Moby Grpae was formed in September 1966 in San Francisco at the instigation of Skip Spence and Matthew Katz, both of whom had previously been associated with Jefferson Airplane, Spence as the band's first drummer, playing on their first album, 'Jefferson Airplane Takes Off', and Katz as the band's manager. After they were both dismissed from the group, Katz encouraged Spence to form a band similar to Jefferson Airplane, with varied songwriting and vocal work by several group members, and with Katz as the manager. The band name was chosen by Bob Mosley and Spence, and came from the punch line of the joke "What's big and purple and lives in the ocean?". Lead guitarist Jerry Miller and drummer Don Stevenson (both formerly of the Frantics), joined guitarist Peter Lewis (ex-The Cornells), bassist Bob Mosley (of the Misfits), and Spence, now on guitar instead of drums. While Miller was the principal lead guitarist, all three guitarists played lead at various points, often playing off against each other, in a guitar form associated with Moby Grape as "crosstalk". All band members wrote songs and sang lead and backup vocals for their debut album, 'Moby Grape', which was released in 1967. Mosley, Lewis, and Spence generally wrote alone, while Miller and Stevenson often wrote together, and the album is a classic of the period, being ranked at number 121 in Rolling Stone's "500 Greatest Albums of All Time". In a marketing stunt, Columbia Records immediately released five singles at once, but this back-fired and the band was perceived as being over-hyped.
The record was critically acclaimed and fairly successful commercially, with The Move covering the album's 'Hey Grandma' on their self-titled first album. Their second album, 'Wow/Grape Jam', released in 1968, was generally viewed as a critical and commercial disappointment, even though the album charted at No. 20 on the Billboard Pop Albums charts, partially due to the special low price double-album packaging. 'Wow' has a more heavily produced sound than the first Moby Grape album, and string and horn arrangements were added to many of the songs by producer David Rubinson. 'Murder In My Heart For The Judge' is a blues rock tune written by drummer Don Stevenson that was later recorded by other rock musicians such as Lee Michaels, Three Dog Night and Chrissie Hynde, while 'Bitter Wind' remains one of the group's most popular songs, even though it contains an ending that includes harsh wind noises and backward vocals. Other stand-out tracks include Jerry Miller's rocking shuffle 'Can't Be So Bad', Skip Spence's darkly comedic roots rocker 'Motorcycle Irene' and Peter Lewis's lush ballad 'He'. The album also includes an electrified re-arranged version of "Naked, If I Want To", which was on the first album as an acoustic track, while the most unusual track on the album is 'Just Like Gene Autry: A Foxtrot', which was a 1930s-style tune written and sung by Spence, but which was cut into the LP at 78 rpm, with added scratchy sound effects to give it an authentic period effect. This meant that if your record player didn't have a 78rpm speed then you couldn't listen to the song.
In a retrospective review for Rolling Stone magazine, music critic Robert Christgau felt that the album suffered from "Pepper-itis" because of how worthy songs such as 'Can't Be So Bad' and 'Murder In My Heart For The Judge' were diminished by superfluous effects such as horns, strings, stereo separations, and musique concrète. The general opinion of the album is that it suffers from far too much gimmicky production, and it is well overdue for a reappraisal based on the music alone. For this new version, 'The Place And The Time' is a more guitar-orientated alternate take, and although I couldn't hear any strings or brass on 'Murder In My Heart For The Judge' I stripped it back to just the band in case I'd missed them. The cacophony at the end of 'Bitter Wind' is now gone, by using an earlier, more gutsy take, and 'Just Like Gene Autry: A Foxtrot' has been completely removed and replaced with an undeservedly omitted out-take from the album sessions. I couldn't pitch-correct the 'chipmunk' vocals on 'Funky-Tunk' so I've removed them completely, at no detriment at all to the song, which now has the remaining vocals more up-front. The horns are gone from 'Miller's Blues', giving it a rawer blues feel, and anywhere else that strings and horns had been added, they have now been removed, apart from one solo on 'Can't Be So Bad' which nicely filled an empty space. I've also boosted the guitars on that track where the horns previously drowned them out. To my ears it now sounds like a completely different record, and one that I can play repeatedly without dreading the next piece of distracting, gimmicky production.
Track listing
01 The Place and the Time
02 Murder In My Heart For The Judge
03 Bitter Wind
04 Can't Be So Bad
05 Loosely Remembered
06 He
07 Motorcycle Irene
08 Three-Four
09 Funky-Tunk
10 Rose Colored Eyes
11 Miller's Blues
12 Naked, If I Want To