| Although their chart hits had long since dried up, Stop Your Motor (1971) 
        became the Association's penultimate long-player and second to last attempt 
        at garnering any degree of hipness. Sadly, the sextet could not have been 
        more out of step with the concurrent popular music trends, which must 
        have been doubly frustrating as this effort actually includes a fair share 
        of decent tunes that would have fit nicely into the burgeoning singer/songwriter 
        genre. When Stop Your Motor was issued in the summer of 1971, it heralded 
        the end of a two-year absence of new material. In the interim there had 
        also been marked change behind the scenes. Most notable was the slightly 
        ersatz production style of Ray Pohlman, a longtime session musician and 
        member of Hal Blaine's infamous "Wrecking Crew." Yet another 
        L.A. studio stalwart, Don Randi, had taken the reigns of one of the Association's 
        most vital assets -- scoring the band's trademark vocal harmonies. Randi's 
        handiwork is at its best on the midtempo opener, "Bring Yourself 
        Home," or the decidedly laid-back lilt of "It's Got to Be Real." 
        While the disc primarily consists of originals from within the combo's 
        own ranks, "P.F. Sloan" is not only one of the record's best 
        tracks, it was penned by singer/songwriter Jimmy Webb as a paean to the 
        West Coast balladeer and composer of the same name. Among Sloan's best-known 
        works are "Eve of Destruction," "Sins of a Family," 
        and "Lollipop Train (You Never Had It So Good)." In fact, the 
        Association covered Sloan's "On a Quiet Night" some four years 
        earlier for the Insight Out (1967) album. Other standouts include Terry 
        Kirkman's (percussion/woodwind) "That's Racin'," which is a 
        whimsical precursor to the burgeoning stock car competitions that would 
        evolve into the NASCAR craze over the ensuing decades. Perhaps the track 
        that most accurately recaptures the Association of old is Gary "Jules" 
        Alexander's (guitar/vocals) familiar mixture of trippy-tinged folk-rock 
        on "Funny Kind of Song," which recalls his earlier contributions 
        "Pandora's Golden Heebie Jeebies" and "Remember." 
        Stop Your Motor was essentially stillborn upon release, stalling out at 
        number 158 and driving a final nail in the band's relationship with Warner 
        Bros., with whom they had been associated for five years. They would return 
        with the equally dismissed Waterbeds in Trinidad! (1972) before splintering 
        shortly after the death of Brian Cole (vocals/bass) in August of 1972. 
       (by Lindsay Planer, All 
        Music Guide) |