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Morning - Morning (1970 us, marvelous country folk rock, 2009 edition)

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Based in Los Angeles and originally known as The Morning and The Evening (wisely shortened to The Morning), this short-lived outfit featured the talents of guitarists Barry Brown and Terry Johnson, keyboardist Jim Hobson, drummer Jim Kehn, singer/guitarist Jay Lewis and bassist Bruce Wallace.

Signed by Vault Records, the band's cleverly titled 1970 debut "Morning" was produced by Brown, Hobson and Lewis. With most of the band contributing material, the collection offered up a variety of genres including Poco-styled country-rockers ('Tell Me a Story' and 'Roll 'em Down') and slower-paced folk-rock numbers ('Early Morning' and 'Time'). 

Lewis had a nifty voice, the rest of the band capable of contributing some nice CSN&Y-styled harmonies ('Easy Keeper' and 'Dirt Road'). Sure, it may not have been the year's most original offering, but the set was never less than pleasant and tracks such as 'And I'm Gone' and the trippy 'Sleepy Eyes' were miles ahead of the competition. (The album was originally released with a gatefold sleeve.)


Tracks
1. Angelena (Barry Brown, R. Dinsmore) - 3:27
2. Early Morning (Jay Lewis) - 2:40
3. Tell Me a Story (Jim Hobson) - 3:13
4. Easy Keeper (Jay Lewis) - 2:09
5. Roll 'em Down (Barry Brown) - 3:05
6. Sleepy Eyes (Jim Hobson) - 3:25
7. New Day (Jim Hobson, Jay Lewis,  Barry Brown) - 1:35
8. As It Was (Instrumental) (Jay Lewis, Barry Brown) - 2:50
9. Time (Jim Hobson) - 3:32
10.It'll Take Time (Barry Brown) - 2:30
11.And I'm Gone (Jay Lewis) - 5:23
12.Dirt Roads (Jim Kehn) - 1:30

Morning
*Barry Brown - Guitar, Drums, Vocals
*Jim Hobson - Piano, Organ, Vocals
*Jim Kehn - Drums, Guitar, Vocals
*Jay Lewis - Guitar, Banjo, Vocals
*Terry Johnson - Guitar
*Bruce Wallace - Electric, String  Bass

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The Youngbloods - High On A Ridge Top (1972 us, beautiful soft rock blended with blues 'n' roll, Sundazed remaster)

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The striking Larry Heald painting spread across fie gatefold sleeve of the Youngbloods' 1972 album High On A Ridge Top depicts a panorama of the rugged west Warm outback with a raccoon in the foreground washing a red sphere he's extracted from a mysterious pyramid According to Banana, the band's keyboardist and guitar player, it signifies nothing more than: "If you leave a pyramid full of red balls outside, a raccoon will pull one out and wash it." A simple explanation serves |just as well for the final album by the Youngbloods—still a four-piece featuring singer/guitarist Jesse Colin Young, Banana. Joe Bauer on drums and bassist Michael Kane. It's a bunch of cool tunes the band has always loved. "We'd all grown up with these songs." says Banana. 'They were part of our soul."

"Speedo." a 1955 smash by the Cadillacs, is taken in true doo-wop a cappella fashion for the first couple of choruses until it busts loose with a rousing, full-band finale. Young's sunlit tenor gives Bob Dylan's "I Shall Be Released" its most emotional reading since the version by the Band's Richard Manuel. Lennon and McCartney's "She Came In Through The Bathroom Window" gives Banana a chance to flash his jazz-piano chops on an extended solo, while "Donna" and "La Bamba" are a natural one-two Ritchie Valens punch for Young, alternately breaking your heart and rocking like nobody's business.

A delightful album highlight is Banana's simmering rendition of "Going By The River." a Jimmy Reed classic. "I introduced all the kids at my grammar school in Santa Rosa to Little Richard, Chuck Berry. Fats Domino and Little Willie John," recalls Banana "When I was 13. I got into KWBR, the local R&B station with Rosco The Astronaut and Jumpin' George Oxford."

