In Search of Amelia Earhart explained

In Search of Amelia Earhart
Type:studio
Artist:Plainsong
Cover:Plainsong_1972.jpg
Released:6 October 1972
Recorded:8–30 June 1972
Studio:Sound Techniques, London
Genre:Country rock/Folk rock
Length:39:28
Label:Elektra
Producer:Sandy Roberton
Chronology:Ian Matthews
Prev Title:Tigers Will Survive
Prev Year:1972
Next Title:Valley Hi
Next Year:1973

In Search of Amelia Earhart is the 1972 debut album by Plainsong. It was released on October 6, 1972, by Elektra Records.[1] [2] [3]

Plainsong was a British country rock/folk rock band, formed in early 1972 by Ian (later Iain) Matthews, formerly of Fairport Convention and Matthews Southern Comfort, and Andy Roberts, previously of The Liverpool Scene. The band's line-up consisted of Matthews, Roberts, Dave Richards (died January 2019) and Bob Ronga (died November 2012). The original group lasted basically a year, splitting up in December 1972. Ronga had already left the band by then due to a drinking problem and Matthews and Richards did not see eye to eye over their musical direction during the recording of a planned second album, the unissued Plainsong III. Both Matthews and Roberts resumed making solo albums in 1973 following Plainsong's demise.

Ian Matthews played in four different band incarnations within three years. He had left Fairport Convention to form his own band, Matthews Southern Comfort, put out two solo LPs for Vertigo Records, and then started the band Plainsong. It is probably fair to say that In Search of Amelia Earhart is the pinnacle of Matthews' work in the 1970s. Working with producer Sandy Roberton (Hard Meat, Steeleye Span, Shirley Collins), Ian and bandmates, notably Andy Roberts who shared vocals on the album, created an atypical British folk album conceived around the idea of the legends surrounding Amelia Earhart and her supposed demise. Both Matthews and Roberts had read the 1966 book The Search for Amelia Earhart[4] [5] by CBS news correspondent Fred Goerner hypothesizing that Earhart and her flying companion Frederick Noonan had crashed around the Japanese held Marshall Islands area and been taken prisoner by the Japanese on Saipan, in the Marianas, in 1937. Their Lockheed Electra plane had supposedly been outfitted with aerial cameras and had a bigger fuel tank than anyone outside of the US government knew. After being grilled by Japanese interrogators Earhart would perish of dysentery, and Noonan was beheaded by the Japanese according to this still unproven theory.

The album at the time was widely perceived as being a concept album, but not all of the songs on the album are directly about Amelia Earhart. But the album carries that somber, mellow tone in which so much great folk music of the early ’70s was in touch. Many of the songs are about seeing and reaching for light, whether they be the light of day or the light of death. So in a way the album is more about the way people felt about, cared about and thought about Amelia Earhart and her death. That she is still considered a heroine of aviation and a distinctly American hero keeps the mystery of what happened to her in the greater cultural imagination.

CD reissues

In Search of Amelia Earhart was unavailable on CD for many years, being first issued as a Japanese-only CD by Warner-Elektra in 1991.[6] It was more widely reissued on Matthews' own label Perfect Pitch in 2001,[7] and again more recently by Man In The Moon Records in 2016.[8]

Plainsong’s unissued second album Plainsong III, now retitled Now We Are 3, finally saw the light of day in 2005 in a 2CD re-issue by Water Records. Simply entitled Plainsong,[9] CD1 features In Search of Amelia Earhart plus various radio recordings and a demo of "I'll Fly Away". CD2 features Now We Are 3, live recordings and two singles, "Along Comes Mary" and "Even The Guiding Light".

Track listing

  1. "For the Second Time" (Ian Matthews) - 3:51
  2. "Yo Yo Man" (Rick Cunha, Marty Cooper) - 2:13
  3. "Louise" (Paul Siebel) - 3:18
  4. "Call the Tune" (Ian Matthews) - 5:22
  5. "Diesel on My Tail" (Jim Fagan) - 2:03
  6. "Amelia Earhart's Last Flight" (Dave McEnery) - 4:05
  7. "I'll Fly Away" (Albert E. Brumley) - 2:03
  8. "True Story of Amelia Earhart" (Ian Matthews) - 4:32
  9. "Even the Guiding Light" (Ian Matthews) - 4:12
  10. "Side Roads" (Ian Matthews) - 3:29
  11. "Raider" (Jerry Yester, Judy Henske) - 4:32

Personnel

Production

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Elektra Records Master Discography . In Search of Amelia Earhart — Plainsong . 15 November 2019 .
  2. Music paper cutting in the 1994 Iain Matthews video Compass & Chart Volume 1
  3. Date stamp on press pack, Andy Roberts website, http://www.andyrobertsmusic.com/music_plainsongpPresPack.html
  4. Published by The Bodley Head Ltd., 1966
  5. Ralph Barker book review, https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/aeronautical-journal/article/search-for-amelia-earhartfred-goerner-the-bodley-headlondon-1966-286pp-illustrations-30s/0BA523729B050A8FDC00B88C4DE167D8
  6. Elektra WPCP-4140
  7. Perfect Pitch PP-009
  8. Man In The Moon MITMCD10
  9. Water 149