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18 March 2020

John Carter - One More Mile To Freedom/ The Saddest Word I Know



Top songwriter breaks out on his own to produce sophisticated seventies pop

Label: Spark
Year of Release: 1972

John Carter. How many times have we talked about the man on "Left and to the Back"? Well, we mentioned him as recently as Sunday in relation to Solent's "My World Fell Down". With partners such as Ken Lewis and Gillian Shakespeare, he was an extraordinarily prolific songwriter throughout the sixties and seventies, and in common with most melody peddlers, had far more flops to his name than hits as he toyed, tweaked and speculated with sounds in order to accumulate.

Seldom did he strike out and record under his own name, though "Laughing Man", his duet with fellow writer Russ Alquist, is probably one of my favourite psychedelic era obscurities. This one, "One More Mile To Freedom", is the chalkiest of chalk against that particular Brie, though, being a much more considered, serious attempt at sophisticated seventies pop without a whiff of marijuana induced silliness in the room. 

Rather, "One More Mile To Freedom" is strident, triumphant and epic, sounding like something you'd put on your car stereo shortly after quitting the worst job of your life. Once again, it proves that Carter had the enviable ability to shift and change genres and styles to suit the era's demands. 

The fact this flopped probably won't have troubled him greatly. Success was just on the horizon with Kincade, then later in 1974 with First Class, and Carter kept the bacon coming home throughout the mid-seventies as well as he did the sixties.




3 comments:

Anonymous said...



Thank you David

As always superb !!

Albert

Paul Redbeard said...

Brilliant site - many thanks indeed! Paul

Graham said...

Thanks for this one, I have 'One More Mile to Freedom' on my playlist, as you commented it's definitely one of the more 'epic' sounding tracks out there.