The Youngbloods were definitely beginning to run on fumes m 1972. "Jesse was starting to do gigs with the Jesse Colin Young Band," says Banana, "and he was writing songs for ;just his own band." One of the tunes Young had penned for Good And Dusty, a set-closing anthem called "Light Shine," admits Banana, "kinda stuck in my craw. Tunes he was writing of a preaching nature rubbed Joe and me the wrong way. When he suggested we do gigs with both the Youngbloods and the Jesse Colin Young Band, Joe and I both said, 'No. man, you can do gigs with your own band, but if we're gonna do Youngbloods gigs it's just gonna be Youngbloods gigs. And that pretty much spelled the end of it."

The finale for the Youngbloods came, appropriately enough, in Massachusetts. "We had decided that was gonna be it," says Banana. "It was at Wolf Trap, this huge festival, and there were 17,000 people there. The very next night was the first gig for the second coming of Banana & The Bunch, in this teeny little coffee house in the Berkshires in front of 18 people. Jesse also had a gig on the next night with his own band, probably with a crowd of 500 people." As all bands must, the Youngbloods had finally run their full course, but the enchanting music they created will forever reverberate from the hills of Marin—high on a ridge top.
by Jud Cost, Santa Clara, CA


Tracks
1. Speedo (Esther Navarre) - 3:19
2. She Caught The Katy And Left Me A Mule To Ride (Taj Mahal, Y. Rachel) - 3:29
3. Going By The River (Jimmy Reed) - 4:59
4. Running Bear (J.P.Richards) - 3:52
5. I Shall Be Released (Bob Dylan) - 5:08
6. Dreamboat (Jesse Colin Young) - 3:14
7. She Came In Through The Bathroom Window (J. Lennon, P. McCartney) - 3:35
8. Donna (Richie Valens) - 3:56
9. La Bamba (Traditional) - 3:52
10.Kind Hearted Woman (Robert Johnson) - 6:10

The Youngbloods
*Jesse Colin Young - Vocals, Guitar
*Joe Bauer - Drums
*Michael Kane - Vocals, Bass
*Banana - Vocals. Guitar, Piano, Mandolin
*Richard "Earthquake" Anderson - Harmonica

Related Act 
1973  Jesse Colin Young - Song For Juli (2009 edition)

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Bond And Brown - Two Heads Are Better Than One (1972 uk, superb progressive fusion jazz rock, 2009 remaster)

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It was inevitable that one day Pete Brown and Graham Bond would work together. They had been friends going back to the early 1960s and the jazz poetry gigs where Pete, Mike Horowitz, Spike Hawkins and the other pioneers of performance poetry would vent their literary spleen backed by musicians on the lunatic fringes of the London jazz scene - including Graham, Dick Heckstall-Smith and Ginger Baker.

For Pete, the Graham Bond Organisation was the best British band and he wrote his classic song 'Theme for an Imaginary Western' with the GBO in mind as they took the blues and R&B all over the UK in vans held together with hope and string to places where the music had never been heard. Pete had been writing songs for Graham and was to play in the last incarnation of the band, but it all fell apart before Pete could join.

In 1972, Pete's band Piblokto was winding down. Meanwhile Graham was in the process of being sacked from the Jack Bruce Band. They had been on tour, promoting Jack's album Harmony Row; guitarist Chris Spedding and drummer John Marshall with saxophonist-surgeon Art Theman comprised the rest of the line-up. Graham was in modern parlance, 'high maintenance1 especially during the times when he was nursing a serious drug habit. Because of his medical duties, Art couldn't make the gig in Rome, which was unfortunate because he was the band's peace-maker between Jack and Graham. But it was there in the dressing room of the Teatro Boncaccio, that Jack got so exasperated with Graham that he ripped the sink out of the wall and threw it at him.

So Pete and Graham found themselves in limbo and decided to join forces. There were a couple of Piblokto gigs to do; one at the Seymour Hall in London and what Pete describes as a "very depressing gig in Southend, a terrible organ trio were the main event singing 'Knees Up Mother Brown' with a singer who was completely out of tune. We were in the psychedelic ghetto with about 18 people."

For the new band, Pete brought in drummer Ed Spevock from Piblokto and bassist deLisle Harper from the recently disbanded Gass formed by Bobby Tench with drummer Godfrey McLean. Graham recruited guitarist Derek Foley from prog rock band Paladin with Graham's wife Diane Stewart on vocals.

They got a record deal with Chapter One, a label formed by composer and conductor Les Reed who went into partnership with Wessex Studios and Donna Music Ltd. Most of the product was 'easy listening', light classical and a few comedy albums, but there was also a connection with Mecca Ballrooms who were looking to book some more progressive acts on their circuit.

