] The 2009 Salvo remaster included three bonus tracks: "Backgammon" (3:23), a studio outtake originally issued as the B-side to the "Wizard Man" single in 1977; "You'd Better Wait" (4:44), a live recording from the band's early 1976 performances that received its first official release here; and "This Old Dog" (3:41), captured live at Criteria Studios during the album sessions. These additions provided fresh insight into the creative process behind the album, highlighting unreleased compositions and live energy from the era's tours. Liner notes, penned by Roland Clare, offered detailed anecdotes about the recording challenges, production decisions by Ron and Howie Albert, and the band's dynamics during the Miami sessions, enriching the historical context without delving into broader critical analysis.[9][37][11] Timed to coincide with Procol Harum's 40th anniversary celebrations since their 1967 debut, the reissue aimed to revitalize interest in the 1977 album amid the band's renewed activity in the 1990s and 2000s, positioning Something Magic as an underrated milestone in their discography. This edition concluded Salvo's comprehensive reissue campaign of the group's catalog, emphasizing archival value through its audio upgrades and supplementary content.[37][9]2020 Esoteric Recordings Edition
In 2020, Esoteric Recordings (an imprint of Cherry Red Records) released an expanded 2-CD remastered edition of Something Magic (ECLEC22740), featuring the full original album tracks (including "Wizard Man") on disc one, along with three bonus tracks: "Backgammon" (3:23), "You'd Better Wait" (live, 4:44), and "This Old Dog" (live, 3:41). Disc two contains a complete 1977 BBC Radio 1 "In Concert" session recording from June 21 at the Golders Green Hippodrome in London, with performances of "Something Magic," "Skating on Thin Ice," "The Mark of the Claw," "Strangers in Space," "A Salty Dog," "Grand Hotel," "Conquistador," and "A Whiter Shade of Pale." The set was remastered from the original tapes by Ben Wiseman, with a 12-page booklet including new liner notes by Procol Harum expert Roland Clare, providing historical context and interview quotes from band members. This edition aimed to further highlight the album's legacy with previously unreleased live material.[38][31]Reception
Contemporary Reviews
Upon its release in March 1977, Something Magic received mixed reviews from critics, who appreciated the album's polished production and the band's technical proficiency but often faulted it for lacking the innovation and emotional depth of Procol Harum's earlier works.[39][40] In the UK music press, Sounds magazine highlighted the high musicianship on side one, particularly praising "The Mark of the Claw" for its grand guitar work, synthesizer layers, and dramatic melody, though the reviewer found the rest of the side tame by comparison to the band's classics.[21] Similarly, New Musical Express (NME) commended tracks like "Skating on Thin Ice" for its atmospheric synths and choir, and "Wizard Man" as a strong, effective single choice with restrained guitar, but criticized the album overall as disappointing and not enhancing the band's reputation.[39] In the United States, reactions varied, with some reviewers noting a return to form in the band's sound. Jeff Burger in a contemporary piece observed that Gary Brooker sang with renewed force, and the piano and organ—hallmarks of vintage Procol Harum—were prominently featured again, rendering the album a solid effort despite underwhelming lyrics and the allegorical misstep of "The Worm & the Tree."[40] A review in Newsbeat, however, positioned the 18-minute suite "The Worm & the Tree" as a highlight, describing its music as dynamic and well-suited to Keith Reid's fable-like narrative, evoking a full emotional range amid the side's conceptual ambition.[41] Conversely, Stereo Review deemed the album Procol Harum's worst to date, a grandiose self-parody where the suite failed to live up to past epics like "In Held 'Twas in I," with lyrics lacking Reid's usual wit.[42] The single "Wizard Man" elicited divided opinions, with NME viewing it positively as concise and radio-friendly, while broader critiques folded it into complaints about the album's simplified, less inspired songcraft compared to the band's prog-rock legacy.[39][42] Overall, the consensus reflected ambivalence toward Something Magic's refined yet conventional approach, with the suite's ambition cited as both a bold undertaking and a diluted effort.[41][21]Retrospective Assessments
