Kathi McDonald was one of the friends recruited by
Big Brother & the Holding Company to perform on their two post-
Joplin releases,
Be a Brother and
How Hard It Is.
David Briggs, producer of the second
Alice Cooper album
Easy Action and multiple early
Neil Young discs is at the helm on
Insane Asylum. With arrangements by The Jefferson Starship's
Pete Sears, this is a showcase for the chops and musicianship of
McDonald. There's a terrific reading of
the Bee Gees' "To Love Somebody" (which
Janis Joplin covered years earlier), and an interesting first track co-written by
McDonald and
Pete Sears, "Bogart to Bowie," with
Nils Lofgren on guitar and
Bobbye Hall on percussion. The photos of
McDonald on the back cover are chaotic and beautiful, a cartoon caricature of these adorns the cover, the illustration by Seiko Kashihara. With
Ronnie Montrose on guitar and
Pete Sears on keys for a heavy version of "(Love Is Like A) Heatwave," you basically have
Big Brother & the Holding Company/
Montrose/
Jefferson Starship covering
Martha & the Vandellas. This 1974 recording was a year before
Linda Ronstadt repeated
Martha's feat of going Top Five with the song. There is something about the record that feels like the band is holding back. That evaporates with what may be the best performance on the disc, "Threw Away My Love," the second
Sears/McDonald original.
Kathi's great, bluesy vocal fights and
Journey's
Neil Schon on guitar give the track lots of soul, which is missing in much of the record. Surprising because
Briggs is usually intuitive enough to bring out the best in artists. There is an abundance of talent here, creating a nice platform for this important singer. "Freak Lover" features the late
Starship violinist
Papa John Creach and is appropriately manic for an album about insanity.
Willie Dixon's composition, "Insane Asylum," with
Pete Sears and
Nils Lofgren, is a blues workout deluxe.
Neil Schon and
Pete Sears accompany
Kathi on a
Peter Frampton tune, "All I Want to Be." Lofgren and Sears do a heavy cover of
Neil Young's "Down to the Wire" for the singer to display her wonderful voice. With such a stellar cast and so much input this record could have been much more. It's still a respectable showcase for the talents of
Kathi McDonald.
–
Joe Viglione, Rovi