The band had two managers, one was a 'silent partner'; the other a tough guy called Mick Walker. His brother is Savoy Brown's Dave Walker; back in the day, they played skiffle together in teenage bands going on to form the Red Caps who landed a record deal with Decca. Dave carried on in bands while Mick became a businessman, establishing the famous Rumrunner Night Club in Birmingham which later became the launch pad for Duran Duran. Maybe the writing was on the wall for Bond and Bond with their manager's opening remarks on meeting the band, "I've just seen Pete Brown and Graham Bond albums together in a remainder bin."

The album was recorded at Richard Branson's Manor Studios, engineered by Tom Newman who worked on Tubular Bells and at Wessex, one of Pete's favourite studios, but sadly sold to developers for housing in 2003. They began by recording an EP which featured 'Lost Tribe', 'Milk Is Turning Sour In My Shoes' and 'Macumbe' and then the tracks for the album. Unlike most British musicians of the times, Pete and Graham had a real affinity for digging into the grooves of a song and imbuing it with soul and funk feels strongly linked to Africa; Pete was a percussionist as well as a lyricist and singer - the Graham Bond Organisation had been driven by Ginger's strong African rhythms who had included Graham (and Diane) in his short-lived band Airforce. So amidst the welter of heavy rock and codclassical prog rock that dominated the British underground scene of the day, this album came from a very different musical sensibility and inspiration.

Between them Pete and Graham wrote most of the songs with contributions from deLisle Harper (nowadays an accomplished arranger) including 'Oombati'. One song, 'Colonel Fright's Dancing Terrapins' was recorded with a slightly different and earlier line-up featuring guitarist Mick Clark from the Clark Hutchinson duo. The song was inspired by some graffiti spotted scrawled on a French wall during a Piblokto tour; "Somebody asked what CFDT meant," says Pete, "it was probably some political slogan, but I just said, 'Colonel Fright's Dancing Terrapins', but we're in northern France so there is something in there about first world war tanks".

Songs like 'Lost Tribe' and 'Looking for Time' were an attempt to express the fact that musicians like Pete and Graham found themselves on the outside of the rock scene in the early seventies, just like they had done in the early sixties when they inhabited the demi-monde of be-bop and 'beat poetry' scorning and in turn being scorned by the jazz establishment. The playfulness in Pete's lyrics sometimes found its way into the music itself; '"Scunthorpe Crabmeat', has about a million time signatures - loads of stops and drop beats all over the place. Piblokto did a straight version of that, a straight shuffle. This was a bizarre, perverted version." As was 'Massed Debate'"a British pervert song" and Pete's homage to 'Arnold Layne'.

The song with the most interesting antecedence was Graham's 'Ig the Pig'. IG were the initials of the Los Angeles boss of a Mercury Records subsidiary label called Pulsar. During his time in the States in 1968, Graham found himself signed to this label along with Dr John and the Doug Sahm Band. With his reputed 'heavy' connections, IG was the guy who did his business at the point of a gun and was one day confronted by Diane (on behalf of Graham who was sick), Mac Rebennack and Wayne Talbot from the Quintet, all coming in search of promised cash. Now Graham, Mac and Johnny  Perez from the Sahm Band all had an abiding interest in the occult - and when they realised that no cash would be forthcoming, they got together to put a whammy on IG. The result? His wife caused a hit and run accident and IG himself was demoted to the ranks very shortly afterwards.

The band were a regular working outfit on the road with a small, but strong following of freaks and hairies especially at The Roundhouse and The Temple in Wardour Street, one of the last hippie outposts of the acid deranged and damaged. They were also signed to EMI in France who were very pro-active in promoting the band where Pete had always had an enthusiastic fan base - although how the band actually survived was a small miracle. Whenever Graham was driving, wheels had the habit of coming off. In fact most of the chaos of this band on the road had Graham at its core. They were in France doing 90 mph with a van full of gear and people, when a wheel rolled past them, "Oh, I think that's one of ours", said Graham. They spun off into a field and somehow Graham managed to bring the van under control before they all perished. With heroin in short supply, Graham would engage country chemists in a series of mumbles and hand signals which would produce varieties of noxious brews that only Graham could stomach. And e.erybody else's stomach turned at the sight of Graham tucking into a huge plate of bloody tripe straight out of a local meat market after an exhausting drive. Coming back through customs, Graham did his bit for Anglo-French relations with loud cries of "You won't find any drugs up my arse."

