Saturday, May 17, 2025

Richard Barone and James Mastro - Nuts and Bolts (1983) ...plus my thoughts on the Bongos new/old live album The Shroud of Touring.

Call it a sheer coincidence, or musical synergy, or whatever you wish, but it didn't dawn on me until just an hour or so ago that tandem with my post this week of the long-neglected Richard Barone/James Mastro collaborative LP from 1983, a band that both gents made a more than significant contribution to, The Bongos are set to release a very belated but terrific live album next week, which I'll address a little later.  

For the uninitiated, Richard Barone was the front-man and bona fide fulcrum for the aforementioned Bongos, a guitar-pop, mini-maelstrom based in Hoboken, NJ who circa the early '80s released a blush of inspired singles and eps, that were consistently critically lauded.  As if 1983 wasn't an eventful year enough with the Bongos making a leap to a major label via the Numbers With Wings ep, Barone's creative juices were loaded for bear, so much so that a small body of songs were set aside from his meal primary ticket and dedicated to another endeavor Nuts and Bolts.  His partner in rhyme, James Mastro had only jumped aboard the Bongos express midway through the band's career, but had already served as a backing guitarist on Richard Lloyd's excellent solo debut, 1979's Alchemy.  

The premise for Nuts and Bolts was democratic with each singer/strummer compiling their respective songs on one side apiece of the record.  Furthermore, it was a logical choice for Barone to put his six numbers here under a separate umbrella from the relatively rambunctious Bongos, given the more contemplative tenor of  acoustic-enhanced pieces "Lost Like Me" and "I Threw a Falcon."  Elsewhere on his side of this proposition, "I've Got a Secret" would have slotted in nicely with what the dB's were finagling with around the same time.  As for the other side of the coin, Mastro's contributions are considerable, yielding the bouncy "In My Pocket" and the driving power-pop aplomb of "Jamais." If he wasn't already a consummate songwriter in his own right at this point, Mastro would in the near-future lend his talents to the likes of Marti Jones, Tim Lee (Windbreakers) and Jill Sobule, among other pursuits like the Health and Happiness Show whom I extoled about just a few months ago.     

As for the more current release I mentioned, read on - although it entails music that's not particularly "current."  1985 was a good year, and if you were The Bongos it was even better.  That’s when the release of the quartet’s first bona-fide album of unique material, Beat Hotel, landed on the heels of half a decade’s worth of lauded singles and eps (not to mention the crucial compilation thereof, Drums Along the Hudson).  The overdue live document The Shroud of Touring captures them at the peak of their collective powers, churning out a generous amount of what was then newer material, yet still attacking the mic and their respective instruments hungry-as-all-get-out on established setlist faves “In the Congo,” “Telephoto Lens,” and their renown remake of T. Rex’s “Mambo Sun.”  The Bongos wouldn’t be long for the world after this tour, but Shroud… stands as a compelling testament to their indigenous stripe of deftly crafted power pop that hasn’t traversed the Earth since.  Ironically, it's seeing the light of day on the the revived Jem Records imprint, who were also responsible for the aforementioned Nuts and Bolts way back when. It's available this coming week on Amazon.    

Nuts and Bolts

Richard's side
01. I've Got a Secret
02. I Threw a Falcon
03. My Side
04. Fie Years Old
05. Lost Like Me
06. Jacob's Ladder

James' side
07. Time Will Tell
08. Dizzy
09. Angel in My Pocket
10. Jamais
11. No One Has to Know

12 comments:

  1. Thanks for this. Saw the Bongos in those days innumerable times and they still get heavy rotation from me. Loved Barone's solo work as well (especially Cool Blue Halo). And every time I see Mastro show up on a stage (he's in Ian Hunter's Rant Band and has been part of Alejandro Escovedo's touring ensemble, among other bands), it's a treat just to see him, and looking ever youthful (well, kinda, but it's in the eye of this aging beholder). This live release was news to me and I can't wait. If you, for some reason, don't know the Bongos, get on it. --Muzak McMusics

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    2. @bigcravings: Thanks so much! I hope you enjoy 'The Shroud of Touring: Live in 1985'!

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    3. Thanks to both of you! It's a great album.

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  2. Hey, thank you for sharing this collection of tracks - its my introduction to these two artists. Muddy Mike

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    2. @MuddyMike: I hope you enjoy discovering our music! All my best, Richard Barone

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    3. Glad i was able to make a new fan!

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  3. Thanks so much for the review! The post-Nuts & Bolts history is not quite accurate, but the good intentions are appreciated. You may find yourself pleasantly surprised in January 2026! With all my best, RB
    httts://RichardBarone.com

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    1. Hey Richard! Probably should have gotten your ok before posting Nuts and Bolts, so I hope you didn't think I was stepping on you. Yeah, I sort of run fast and loose with the facts - I hope I wasn't too egregiously inaccurate! Thanks so much to you and your compatriots for the music.

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  4. Bought this when it came out, great great stuff, thanks!!!!

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  5. I bought the lp back in 1983. Wonderful power pop. I also own any more so an sbd live rec. from Columbia University N.Y. 31.8.83.

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