This eponymous album from 1972 was the end of the road for the U.K.-based band
Jericho, but what a long and eventful road it was. Years earlier -- 1965 to be precise -- the group's story began halfway round the world, in the independent state of Israel, as
the Churchills: a beat group that enjoyed considerable local pop success and then recorded perhaps the first Hebrew-sung rock album backing up noted singer/songwriter
Arik Einstein. In 1969, British guitarist
Robb Huxley (of
the Tornados fame) hooked up with
the Churchills amid a tour through Israel and seemingly lured them back to England, where they eventually renamed themselves
Jericho Jones and released a 1971 LP entitled
Junkies Monkeys and Donkeys, to little acclaim. Finally, the band name was shortened to
Jericho and this eclectic, five-song collection of heavy progressive rock resulted as their last musical will and testament…and an enduringly fascinating one it is too. The memorable guitar signature of opening number "Ethiopia" rides a driving beat similar to Krautrock's emergent Motorik style, while ostensive single "Don't You Let Me Down" anchors itself in safer blues-rock territory, but is still both forceful and catchy, thanks to vocalist
Danny Shoshan's snarling intensity. Then we're into the epic compositions -- three of them -- beginning with "Featherbed," which weaves serpentine, Middle Eastern-flavored guitars behind harmony vocals intoning alternately blissful and tormented impressions of a presumed acid trip (or 20), with room in its jam section for a little scat-singing and choppy guitar funk. The cryptically named, string arrangement-laden "Justin Nova" explores a more anthemic, pedantic prog-rock vibe reminiscent of the era's rising, blue-blooded proggies, particularly
Genesis with a little
Yes thrown in. And the big daddy of the bunch, "Kill Me with Your Love," probably lacks its counterparts' focus (meandering off into several solo instrumental spots along its route) but ultimately nails its spiteful chorus to the wall of proto-metal intensity -- with attitude. All told, this material may have lacked some overarching cohesion and obviously yielded no glaringly irresistible chart-beaters, but it still helped
Jericho stand well above the countless forgotten bands that were churning out mindless heavy rock drivel during this period. What's more, there's little available evidence to refute
Jericho‘s status as the first hard rock album produced by an Israel-born band, and it's just too bad that it had to also signal a final stand for its creators.