And it was drugs that finally did for the band. There was trouble anyway because Diane and the manager fell out, resulting in the singer being fired and bringing the fires of hell raining down on Graham's head. They were on tour in Leicester where Pete recalls, "this incredibly frightening woman appeared and gave Graham loads of acid and he did nothing but play feedback all night." The next night in Scarborough, Graham was hospitalised and they did this and the next gig without him and after that the whole band folded.

This was to be Graham's last recorded album. His mental health was deteriorating as his obsession with the occult grew. After a spell in a mental hospital, his life ended tragically under the wheels of a London Underground train in May
1974.

Pete went on to a renaissance career in both music and film, continuing to write with Jack Bruce, forging another productive partnership with ex-Man keyboardist Phil Ryan, recording albums on his own label, touring his band, working in the studio with an array of promising young talent and writing and producing films. He is currently working on his autobiography.
by Harry Shapiro


Tracks
1. Lost Tribe (Pete Brown, Graham Bond) - 3:54
2. Ig The Pig (Graham Bond) - 4:39
3. Oobatl (DeLisle Harper) - 3:45
4. Amazing Grass (Diane Bond) - 5:08
5. Scunthorpe Crabmeat Train Sideways Boogie Shuffle Stomp (Pete Brown, Graham Bond) - 4:05
6. C.F.D.T. (Colonel Frights' Dancing Terrapins) (Pete Brown) - 5:52
7. Mass Debate (Ed Spevock, Pete Brown) - 3:24
8. Looking For Time  (Pete Brown, Graham Bond) - 1:58
9. Milk Is Turning Sour In My Shoes (G. Bond, Phil Ryan, Taff Williams) - 7:31
10.Macumbe (DeLisle Harper) - 3:38
Bonus tracks 9-10 from "Lost Tribe" EP 1972

Musicians
*Graham Bond - Piano, Electric Piano, Alto Saxophone, Vocals, Organ
*Pete Brown - Trumpet, Talking Drums, Vocals
*Diane Bond - Vocals, Congas, Percussion
*Ed Spevock - Drums, Percussion, Backing Vocals
*Lisle Harper - Bass, Congas, Vocals
*Derek Foley - Lead Guitar
*Mick Hutchinson - Guitar On C.F.D.T.
*Mick Walker - Backing Vocals, Percussion
*Sue Woolley - Backing Vocals
*Erica Bond - Backing Vocals

Graham Bond
1965  The Sound Of '65 / There's A Bond Between Us
1970  Holy Magick (Vinyl and Repertoire CD limited edition)

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Brimstone - Paper Winged Dreams (1973 us, spectacular progressive art rock)

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Official reissue by the band themselves,  an early Seventies harmonic progressive / psych rock band from the USA, who made this excellent album. Long instrumental tracks with keyboard and guitar mixing psych with progressive styles in a fragile ethereal manner. 

Formed in Canton, Ohio by Chris Wintrip during the early 1970's. The band went through many incarnations through the years, but will probably be best remembered for their debut album in 1973 titled "Paper Winged Dreams. Features extended instrumental organ/guitar passages, or as is said elsewhere 'long instrumental tracks with keyboard and guitar mixing psych with progressive styles in a fragile ethereal manner.

“Suite In Five Movements” is a complex composition in five movements which features some nice solo vocals complimented by intermingled harmonies; lyrics dominate the music but there's some nice guitar work and counter-pointing vocals; overall well worth investigation.

Rather irresistible melodic prog-artrock LP with a light, airy feel throughout. The band belongs at the dreamy Moody Blues and Camel end of the prog spectrum, with flawless vocal harmonies, long classical-inspired keyboard excursions and plenty of superior guitar interplay.'



Tracks
1. Dead Sleep At Night - 3:12
2. End Of The Road - 3:55
3. Etude - Fields Of Clay - 6:17
4. Illusion - Paper Winged Dreams - 4:51
5. Suite In Five Movements - 18:52
.a.Prelude In C Minor
.b.Song Of Fifths (Thanks To Our Friend)
.c.Interlude To You
.d.Ode To Fear And Loneliness
.e.Epilogue: Forever
6. Visions Of Autumn - 3:15
7. Song Of Love - 2:49
All compositions by Christopher Wintrip, Gregg Andrews, Bernie Nau.

