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Archive for January, 2011

29
Jan

The Baroque Inevitable – The Baroque Inevitable (1966)

Artist: The Baroque Inevitable
Title: The Baroque Inevitable
Year: 1966
Format: LP
Label: Columbia

Curiosities don’t come much curiouser than The Baroque Inevitable, a 1966 LP of classical — or more accurately, Baroque — arrangements of ’60s pop tunes, arranged, produced and conducted by John Simon, the producer behind the Band’s first two albums, the first Blood, Sweat & Tears LP, Big Brother & the Holding Company’s Cheap Thrills, Cyrkle’s Red Rubber Ball and several other ’60s classics.

Simon was an in-house producer for Columbia, the label that released this LP, and it’s the kind of left-field oddity that only a supremely talented individual supported by a major label could release: it walks a fine line between genuine art and kitsch, and is enjoyable as both.

As the cheerfully psychedelic front artwork and tongue-in-cheek liners on the back suggest, Simon wasn’t taking himself too seriously here — any album that bears the legend “Being a Recital of the Hits of the Day, Performed in the Baroque-Rockque Instrumental Style Popularized by Bach, The Beatles and Other Notables of the 17th through 20th Centuries, AD” was made by artists that are in on several jokes, mocking themselves while tweaking stuffy classical conventions, as well.

To be sure, there’s a lot of lightness here — in how the strings are driven by a rock rhythm sections, how the flutes carry melodies that are better sung, how fuzz guitars wind in and out of the mix, how harpsichords rock like they’re pianos, how “Wild Thing” is melded with “Sunny” — but that doesn’t mean this is a flat-out lark: there’s considerable skill and cleverness behind these sly easy listening arrangements and it never feels tossed-off the way that so many ’60 mellow instrumental pop does.

It strikes a good blend of sunshiney pop and classical substance, as Simon never takes the easy way out: “Yellow Submarine” could be glib, but the melody is downplayed and the performance sounds lush and fresh because of it, while “Strangers in the Night” is turned into dueling harpsichords that lead imperceptibly to a clever round of cut-n-paste collage.

It’s all interesting and provided you’re in the right mood, gently enjoyable, yet it is still at its core a curiosity: the kind of record to marvel at once, to marvel that it actually exists, and to marvel that it’s actually better than its description suggests. And after you marvel at that fact, it’s unlikely you’ll revisit The Baroque Inevitable all that often. (Allmusic)

Track Listing

  1. Rainy Day Women # 12 & 35
  2. Turn Down day
  3. Sunny
  4. All I Really Want To Do
  5. This Door swings Both Ways
  6. I Couldn’t Live Without Your Love
  7. Wild Thing
  8. Yellow Submarine
  9. I Can Make It With You Baby
  10. Strangers In The Night
  11. Eleanor Rigby
29
Jan

Zager & Evans [And Others] – The Early Writings Of Zager & Evans [And Others] (1969)

Artist: Zager & Evans [And Others]
Title: The Early Writings Of Zager & Evans [And Others]
Year: 1969
Format: LP
Label: White Whale

“The Early Writings Of Zager & Evans” was released in 1969 most likely to capitalize on the success of their hit single, “In The Year 2525″.

White Whale who owned the rights to the duo’s early recordings didn’t have enough material for a full LP, so they included the second side of the “Suddenly One Summer” album by J.K. & Co. which was released on White Whale in 1968. This marketing ploy probably helped the selling of the “Suddenly One Summer” (a psych classic!) album more than it did Zager & Evans.

Their recordings on this album are early sixties r&r fodder recorded in 1965 when they were part of a group called The Eccentrics, and is very reminiscent to the Tommy Boyce album which RCA Camden released to exploit the success of Boyce & Hart in the mid to late sixties. (Howard Hales Broom)

Track Listing

  1. Listen To The Raindrops
  2. Lonesome For Your Love
  3. I Still Love You
  4. Night Time Noon Time
  5. Share Me
  6. Stars
  7. Break Of Dawn
  8. Fly
  9. Little Children
  10. Christine
  11. Speed
  12. Crystal Ball
  13. Nobody
27
Jan

Dennis Zager & Rick Evans – Food For The Mind (1971)

Artist: Dennis Zager & Rick Evans
Title: Food For The Mind
Year: 1971
Format: LP
Label: Vanguard

The folk-rock duo of guitarist/vocalists Dennis Zager and Richard Evans made their bid for temporary greatness with “In the Year 2525,” a post-apocalyptic vision of life in the future. Formed in Lincoln, Nebraska, Zager & Evans hit number one with “In the Year 2525″ less than a month after its release in the of summer 1969 (the single was written by Evans, allegedly in half an hour).

