A key album in
R. Stevie Moore's early career, 1976's
Stevie Moore Returns is an effortlessly eclectic set ranging from prog rock-influenced instrumentals (like the melodic, almost jazzy "Melbourne," and the colder, electronic "Magnusifence"), to scrappy little pop songs (an interesting new version of
Moore's early standard, "Sort of Way," with a peculiar bongo-like drum track, or the joyous,
Modern Lovers-like "Milk Shake") with plenty of
Moore's patented experimentalism on display. This time out, the experiments involve an interest in funk and disco (in particular, the powerful "Everybody Is So Ignorant" works up a good wah-wah-powered head of steam), and the hilarious "Frank Jones Interview," where Stevie takes a radio station promo disc from Monument Records (the label his father, Nashville session legend
Bob Moore, both co-owned and recorded for) and inserts his own increasingly daffy and desperate answers to
Frank Jones' unctuous questions in place of his Dad's. The CD version of
Stevie Moore Returns includes one of the more delightfully odd items in
R. Stevie Moore's early catalog, The Voice/Lake Inferior, a mostly spoken word collection of surreal stories, stream of consciousness autobiography, found sounds, and tape loop experiments, like the gorgeous, mysterious "Quo Pah." Segments from the three-part "The Voice" would eventually appear on
Moore's first LP,
Phonography (under the titles "Explanation of Artist," "The Voice," and "Mr. Nashville"), as would "Melbourne," the soon-to-be-legendary "Goodbye Piano," and two of
Moore's finest early pop songs, "I Wish I Could Sing" and "I Want You In My Life."