Brimstone
*Gregg Andrews  - Vocals
*Ken Miller  - Bass, Vocals
*Bernie Nau  - Keyboard,s Vocals
*Jimmy Papatoukakis  - Drums
*Christopher Wintrip  - Lead Guitar, Vocals

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Bob Theil - So Far... (1973-82 uk, gorgeous progressive folk rock)

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Scottish born Bob Theil is a singer-songwriter guitarist very much in the tradition of British exponents, such as Roy Harper, AI Stewart, Michael Chapman and Bert Jansch who filled the folk clubs and concert halls in the early seventies.

Entirely self-taught as a guitarist, he has developed his own distinct style on twelve-string acoustic guitar. His music, most of which originates from the 12 string acoustic/electric guitar is an evocative mixture of Celtic atmospheres and intense lyrical images, sometimes with a folk flavour, at other times with a strong rock sound.

Incredible 12string-guitars and the addition of great musicians (by Bill Power, Jimmy Litherland -I noticed Jimmy Litherand also played with Marian Segal-, Jim Covington, Jed Marchant, Mark Brezicki (Big Country, Fish), Steve Hall), creating great indepth songs. The music reminded a bit in mood at Roy Harper's from around the 'Stormcock' period, but much more sparsly arranged. Steve Hall was the producer for this album. He definitely had his share in making the sound so wonderful. Cutting engineer Nick Webb (credited on the Stormcock album of Roy Harper) also was one of those people who knew the value of the music involved. 

I realize now there aren’t too many skilled 12-string guitarists who also are good songwriters. As an introduction to people I prefer to compare and desribe the music of Bob Theil as a combination of the better Roy Harper, the first Perry Leopold album, and some earlier Al Stewart. Bob Theil, knowing the best English literature, having an eye for the world and having an awareness of social & philosophical patterns that people tend to follow, it’s no wonder Bob Theil’s texts have some deep connections. I guess this has evolved through the years. 

Hearing back the remastered CD version now, I realize even more what made the production so successful. Also the band gave a wonderful contribution.  Just hear the electric guitar solo from James Litherland (Coloseum/Mogul Trash/Marian Segal and Jade/Leo Sayer) on “One Day, today or tomorrow”, or Jim Covington on “So Far”. The complexity of Bob’s 12 string guitar picking can be heard on songs like “Moments lost” and on one of my favourites of the album, the instrumental 12-string track, “Wind in the Wires””. 

Another incredible beauty for me is “Who are we now?” with Bob’s voice first in more bass registers, then also with high pitched peeks, again with his 12 string-accompaniment. This kind of relaxed singing in such songs, letting his voice express the underlying, also being emotionally moved by the values of the content, is something Bob Theil will develop even more throughout the years, with various similar beautiful compositions like this one. The instrumental ending on it, is also another example of the fine production. A true highlight ! Also from the last 8’28” track, “December 1918” I can say very similar things, recalling the best Roy Harper.

As bonus track the EP directly recorded from the single is added. I didn’t have much interest in the early days for it, but now when I hear it back I still think especially “Post Mortem Blues”, “Moments Lost” & “Westway” are worth as much investigation. PS. the single was recorded shortly before the LP.


Tracks
1. Yesterdays - 6:01
2. Lady - 3:41
3. One Day, Today Or Tomorrow - 3:56
4. Moments Lost - 2:05
5. So Far - 5:05
6. Westway - 0:05
7. Reflections - 3:03
8. Wind In The Wires - 4:01
9. Who Are We Now? - 5:02
10.December 1918 - 8:04
11.Post Mortem Blues - 3:02
12.Moments Lost - 2:05
13.Reflections - 3:01
14.Another Flight - 4:01
15.Westway - 1:00
All compostions by Bob Theil

Musicians
*Bob Theil - Vocals, 12 String, Acoustic Guitars, Synth
*Bill Power  - Bass Guitar
*Mark Brzezicki  - Drums, Percussion
*Jed Marchant  - Electric Guitar
*Steve Hall - Synth,  Keyboards
*Jimmy Litherland - Electric Guitar
*Jim Covington - Electric, Acoustic Guitar
*Walter Mets - Drums, Keyboards

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Blood Sweat And Tears - New Blood (1972 us, marvelous jazz progressive rock)

