By the late '70s,
Mahogany Rush were no longer simply
Mahogany Rush; they were billing themselves as
Frank Marino & Mahogany Rush, which was appropriate given that frontman
Marino had done so much to shape the power trio's sound. Not only was
Marino Mahogany Rush's lead singer and guitarist, he was also the person who wrote all of the songs on studio albums like 1972's Maxoom, 1974's Child of the Novelty, and 1975's Strange Universe. So when
Tales of the Unexpected came out in 1979, none of
Marino's admirers complained about seeing the name
Frank Marino & Mahogany Rush on the front cover. This is both a live album and a studio album; in its original vinyl LP configuration,
Tales of the Unexpected (which was reissued on CD in early 2008) consisted of four studio recordings on side one and four live performances on side two. Back in 1979, some fans wondered why the band was offering more live recordings after having just provided a live LP for Columbia in 1978; perhaps that was
Marino's way of addressing fans who complained that their live album should have been a two-LP set instead of a single LP. At any rate,
Tales of the Unexpected has a lot going for it. The studio material, all of it solid, ranges from enjoyably psychedelic covers of
the Beatles' "Norwegian Wood" and
Bob Dylan's "All Along the Watchtower" to the funky "Sister Change" and the instrumental title track (which finds the hard rock/metal unit venturing into jazz fusion territory and indicates that
Marino had been seriously checking out
Chick Corea's
Return to Forever and
John McLaughlin's
Mahavishnu Orchestra). The live tracks, meanwhile, include ballsy, inspired performances of "Woman," "Down, Down, Down," "Door of Illusion," and "Bottom of the Barrel." Although not as essential as Strange Universe,
Tales of the Unexpected was a respectable way for
Marino and his colleagues to say goodbye to the '70s. ~ Alex Henderson