Raw & Alive: The Seeds in Concert at Merlin's Music Box is the fifth album by the American garage rockband, the Seeds, and was released on GNP Crescendo in May 1968 (see1968 in music). It was marketed as a live album, and actually was recorded raw, but all of the album's contents were completed in a studio. The album marks a return to the band's energetic punk sound that previously garnered them national acclaim. Upon release, however, the album, and its accompanying single, "Satisfy You", failed to chart, and the group would eventually disband in 1972.
Background
The Seeds came to national prominence, albeit briefly, with hit singles such as "Can't Seem to Make You Mine" and "Pushin' Too Hard", which made them front-runners in the development of garage rock, and one of the more harder-edged groups of the era.[2] However, the group's psychedelicconcept album, Future saw the band attempt to create a sophisticated sound, and its successor, the blues-orientated A Full Spoon of Seedy Blues, completely missed the national charts. As a result, by 1968, the Seeds had all but been forgotten outside their loyal following in California, they fired their long-time manager Lord Tim Hudson, and the band sought a way to return to past fortunes.[3]
The Seeds attempted to utilize the simplicity of their lyrical and instrumental arrangements of their first two albums and the psychedelia exemplified on Future for their next album.[4] In early 1968, the group entered Western Recorders, in Hollywood, rather than the coffeehouse they occasionally performed in that is mentioned in the album title, with record producer Neil Norman co-producing Raw & Alive. The band's original plan was to replicate the vitality of their live performances, with relatively basic and stripped-down recording methods and an in-studio audience. However, the Seeds recognized that at the conclusion of the recording sessions the dynamics of an actual concert were lacking and the material was scrapped. Though none of the recordings were featured on Raw & Alive, they later appeared on a reissue of the album on Big Beat Records in 2014, with the previously unreleased track, "Hubbly Bubbly Love", included.[4][5]
In April 1968, the band reconvened with the same concept, but without an audience present. Still, Raw & Alive had the authenticity of a live album with an introduction by Merlin's Music Box's local disc jockey, "Humble" Harv Miller, lead vocalistSky Saxon making his traditional dedication of the song, "Pushin' Too Hard", to "society", and crowd noises overdubbed into place.[6] Five of the 11 tracks, including "Pushin' Too Hard", "Can't Seem to Make You Mine", "Mr. Farmer", "No Escape", and "Up in Her Room", were all re-recorded renditions of previously released Seeds songs, though "Up in Her Room" is five minutes shorter than the original version on A Web of Sound. Arguably, among the album's new material, the best-known composition is the organ-driven "900 Million People Daily (All Making Love)", which is seen as a return to the group's lengthy instrumental jams highlighted on past releases.[7] For Raw & Alive, the song was shortened to five minutes, but the full-length version was eventually released on the compilation album, Travel with Your Mind.[8]
Upon release, Raw & Alive failed to chart nationally. The accompanying single, "Satisfy You", also was commercially unsuccessful. The band's lineup began to unravel with Saxon continuing with variations of the group until its first disbandment in 1972.[5] At first, the album's status of being recorded live went unchallenged until versions of "Satisfy You", "Pushin' Too Hard", and "900 Million People Daily (All Making Love)" without the crowd noises were released on the 1993 compilation albumTravel With Your Mind.[9] The alternate take of "Pushin' Too Hard" was actually first issued on the 1977 album, Fallin' off the Edge, but was listed as a "rehearsal". No reissue has a full setlist without audience applause, despite a demand for such a release.[7]