Like the 1997 release If You Believe In, this is a dip into the vault of
MacLean solo demos, revealing that the ethereal singer/songwriter had a wealth of compositions that never made it onto
Love records. In fact, not a single one of these songs was included on
Love's first three albums, though a few of them had been written before his departure from the band (and a couple of them appear, in different versions, on If You Believe In). This collection might be considered less essential, for purist fans at any rate, than If You Believe In, as (unlike If You Believe In) this has no bona fide 1960s performances. Seven were done in New York in 1971, a couple were recorded live in 1976-77, and the rest date from the early 1980s (though, according to the liner notes, just five of the 19 songs were written after 1970). As all of the songs feature nothing but
MacLean's acoustic guitar and voice, they may as well have all been done in the late 1960s. Throughout his sound is an odd if alluring package: high, wavering, sometimes almost girlish delicate vocals, entrancing yet rambling melodies, and a similarly rambling lyrical focus of stream-of-consciousness romantic naïveté. Be warned that some may find this way too sappy:
MacLean often sounds as if he's composing/singing love letters right off the top of his head, with a sense of phrasing that would be as at home in theatrical musicals as folk coffeehouses. While some of these were written during the
Love era and might indeed have been nice additions to Da Capo or Forever Changes --
MacLean in fact notes in his spoken intro to "Love Will Be Here" that the tune was going to be on Forever Changes until
Arthur Lee vetoed it at the last minute -- you sense that the band would have really needed to knock them into more concise, rock-oriented arrangements to make them work in that context. Perhaps partially for that reason, nothing here sounds as good as Forever Changes' "Old Man" or "Alone Again Or," which were more taut, in lyrics and structure, than anything here. Nonetheless, it's another useful volume for the serious
Love fan's library, enhanced by a 13-minute 1998 radio interview at the end, in which
MacLean -- with less than a year to live -- bubbles with enthusiasm and optimism for the future. ~ Richie Unterberger