Ship of Memories

Ship of Memories is the sixth studio album from the Dutch rock band Focus, released in 1976 on EMI-Bovema. It's a compilation album. During a period of group inactivity, longtime associate Hubert Terheggen asked their producer Mike Vernon to select previously unreleased material for official release. Compiled without any active involvement by any band member, the recordings date from January 1970 to mid-1975, and largely during unproductive recording sessions in 1973 for a follow up studio album to Focus 3 (1972).

Ship of Memories
Compilation album by
Released1976
RecordedJanuary 1970 – mid-1975 in various locations
GenreProgressive rock, instrumental rock, jazz fusion
Length36:22
LabelEMi-Bovema
ProducerHubert Terheggen, Mike Vernon
Focus chronology
Mother Focus
(1975)
Ship of Memories
(1976)
Focus con Proby
(1977)
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic[1]
Discogs[2]

Production

The first four songs were recorded in May 1973 at Chipping Norton Recording Studios in Chipping Norton, Oxfordshire. "P.'s March", though seemingly a pun on "peace march", was meant to be "Pierre's March" in honour of the drummer, Pierre van der Linden. The second, or "B" motif first appeared as a "B" motif in the song, "Carmen Elysium", on Thijs van Leer's "Introspection 2" album. Written in the classical style by Thijs van Leer, but performed with rock arrangements, this song alternates between uptempo, major key choruses, with melody stated on flute and piccolo, and minor key Bachian verses, with melody stated on electric guitar. "Can't Believe My Eyes", originally entitled "Can't Believe My Ears" and subtitled "Dance Macabre", is a bleak, hard rock instrumental written by Jan Akkerman. In stark contrast is van Leer's gentle jazz ballad "Focus V." "Out of Vesuvius" is an excerpt from a 1973 jam session, which would eventually evolve into a long composition like "Eruption". "Glider" marked a move into disco-funk territory, and was recorded in Brussels, Belgium with drum machine and electric sitar amongst the instrumentation. The song was later rearranged and recorded as "Mother Focus". "Red Sky at Night" features synthesised bass parts, and was recorded with vocals as "O Avondrood" on a Dutch music compilation. Recorded in 1970, "Spoke the Lord Creator" was the band's first attempt at using "Brahms Variations on a Theme by Haydn" in a rock music context. It was later recorded as "Starter" on the 1974 Hamburger Concerto album. "Crackers" is another disco-funk instrumental with extended chords more common to jazz. Lastly, "Ship of Memories" is an excerpt of an instrumental on drums and harmonium written and performed by Pierre van der Linden.

Track listing

Vinyl release

Side One
No.TitleWriter(s)RecordedLength
1."P's March"Thijs van LeerMay 19734:43
2."Can't Believe My Eyes"Jan AkkermanMay 19735:17
3."Focus V"van LeerMay 19733:02
4."Out of Vesuvius"Akkerman, Bert Ruiter, Pierre van der Linden, van LeerMay 19735:50
Side Two
No.TitleWriter(s)RecordedLength
1."Glider"Akkerman19754:38
2."Red Sky at Night"Akkerman, van Leermid-19755:50
3."Spoke the Lord Creator"van LeerJanuary 19702:32
4."Crackers"Akkermanmid-19752:42
5."Ship of Memories"van der Linden1972-19741:48

CD release

No.TitleWriter(s)RecordedLength
1."P's March"Thijs van LeerMay 19734:48
2."Can't Believe My Eyes"Jan AkkermanMay 19735:23
3."Focus V"van LeerMay 19733:02
4."Out of Vesuvius"Akkerman, Bert Ruiter, Pierre van der Linden, van LeerMay 19735:50
5."Glider"Akkerman19754:39
6."Red Sky at Night"Akkerman, van Leermid-19755:52
7."Spoke the Lord Creator"van LeerJanuary 19702:33
8."Crackers"Akkermanmid-19752:44
9."Ship of Memories"van der Linden1972-19741:47
10."Hocus Pocus (US Single Version, bonus track)"van Leer,Akkerman19723:25
Total length:40:06

The cover art shows the German World War II heavy cruiser "Admiral Hipper" recovering an Arado Ar 196 plane.

Personnel

References

  1. "allmusic ((( Ship of Memories > Overview )))". www.allmusic.com. Retrieved 2009-11-17.
  2. "Focus (2) - Ship Of Memories (LP) at Discogs". www.discogs.com. Retrieved 2009-11-17.
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