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New Blood is the well chosen title for this entry in that the package highlights some change in the personnel with lead singer Jerry Fisher, new to the group, showing first-rate quality throughout.  The B.S.&T. style is strong on "I Can't Move No Mountains," and "Snow Queen," while "Down In The Flood,""Alone," and "Touch Me," showcase the sound of the new blood.  New hit "So Long Dixie" included. 
B/Bd,  Oct. 21, 1972

New Blood was B.S.&T.'s last top 40 album.  While the band was first regrouping, following the departure of David Clayton-Thomas, Columbia released BS&T's Greatest Hits.  The new BS&T led by blind singer Bobby Doyle and featuring legendary Sax-man Joe Henderson, was not getting along very well.  Doyle was dropped in favor of Jerry Fisher, delaying the album even further.  Finally, Columbia released the single, "So Long Dixie/"Alone" which peaked at #44 on the singles chart.  

Two months later, in October, the album was released (Columbia CK-31780), eventually hitting #32 before dropping off of the charts.  A second single, "I Can't Move No Mountains"/"Velvet" was also released but failed to chart.  New Blood isn't in print in the U.S., but there's a Japanese Import CD in print.  Numerous importers carry it.  Scant few of the tracks appear on the What Goes Up! compilation and on the European compilations.


Tracks
1. Down In The Flood (Bob Dylan) - 4:21
2. Touch Me (Victoria Pike, Teddy Randazzo) - 3:33
3. Alone (Lou Marini) - 5:29
4. Velvet (Jeff Kent) - 3:31
5. I Can't Move No Mountains (Michael Gately, Robert John) - 2:58
6. Over The Hill (Dave Bargeron) - 4:20
7. So Long Dixie (Barry Mann, Cynthia Weil) - 4:28
8. Snow Queen (Gerry Goffin, Carole King) - 5:24
9. Maiden Voyage (Herbie Hancock) - 6:14

Blood Sweat And Tears
*Jerry Fisher - Lead Vocals (Except "Velvet")
*Lew Soloff - Trumpet, Fleugelhorn, Piccolo Trumpet, Vocals
*Chuck Winfield - Trumpet, Flueugelhorn, French Horn, Baritone Horn.
*Lou Marini Jr.- Soprano, Tenor,, Alto Sax.  Alto, Soprano Flute,  Piccolo, Vocals
*Dave Bargeron - Tenor Trombone, Bass Trombone, Baritone Horn, Tuba, Percussion, Vocals.
*George Wadenius - Electric, Spanish Guitar, Vocals.
*Steve Katz - Electric Guitar, , 6-String, Electric 12- String, Acoustic Guitar, Harmonica,  Vocals. (Lead On "Velvet")
*Larry Willis - Electric Piano, Hammond Organ,, Vocals.
*Jim Fielder - Fender Bass, Vocals.
*Bobby Colomby - Drums, Percussion,, Vocals.
*Bobby Doyle - Background Vocals On "Touch Me", "Velvet."

The Blood Sweat And Tears
1968  Child Is Father To The Man
1973  No Sweat
1974  Mirror Image
1975  New City
1976  More Than Ever

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The Butterfield Blues Band - Keep On Moving (1969 us, awesome blues rock with jazz and funky vibes)

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Released in 1969, Keep on Moving was the fifth Elektra album by the Paul Butterfield Blues Band. During a four-year span the group's namesake and leader was the only original member left from their first album in 1965. Morphing in a similar direction as Michael Bloomfield's Electric Flag, this edition of the Butterfield Blues Band prominently fronted the horn section of David Sanborn on alto sax, Gene Dinwiddie on tenor, and Keith Johnson on trumpet. 

The band's direction was full tilt, horn-dominated soul music, first explored on The Resurrection of Pigboy Crabshaw, which took them farther away from the highly regarded gritty blues experimentation of East-West and the duel guitar attack of Michael Bloomfield and Elvin Bishop. This album also signaled the final appearance of AACM and Art Ensemble of Chicago drummer Phillip Wilson, whose Butterfield swan song was the collaboration with Dinwiddie on the hippie gospel track "Love March," of which an appropriately disjointed live version appeared on the Woodstock soundtrack album. 

