by Thom Jurek
A remarkably fresh and timeless recording, Bruce Cockburn's second album concentrates far more on roots music than its predecessor. There's the ragtime blues of &Happy Good Morning Blues,& the ambitious minor-key troubadour folk of &Love Song,& and the slide guitar country of &One Day I Walk& to kick things off. And over the album's original ten songs it just becomes more ambitious. &Golden Serpent Blues,& with its poignant and percussive piano lines, is something out of a Western Canadian barrelhouse where the piano player has heard and loved &Lady Madonna.& Overall, however, this album -- like Sunwheel Dance that follows it -- presents a far more mystical Cockburn. His tenderness and poetic vision are almost pastoral on these early recordings, something that would get burned off and become hard-bitten (if no less romantic and more dramatic) as his music and social vision grew.