The LPs “In the Year 2525 (Exordium & Terminus)”, “Zager & Evans” and “The Early Writings Of Zager & Evans” followed in quick succession before the end of the year, but the pair’s chart run had finished.

“Food For The Mind” a mix of Pop, Folk, Psychedelic sounds, released in 1971 on Vanguard Records, proved to be their final LP. (John Bush)

Track Listing

  1. Food For The Mind
  2. Be My Lady
  3. Hydra 15,000
  4. Princess Ann
  5. The House On Sumner Street
  6. Believe In The Man With A Dream
  7. I Am
  8. Brother Can You Spare A Dime
  9. The Last Two People On Earth
  10. Come Sing My Song
  11. Alice Browning
26
Jan

Aliotta Haynes Jeremiah – Aliotta Haynes Jeremiah (1970)

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Artist: Aliotta Haynes Jeremiah
Title: Aliotta Haynes Jeremiah
Year: 1970
Format: LP
Label: Ampex

Aliotta-Haynes-Jeremiah was an American rock group from the early 1970s.

This West Allis, Wisconsin trio was originally composed of bassist Mitch Aliotta, drummer Ted Aliotta, and guitarist Skip Haynes. Ted left after their debut album to be replaced by pianist John Jeremiah. They scored a popular regional hit (Chicago area) in 1971 with the single and album “Lake Shore Drive,” an homage to the famed lakefront highway in Chicago and (some believe) also to LSD, a hallucinogen.

“Lake Shore Drive”, the album, was re-released on compact disc in 1996 for its 25th anniversary, along with some of their other songs on a 2-CD set. The single 1992 Quicksilver “Lake Shore Drive” CD is missing 2 of the songs from the Original 1971 Big Foot release: “Leaving Chicago” & “Long Time Gone” – aka “Long Time Coming”.

The initials “LSD” are occasionally used in Chicago vernacular to refer to the highway (although it is sometimes referred to as the Outer Drive to distinguish it from Inner Lake Shore Drive, which extends from Ohio St. to Irving Park Rd.).

Outside of the Chicago area, the initials are known only as the name of the drug. Skip Haynes claims LSD had no drug references whatsoever, unlike “The Snow Queen,” which references the up- and downsides of cocaine usage.

The band appeared in a 1978 made-for-TV movie, “Sparrow,” playing a rock band whose lead singer is electrocuted while performing onstage. Keyboardist John Jeremiah died December 5, 2011, in Chester, Illinois. (Wikipedia)

Track Listing

  1. Long Time Gone/When I Was A Cowboy
  2. Poppa Song
  3. Leavin’ Chicago A. M.F.
  4. Tomorrow’s Another Day
  5. For Eddy
  6. Brother’s Keeper
  7. With My Eyes Closed
  8. One-Night Stand
26
Jan

Philamore Lincoln – The North Wind Blew South (1970)

Artist: Philamore Lincoln
Title: The North Wind Blew South
Year: 1970
Format: LP
Label: Epic

Often badmouthed and always considered as a minor piece of music for some reason – I actually think that it’s not far from being a great record. The annoying, filler material is only represented by a couple of tracks (at the end of the album), and pretty much everything else here is good.

The opening track has those sweeping, majestic strings and vocals on par with anything from the golden ear of Baroque Pop. Track 4 “Early Sherwood” has a child-like, melancholy playfulness that reminds me of Syd Barrett-era Pink Floyd, “Temma Harbour” is a great little pop song…

I mean, there are far worse albums from the 60′s out there – I actually think that it’s better than certain overrated records like Dana Gillespie’s “Foolish seasons” for instance – so I really don’t know what doesn’t go down well with people here. It is fresh, it is varied, it has period flavor – good stuff to my ears. (hours in monoxide RYM)

Track Listing

  1. The North Wind Blew South
  2. You’re The One
  3. Lazy Good For Nothin’
  4. Early Sherwood
  5. Rainy Day
  6. Temma Harbour
  7. The Plains Of Delight
  8. County Jail Band
  9. The When You Were Looking My Way
  10. Blew Through
26
Jan

Various Artists – What’s Shakin’ (1966)

Artist: Various Artists
Title: What’s Shakin’
Year: 1966
Format: LP
Label: Elektra

When the Elektra label started to record electric rock music in the mid-1960s, it did so with some baby steps. Really, it wasn’t until the first Paul Butterfield Blues Band album (in 1965) that they did a full-length rockin’ electric platter, and even that LP was at least as rooted in blues as rock’n'roll.