The difference between Butterfield's 1965 street survival ode "Born in Chicago" ("My father told me 'son you'd better get a gun") and "Love March" ("Sing a glad song, sing all the time") left fans wondering if the band had become a bit too democratic. However, on cuts like "Losing Hand," some of the band's original fervor remains. Butterfield's harp intertwining with the horn section sounds like a lost Junior Parker outtake and the Jimmy Rogers' penned "Walking by Myself," is the closest this band comes to the gutsy Windy City blues of its heyday. Butterfield would make a few more personnel changes, release one final disc on Elektra, "Sometimes I Just Feel Like Smilin", and then dump the band altogether to embark on a solo career.
by Al Campbell 



Tracks
1. Love March  (Gene Dinwiddie, Phil Wilson) - 2:58
2. No Amount Of Loving (Paul Butterfield) - 3:14
3. Moring Sunrise  (Paul Butterfield, Phil Wilson) - 2:41
4. Losing Hand (C. Calhoun) - 3:35
5. Walking By Myself  (James A. Lane) - 4:31
6. Except You  (Jerry Ragovoy) - 3:53
7. Love Disease  (Gene Dinwiddie) - 3:29
8. Where Did My Baby Go  (Jerry Ragovoy) - 4:23
9. All In A Day (Rod Hicks) - 2:28
10.So Far So Good  (Rod Hicks) - 2:28
11.Buddy's Advice  (Howard Feiten) - 3:21
12.Keep On Moving  (Paul Butterfield) - 5:02

Personnel
*Paul Butterfield - Harmonica, Vocals, Flute
*Fred Beckmeier - Bass
*Gene Dinwiddie - Guitar, Keyboards, Tenor Sax, Flute, Backing Vocals
*Howard Feiten - Organ, Guitar, French Horn, Backing Vocals
*Ted Harris - Piano
*Rod Hicks - Bass, Cello, Backing Vocals
*Keith Johnson - Trumpet
*Trevor Lawrence - Baritone Saxophone
*Steve Madaio - Trumpet
*Jerry Ragovoy - Piano
*David Sanborn - Alto Saxophone
*Phillip Wilson - Drums, Backing Vocals

Paul Butterfield's back pages
1966-68  Strawberry Jam
1970  Live 
1971  Sometimes I Just Feel Like Smilin'
1973  Paul Butterfield's Better Days
1973  It All Comes Back (Japan Edition)
1976  Put It In Your Ear

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Paper Garden - Paper Garden (1968 us, beautiful sunny psychedelia, 2012 Relics edition)

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A decent if somewhat candy-coated effort in the pop-psychedelic vein, combining cheerful sunshine pop sensibilities with some hard-edged psychedelic playing. It all falls somewhere between the Beatles' Revolver album and the Zombies' Odessey & Oracle (the latter especially on "Man Do You" and "Raven"), with some Sgt. Pepper-type layered choruses and overdubbed strings and other instruments. 

The question is how well it represents the sound of the Paper Garden -- and that begs the larger question behind the purpose of recording an LP; The Paper Garden dates from a period when the answer to that question was starting to change. According to the account of singer/guitarist Joe Arduino, the New York City-based quintet had a solid stage repertory established from performances at colleges in the Northeastern United States in 1967 and 1968, when they got the chance to cut this album under the auspices of British producer Geoff Turner, who was working at Musicor in New York at the time -- presented with that opportunity, the members ended up writing a whole new body of songs for the occasion; thus, the album become a new, self-contained artistic statement rather than a representation of the music by which they'd first attracted attention and defined themselves. 

The songs are filled with catchy tunes played on a mix of virtuoso electric lead and acoustic guitars -- with the occasional sitar, courtesy of rhythm guitarist Sandy Napoli -- and violin, string orchestra, trumpet, and trombone embellishment, and the lead singing coming down somewhere between Paul McCartney and Colin Blunstone with the backing usually very Lennon-esque. The group had three talented songwriters in their ranks whose work was worth hearing and the 27-minute running time isn't even a problem -- the content is substantial enough to make this a nicely full sonic meal and one of the most enjoyable albums of the psychedelic era.
by Bruce Eder



Tracks
1. Gypsy Wine - 3:14
2. Sunshine People - 2:46
3. Way Up High - 2:31
4. Lady's Man - 1:54
5. Mr. Mortimer - 3:51
6. Man Do You - 3:39
7. Raining - 2:07
8. I Hide - 2:23
9. Raven - 2:15
10.A Day - 2:28
All songs by Sandy Napoli, Joe Arduino

