Having recently acquired one of the original LP's (1974); I'm still somewhat conflicted by this one. Not because of the music, it's that Baker Bigsby QS encoded mix that just continues to confound me. I decoded it with my trusty Involve Surround Master ver.2 and ripped it to digital at 96x24 for a good clean listen after some De-Clicking and Spectral Noise reduction.
I actually feel now that I've listened to it many times, that the enjoyment of the music grows with each listen. Might be one of my favorite Michael White albums now. It's too bad that it only has had two releases AFAIK via some research; one QS LP and another similar at the time that was a Promo version. Since then nothing from the label, no extra LP's CD's or even streaming/download files to listen to. So I'm sure you can catch some of it off of YouTube to sample the music; however if one was wanting a single inventory type later release somewhere the "Flow" would be stopped in it's tracks! I'd categorize the style of music as a funky more acoustic sounding Jazz fusion of that time; and with White's Violin playing sounding like a jazzier/funkier version of Papa John Creach.
The mix is often that typical Impulse! "
where are the discrete instruments coming from?" feel to it with a kind of heavy handed bass mastering etc. that sounds somewhat soft and muddy overall. However if you do a good decode and listen carefully, you can pick out some semi-discrete sounding features as I'll break down a few below.
The title song 'Go With The Flow' (song number 1) starts with a soft triangle ring in the fronts and a double bass with some wah-wah effect, comes in followed by some spacey moaning vocals that shifts from Front to Rear. Also, some guitar, organ, Rhodes, Violin, of course Drums/Conga and some finger snaps/hand claps that move around the fronts and rears. Kenneth Jenkins plays some very active bass, continually moving the grooves along. Sometimes you'll hear a loud Crash Cymbal in the Rear Left.
On track 3 'In The Silence (Listen)' you'll hear a drum roll go from Front Right to Front Left and down to Rear Left. This sometimes reminds me of something like "Return To Forever" with a more Jean-Luc Ponty feel. The last part of the song has some vocalizations that move around the sound field, along with some Griot Bells and Thumb Piano, giving it a very earthy African sound.
Track 4 'Spaceslide' has some guitar and organ movement (maybe Moog Synth.) that somehow satisfies my more Quad yearnings. Lots of Conga on this one. There is a more straight forward sound here, but since it is an acoustic Double Bass, it just seems recorded (engineered) a little too muddy for me.
Track 6 'Moondust Shuffle' is a real stompin' Jazzy shuffle, with that Papa John Creach violin sound to me. Just a great walking bass line going strong on this one. Sometimes on these songs, it sounds like the Crash Cymbal has some kind Phase pedal effect applied to it.
No wonder this one doesn't have any votes here, given that you'd need to purchase an original Vinyl like I did to give a proper listen. However I believe with the strong musical performance, it's dollars well spent for folks that enjoy this style music in Quad. Hopefully someday this situation will get remedied or else perhaps no additional releases because the masters were lost/deteriorated etc.; which would be a major loss IMO.
For a vote I'll go with a strong
7 for this one, with music about a 9 and the mix/mastering a 6.
Here are some of my scans of the covers (including inside Gatefold) for historical purposes.