It took Love’s debut album the following year to mark Elektra’s first all-out step into the rock’n'roll LP market (and, with the band’s “My Little Red Book,” into the Top Forty singles charts). And it would take the Doors’ best-selling debut album, and #1 single “Light My Fire,” to put Elektra rock on the top of the charts in 1967.

Along the way, however, the company accumulated a bunch of intriguing unreleased rock recordings by artists who never made an album for the label, as well as some interesting outtakes by artists who did. Rather than keep them locked up in a vault, Elektra generously made 14 of them available to the public with the 1966 compilation What’s Shakin’.

Every cut was by an artist of note — in fact one of the acts, the Lovin’ Spoonful, could have barely been hotter at the time of its release, though unfortunately for Elektra, their string of mid-’60s smashes was issued on another label. Also on board were Elektra’s hottest group of the time, the Paul Butterfield Blues Band, as well as a single track each by Tom Rush (then just beginning to move into folk-rock) and Al Kooper (then just beginning to make his reputation as part of the Blues Project).

Add three recordings by an ad hoc British supergroup with Eric Clapton, Jack Bruce, Stevie Winwood, and lead Manfred Mann singer Paul Jones, and you had an LP of truly interesting odds and ends, even if they didn’t match the best of what these musicians were putting onto their own albums.

Elektra founder and president Jac Holzman confirms that What’s Shakin’ was sparked in part by the recent success of the Elektra sampler Folk Song ’65. That record had included one song, “Born in Chicago,” from the sessions for the first Paul Butterfield album (a different version, incidentally, than the one that appears on the actual debut Butterfield LP).

Elektra was expecting sales of about 25,000 copies, but ended up selling 60,000, in large part due — as Holzman’s phone calls to stores confirmed — “Born in Chicago.” That was a huge success for what was at that point still a fairly small independent record label, and one that, as previously noted, had only barely begun to record electric rock.

What’s Shakin’ did not dilly-dally around — it was all electric rock, and if it wasn’t the sensational sales success that Folk Song ’65 was, as Holzman acknowledges, “it did fairly well. The recordings are from sessions that haven’t been completed.

In the Butterfield case, it was from the first iteration of [their first] album, which never got released. I had had a disappointment with the Lovin’ Spoonful, a disappointment on not getting Clapton. These were things that were sort of made available to me because they liked me, and [the Lovin' Spoonful's] John Sebastian felt he owed me. Which he really didn’t, but John’s a good guy.”

Admits Holzman, “This was an album that had no organic reason for being. Absolutely none. It was material that was available to us, which we tried to put a wrapper around that was reasonably transparent. I don’t think we tried to fool anybody. We were just taking advantage of what we could get.”

But although it sold respectably, he adds, “There was so much great stuff coming out in those days, and everybody could tell what the great stuff was. And nobody sounded like anybody else, for the most part — not true today. I think people were reserving their money for the really good things. And [What's Shakin'] was okay. It’s not stellar.”

The Paul Butterfield Blues Band were prominently featured with five tracks, all of which, as Holzman notes, date from around the time they recorded their debut album. The production of that record was quite troubled, with the first set of studio recordings getting scrapped.

A subsequent attempt at cutting a live album also failed before the group re-entered the studio to put down what became the actual The Paul Butterfield Blues Band LP. (The whole convoluted story is told in Holzman’s autobiography Follow the Music (co-written with Gavan Daws) and the liner notes to the Butterfield CD The Original Lost Elektra Sessions, which contains material from the initial, failed attempt at making a studio album.)

The Butterfield cuts on What’s Shakin’, however, hardly sound like inadequate rejects. Indeed they could have fit into The Paul Butterfield Blues Band LP comfortably, with the Butterfield original “Lovin’ Cup” and a cover of Little Walter’s “Off the Wall” being particularly outstanding. By the way, two of the five Butterfield songs on What’s Shakin’, “Off the Wall” and “One More Mile,” do not appear on The Original Lost Elektra Sessions or The Paul Butterfield Blues Band in any guise.

