Love: Black Beauty

Arthur Lee’s career was marked with missed opportunities, self-sabotage and plenty of plain old shitty luck. Just as his band Love was on the ascendant following the release of their 1967 masterwork Forever Changes, the group fractured due to drugs and infighting. His efforts to move forward with a different lineup were met with indifference, and a potentially lucrative deal with Columbia Records in the early ‘70s was scuttled by his own narcotics use and erratic behavior.
By the time he had gotten his head clear enough (and brushed off the poor reviews and commercial failure of his solo album), he was able to put together an all-black backing band and record a batch of fuzzy and funky soul-rock tunes…only to have the company that promised to put the release out go under. In his frustration, Lee shelved the tapes and relegated the 1973 sessions to legendary “lost album” status.
The re-emergence of Black Beauty in wide circulation, first as a 2012 limited vinyl release and now this expanded CD, is an interesting story alone. Lee’s widow and former manager turned over every stone to find a copy of the master tapes, and were only able to find a copy of an acetate given to John Sterling, a guitarist who joined up with Love in 1974. It was the clearest version of these sessions yet, and provided the foundation for this reissue.
But this new edition also brings up some sorrowful “What if?” speculation. Compared to the drudgery of Lee’s solo album Vindicator and the spotty R&B of Reel To Real, the Love LP recorded with this same backing band, fans have to start imagining an alternate timeline where Black Beauty was given a proper release and Lee returned to his rightful place as one of rock’s true iconoclasts.