In later years, Something Magic has garnered mixed but generally appreciative retrospective assessments, often positioned as a competent yet transitional progressive rock effort that closed out Procol Harum's prolific 1970s phase. AllMusic awards the album a 3-out-of-5-star rating, describing it as solid prog fare with competent execution but lacking inspiration, while spotlighting the title track and the ambitious 19-minute suite "The Worm & The Tree" as its standout elements.[1] A 2011 Blogcritics review characterized side one of the original LP as uninspired and formulaic, in contrast to the conceptual ambition of the side-long suite on side two, ultimately framing the record as a bridge between the band's earlier classics and its impending dissolution.[43] Fan discussions in 2020s online communities, such as those on Prog Archives, frequently hail Something Magic as an underrated gem, valuing its polished studio sheen, thematic lyricism, and Gary Brooker's sophisticated songcraft amid the rise of punk rock. A 2020 At The Barrier review of the Esoteric remaster similarly lauds the expanded edition's live bonus disc from a 1977 BBC session, which uncovers the album's latent strengths and underscores its role in preserving Procol Harum's progressive legacy.[11][19] The album is widely regarded as a dignified capstone to Procol Harum's 1970s era, preceding the band's 14-year hiatus before reuniting for 1991's The Prodigal Stranger.[12] Reissues have notably bolstered its standing; the 2009 Salvo edition, with its enhanced remastering and bonus tracks like the previously unreleased "You'd Better Wait," has prompted reappraisals that view Something Magic as a milestone rather than a misstep, enriched by contextual insights into the band's creative process.[9]Commercial Performance
Chart Positions
Something Magic debuted on various international charts in 1977, achieving its highest peak in Denmark at No. 13. The album entered the US Billboard 200 at No. 147, marking a modest performance amid the genre's challenges. In Canada, it reached No. 84 on the RPM Top Albums chart. It did not enter the UK Albums Chart. European markets showed stronger relative support, with peaks of No. 16 in the Netherlands, No. 19 in Norway, and No. 23 in Sweden.[44][45][46]| Country | Chart | Peak Position | Year |
|---|---|---|---|
| United States | Billboard 200 | 147 | 1977 |
| Canada | RPM Top Albums | 84 | 1977 |
| Denmark | Album Chart | 13 | 1977 |
| Netherlands | Album Top 100 | 16 | 1977 |
| Norway | VG-lista | 19 | 1977 |
| Sweden | Sverigetopplistan | 23 | 1977 |
Sales and Certifications
Something Magic achieved modest commercial success upon its initial 1977 release, reflecting the band's waning popularity amid the shift away from progressive rock. The album's sales were hampered by Procol Harum's subsequent hiatus, which curtailed promotional efforts and broader market penetration.[47] No major international certifications, such as gold or platinum awards from the RIAA or BPI, were attained for the original release, underscoring its underperformance relative to earlier works like the debut album's silver certification in the UK.[48] Digital platforms have further sustained its niche appeal among classic rock enthusiasts, ensuring ongoing but limited commercial legacy without achieving blockbuster status.[11]Track Listing and Personnel
Standard Track Listing
The standard track listing for the original 1977 vinyl release of Something Magic follows the format of five tracks on Side One and one extended track on Side Two.[26] Side One- "Something Magic" (music: Gary Brooker, lyrics: Keith Reid) – 3:34[26][15]
- "Skating on Thin Ice" (Brooker/Reid) – 4:46[26][15]
- "Wizard Man" (Brooker/Reid) – 2:30[26][15][11]
- "The Mark of the Claw" (music: Mick Grabham, lyrics: Keith Reid) – 4:37[26][31]
- "Strangers in Space" (Brooker/Reid) – 6:02[26][15]
6. "The Worm & the Tree" (Brooker/Reid) – 18:35[26][15] All lyrics on the album were written by Keith Reid.[49] The total runtime is 40:04.[11]