The four Lovin’ Spoonful tracks on What’s Shakin’ — never to be included, in this form or as re-recorded versions, on subsequent releases by the band — also took a circuitous route to commercial availability. The group had come close to signing with Elektra in early 1965, although they ultimately decided to go with Kama Sutra. The four cuts that made it onto What’s Shakin’ are, a little surprisingly, more roots rock’n'roll than folk-rock, including covers of the Coasters’ “Searchin’” and Chuck Berry’s “Almost Grown.”

Of the two John Sebastian originals, “Don’t Bank On It Baby” shows a similarly heavy R&B influence. Only the self-descriptive “Good Time Music” really flashed the original brand of good-time rock that was the Spoonful’s forte. (As a footnote, it subsequently scraped the bottom of the Top Hundred on a single by the Beau Brummels.)

As to why the Spoonful didn’t stick with Elektra, various of the principals offered various explanations when interviewed for this writer’s book Turn! Turn! Turn!: The Folk-Rock Revolution. Bassist Steve Boone: “Jac Holzman, obviously, was a friend of John’s and Zally’s [Spoonful guitarist Zal Yanovsky] and Erik’s [Spoonful producer Erik Jacobsen].

I had a lot of respect for the Elektra label, just because of the artists that I knew to be on it at the time. But we as a group, and our management and production, all agreed that going with Jac Holzman and Elektra was risky in that we wanted to be clearly identified as a rock band.

We wanted the benefits of being on Dick Clark, we wanted to be in Teen Beat magazine, we wanted to ride around in limousines and act like rock stars. We really felt that Elektra would be a label that would deliver the quality that we were looking for, [but] couldn’t deliver the oomph in the rock’n'roll department.”

John Sebastian: “If we had only gone with Jac, what a different world it would have been. I don’t know if the music would have been that different. I think that part of our decision was that we didn’t want to change horses in midstream. All of our little practice runs had been with Erik Jacobsen.”

Erik Jacobsen: “I think the reason we did the four songs for him was because we felt a little bit guilty. We had kind of hung [Holzman] out to dry just a little bit on that somehow, and allowed him to have those sides.”

Jac Holzman: “Nothing would have been different with the Lovin’ Spoonful [if they'd signed with Elektra], except insofar as [Paul] Rothchild might have produced. I’m not sure whether Rothchild [who would go on to produce Love and the Doors] would not have been a bit too strong for them. I don’t know whether Paul would have let John do what John did without there being some blood on the studio.”

What, then, would have been different? Holzman: “I ran into John Sebastian, he was performing at Central Park many, many years after I had left the business, probably the mid-’80s. I went backstage to see him, and he gave me a big hug, and said, ‘What a mistake we made. We would have sold no fewer records on Elektra, and we would have been paid.’” Jacobsen confirmed that at Kama Sutra, “We were taken to the cleaners, like very few people were in the subsequent era.”

As for the two artists represented by just one song apiece on What’s Shakin’, Holzman believes Tom Rush’s cover of Fats Domino’s “I’m in Love Again” is an outtake from the sessions for his 1966 album Take a Little Walk with Me. That seems logical as that record was split between one entire LP side of acoustic folk, and one LP side dominated by electric full-band covers of rock’n'roll oldies; “I’m in Love Again” could well have been recorded for consideration on the oldies side.

As for Al Kooper’s “Can’t Keep from Crying Sometimes,” it’s been speculated that this was also recorded around the time of the Take a Little Walk with Me sessions, as Kooper had taken a prominent role on the LP’s electric cuts as a pianist and guitarist. Kooper would record a tougher version of the same tune — an adaptation of a Blind Willie Johnson number — later in 1966 as part of the Blues Project, who made it the opening track of their second album, Projections.

The What’s Shakin’ version is actually itself something of a Blues Project recording, as it was cut by the trio of Kooper (on vocals, keyboards, and guitar) and Blues Project rhythm section Andy Kulberg (bass) and Roy Blumenfeld (drums), though the later Projections recording boasted a considerably fuller arrangement.

The most enigmatic recordings on What’s Shakin’ were the three tracks credited to Eric Clapton and the Powerhouse, subsequently revealed to be a studio-only supergroup of sorts.

