Part 2 of a 2 part Mr. Big special. Â Click here if you missed Lean Into It!
MR. BIG – “Green Tinted Sixties Mind” (1991 Warner UK 7″ single)
I won’t talk about the song “Green-Tinted Sixties Mind”; I did that already. Â (In short: Â “classy and cool”.) Â I picked up this 7″ promo import from the UK from a record show in London (Ontario). Â At $5, it was a no-brainer purchase. Â The sleeve is cardboard, not paper, and pretty cool.
I was in the dark as to what the B-side “Shadows” was. Â The label indicated the song is from 1990, and produced by Giorgio Moroder. Â Although it’s not credited as such, that would make the song from the Navy Seals soundtrack. Â They didn’t write it, so it doesn’t sound like Mr. Big. Â It’s very “hard rock” circa 1990. Â I could swear parts of the verse melody are directly ripped off of Whitesnake. Â So, “Shadows” is a curiosity, nothing to get too excited about.
I know there was a second song from the Navy Seals soundtrack called “Strike Like Lightning”, if you’re interested in tracking it down. Â Also on the soundtrack was Bon Jovi’s cover of “The Boys Are Back In Town” and “Try” by Blue freakin’ Rodeo! Â How the hell did that happen?
MR. BIG – “To Be With You” (1992 Warner Europe CD single)
Like with the other single, I want to focus on the B-sides. Â I will say that this version of “To Be With You” is an uncredited edit version. Â It’s 6 seconds shorter and lacks the count-in. Â This German import CD single has three live tracks. Â I found this one at Fairview Mall in Kitchener, an incredible score for the time!
Mr. Big sound like they are killer live. Â “30 Days In the Hole” is more spontaneous and funky than its album counterpart. Â It’s a lot more fun, and man could this band groove. Â The Tokyo crowd clearly loves it too.
In crashes the old Talas/David Lee Roth speed demon, “Shy Boy”! Â The band can pull it off musically, Sheehan repeating his bass magic, and Gilbert having no problem with a lightning fast solo. The only one who can’t keep up is vocalist Eric Martin. Â His normal soulful voice isn’t right for a song that was defined by David Lee Roth.
The final track is a medley. Â They first tease the Japanese audience with the first couple minutes of “Woman From Tokyo”, before switching gears to “Baba O’Riley”. Â It’s all but seamless, and natural. Â Gilbert plays the synth lines, but on his guitar. Â Meanwhile Sheehan handles the riff, on his bass. Â Martin shines on this one, much more at home with a song like this. Â He really gets to stretch out, and I love it. Â Sounds like Gilbert singing Townsend’s vocal part. Â Really cool.
“Green-Tinted Sixties Mind” – 3/5 stars
“To Be With You” – 4.5/5 stars