With Eric Clapton (then in John Mayall’s Bluesbreakers and months away from joining Cream) on lead guitar and Stevie Winwood (then in the Spencer Davis Group) on vocals, the band also included bassist Jack Bruce (then of Manfred Mann), Manfred Mann lead singer Paul Jones (on harmonica), pianist Ben Palmer (who had played with Clapton in a band during a brief interval in 1965 when Eric left the Bluesbreakers, and would later roadie for Cream), and Spencer Davis Group drummer Pete York. For contractual reasons, Winwood was credited under the pseudonym of either Steve Anglo or Stevie D’Angelo on the original LP

It wasn’t hard for anyone with a decent knowledge of the British pop scene to recognize his voice, however, and in the October 29, 1966 issue of Melody Maker, Clapton admitted that “Steve Anglo” was indeed Stevie Winwood. (Winwood would also use the pseudonym of Steve Anglo on a November 1966 recording with John Mayall, “Long Night,” which was issued shortly afterward on the various-artists Raw Blues compilation.)

Probably recorded in March 1966, the three Powerhouse songs on What’s Shakin’ include Robert Johnson’s “Crossroads,” which Clapton and Bruce would bring to rock audiences as two-thirds of Cream, and the instrumental “Steppin’ Out,” which Clapton recorded on his sole album as part of the Bluesbreakers (and which Cream would record in concert and for the BBC). The third item, “I Want to Know” (credited to “MacLeod,” possibly a pseudonym for Paul Jones or the group, as Jones’s wife was British author Sheila MacLeod) would not resurface in Cream’s repertoire, although Ten Years After did it on their first album.

That album, funnily enough, included two songs done by other acts on What’s Shakin’ (“Spoonful,” which had been one of the Butterfield tracks, and “I Can’t Keep from Crying Sometimes”), making one wonder if Ten Years After had been influenced by the Elektra compilation. Incidentally, in a March 1968 interview (printed in 1992 in the Eric Clapton issue of Best of Guitar Player), Clapton said that an unreleased fourth track, identified only as a “slow blues,” was also recorded. “The slow blues was never issued, so they must have it on tape at Elektra somewhere,” he revealed. “It was pretty good, too.”

The Powerhouse cuts were recorded in London at the prompting of Joe Boyd, a young American who would soon go on to become a top producer, often in the British folk-rock field, for Fairport Convention, the Incredible String Band, Nick Drake, and others. “Elektra had an ‘electric blues project’ in preparation and I was opening a London office for them,” he told researcher Christopher Hjort when interviewed for Hjort’s upcoming book on John Mayall.

“I suggested that we include an English blues band in the project. Paul Jones came to see me at Elektra and I told him of my difficulty in finding an unsigned blues band for the project. He suggested putting together an all-star group, and we made out the lineup together in my office.”

This original proposed lineup was the same as that used on the eventual session, Boyd continued, “only with Ginger Baker on drums. But he was away on tour, so we used Pete York instead. Jones approached them, then I worked with Clapton, Winwood, and Jones to choose repertoire — a track to feature each one of them.”

This was, he added, his first recording session in the United Kingdom as a producer, “but Holzman showed up and insisted on taking the tapes to New York to mix, so I didn’t get credit.” Clapton and Bruce, of course, would within about three months be working together in Cream, a trio completed by the intended drummer for the Powerhouse project, Ginger Baker. Clapton would also play, though only briefly, with Winwood in another top-selling rock band, Blind Faith.

Hard as it might be to imagine today, Clapton and Winwood were not well known in the United States when What’s Shakin’ came out. Cream had only just formed and had yet to put out a record; Clapton had not toured in the United States; his pre-Cream band, John Mayall’s Bluesbreakers, were virtually unknown in America; and he’d left his pre-Mayall band, the Yardbirds, before they’d chalked up their first hit.

As for Winwood, while the Spencer Davis Group were already huge in Britain, they wouldn’t have their first significant Stateside hit until early 1967. Of course, had Clapton and Winwood already been international stars when What’s Shakin’ was compiled, they might not have even had the time or inclination to get together with other musicians for the Powerhouse session in the first place.

Instead, they supplied one piece of the puzzle for this intriguing grab bag of tracks by present and future ’60s stars, of which even many fans of the artists remain unaware. (Richie Unterberger)

Track Listing

  1. Good Time Music [Lovin' Spoonful]
  2. Almost Grown [Lovin' Spoonful]
  3. Spoonful [Paul Butterfield Blues Band]
  4. Off The Wall [Paul Butterfield Blues Band]
  5. Can’t Keep From Crying Sometimes [Al Kooper]
  6. I Want To Know [Eric Clapton & The Powerhouse]
  7. Crossroads [Eric Clapton & The Powerhouse]
  8. Lovin’ Cup [Paul Butterfield Blues Band]
  9. Good Morning Little Schoolgirl [Paul Butterfield Blues Band]
  10. Steppin’ Out [Eric Clapton & The Powerhouse]
  11. I’m In Love Again [Tom Rush]
  12. Don’t Bank On It Baby [Lovin' Spoonful]
  13. Searchin’ [Lovin' Spoonful]
  14. One More Mile [Paul Butterfield Blues Band]
25
Jan

Uncle Chapin – Uncle Chapin (1971)

Artist: Uncle Chapin
Title: Uncle Chapin
Year: 1971
Format: LP
Label: Polydor

Uncle Chapin were a Jazz/Rock group from New York and consisted of Mike Mattia – (trumpet-flugelhorn-piano-percussion), Carl Shickler (trombone-flute-guitar), Donny Olson (bass-lead vocals), John Briganti (drums), Angelo Ficara (guitar-acoustic guitar-lead vocals), James Rosolino (trumpet-lead vocals), Paul Mergingoff (piano-organ-lead vocals) and Ed Covi (alto, tenor, baritone, soprano saxes-flute.)

“Breaks, Funk, Jazz, and more Breaks. This nicely textured, self-titled release by the jazz rock band Uncle Chapin, is a worthy addition for people looking to find something different in something that should be familiar.

The release is riddled with horn, drum, and rhythm solos that show off the band’s Jazz and Funk influence. Tracks worth checking out include “Do It”, for its drum and horn solo and it’s musical arrangements midway through the track, and “If You Quit Me”, for it’s tempo change from the meat of the track into the solo section, which has got a really cool down-tempo breakdown.” (Amazon)

Track Listing

  1. Wrong From Right
  2. Do It
  3. Time Is Wastin’ Away
  4. Lo And Behold
  5. Changes
  6. If You Quit Me
  7. You Must Help Yourself
24
Jan

Warlock – Warlock (1972)

Artist: Warlock
Title: Warlock
Year: 1972
Format: LP
Label: Music Merchant

This is a super scarce album of prog-psych heaviness with some blues and funk vibes, In-demand Psych Funk Soul record with plenty of breaks, released on the Buddah subsidiary label, Music Merchant. The album has a very unique sound, somewhat like Next Morning and 100 times better than Maximillian (see June 28, 2010 post). It has a killer colorful cover as well. (Collector’s Frenzy)

Track Listing

  1. Music Box/Struggling Man
  2. So Can Woman
  3. Putting Life Together
  4. You’ve Been My Rock
  5. Thrills Of Love
  6. Love Girl
  7. As You Die/Music Box<
23
Jan

Fear Itself – Fear Itself (1969)

Fearitself

Artist: Fear Itself
Title: Fear Itself
Year: 1968
Format: LP
Label: Dot

Fear Itself was a short-lived psychedelic blues-rock band formed by Ellen McIlwaine in the late 1960s in Atlanta, Georgia. The band released one self-titled album in 1969 on vinyl by Dot Records.

The band featured McIlwaine singing lead vocals as well as performing harp, rhythm guitar and organ. Chris Zaloom performed lead guitar, Steve Cook played bass guitar, and Bill McCord was on drums. (Steve Cook left Fear Itself after this album was recorded and Paul Album joined the group playing bass guitar.)

Inspired by Jimi Hendrix and Cream, the group’s sound was unique due in large part to the McIlwaine’s gospel-bluesy voice and lyrics. The group performed at Woodstock Festival in 1969, and eventually separated after the bass guitarist Paul Album was killed by a drunk driver. McIlwaine later moved to Canada and started a solo career. (Wikipedia)

Track Listing

  1. Crawlin’ Kingsnake
  2. Underground River
  3. Bow’d Up
  4. For Suki
  5. In My Time Of Dying
  6. The Letter
  7. Lazarus
  8. Mossy Dream
  9. Billy Gene
  10. Born Under A Bad Sign
22
Jan

Colosseum – The Grass Is Greener (1970)

Artist: Colosseum
Title: The Grass Is Greener
Year: 1970
Format: LP
Label: Dunhill

The American release of “Valentyne Suite” is unexpectedly much more interesting than the british. The cover’s lettering and photo are a little weaker but musically the album is stronger with the addition of some lovely vocal tracks recorded at the same time the album came out in England. (antonbildern RYM)

Track Listing

  1. Jumping Off The Sun
  2. Lost Angeles
  3. Elegy
  4. Butty’s Blues
  5. Rope Ladder To The Moon
  6. Bolero
  7. The Machine Demands A Sacrifice
  8. The Grass Is Greener


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