Paper Garden
*Joe Arduino - Vocals, Bass, Guitar
*Paul Logrande - Vocals, Lead Guitar
*Sandy Napoli - Vocals, Rhythm Guitar, Keyboards, Sitar
*John Reich - Keyboards
*Jimmy Tirella - Drums, Percussion

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Blood Sweat and Tears - 4 (1971 us, amazing jazz blues rock)

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When Ed Sullivan welcomed Blood, Sweat and Tears to his show a while back he asked them where they got the unusual name from. From Churchill, they replied. Well, since the Kinks did Arthur, everybody knows Churchill isn't worth very much anymore, so as a result the name has been immeasurably weakened. So maybe they ought to shorten it (names of groups are too long nowadays) to just Tears. After all it's the Tears that have always been their most vital component. There really hasn't been that much in the way of sweat except maybe from the spotlights getting too hot. And the only blood has been from the deep scratches Janis inflicted on David ClaytonThomas' back when that pair hooked up once upon a time. So it's Tears and it fits. After all they've always been best at sad ballads and this album is no exception.

And Steve Katz has a lot to do with it, having written two real pretty little things, called "Valentine's Day" and "For My Lady." The first of them is sort of vaguely reminiscent of something with a similar title that Tim Buckley did around four years ago. Which isn't peculiar, since Steve did that Buckley thing "Morning Glory" on the first BS&T album three years ago. Well, his Valentine item is just as pretty as anything by Tim and "For My Lady" is prettier still. It's as pretty as a peach, it's even what some people might call shit-pretty. That's how pretty it is. Lovely in fact. And Fred Lipsius does this even lovelier instrumental thing on both sides called "A Look to My Heart" which sounds like Monk's "Ruby My Dear" and sounds even more like Coltrane's "Naima." Or anything by Bill Evans. You know: concrete timeless breathless prettiness as an excuse for beauty.

Which certainly is a good formula. Like if jazz titans can indulge in it, why not jazz non-titans like BS&T? It's no disgrace to balladize exclusively, maybe they ought to give it a try. It's what they do best, isn't it? When they try to rock with David wailing and flailing it comes off like Paul McCartney doing same. Conviction is abandoned in the attempt to get down, get with it, teach your dog to swim. And conviction is something that actually seems to be on the agenda when they're doing the soft stuff and ever since Elvis did "I Want You, I Need You, I Love You," it's been a well-known fact that ballads need not be worthless. And need not be non-rock either so there's no threat to their masculinity or anything like that.

Anyway, ballads may even be vehicles for the conveyance of meaning. Like on that Indian song by David called "Cowboys and Indians." It's an Indian song rather than cowboys, and it's poignant and yet there's no blood like in Soldier Blue or Little Big Man so it avoids heavy polarities in making its point. Kids'll be quoting it in English classes and maybe even social studies. Richie Havens could even have a decent size hit with it and then it would take on really relevant racial significance.

So you can play the soft touching stuff and then for a change slip the needle over to "Lisa, Listen to Me." It's like a breath of fresh Airplane, circa "We Can Be Together." Steve really pulls off a mind-boggier of a riff on his ax and the vocal that follows doesn't even ruin it. Put the ballads and it together and you've got yourself the best – B-(e)-S-(&)-T – Blood, Sweat & Tears album since the first.

And come to think of it, David's guitar playing on "Go Down Gamblin'" is better than Jagger's guitar playing on Sticky Fingers. And "For My Lady" is a lot like George Harrison's "Something," so I wonder what Joe Cocker would have to say about it.
by Richard Meltzer, Rolling Stone, Aug 5, 1971


Tracks
1. Go Down Gamblin' (David Clayton-Thomas) – 4:14
2. Cowboys and Indians (Dick Halligan, Terry Kirkman) – 3:07
3. John The Baptist (Holy John) (Al Kooper, Phyllis Major) – 3:35
4. Redemption (Halligan, Clayton-Thomas) – 5:11
5. Lisa, Listen To Me (Halligan, Clayton-Thomas) – 2:58
6. A Look To My Heart (Fred Lipsius) – 0:52
7. High On A Mountain (Steve Katz) – 3:13
8. Valentine's Day (Katz) – 3:56
9. Take Me In Your Arms (Rock Me a Little While) (Holland, Dozier, Holland) – 3:27
10.For My Lady (Katz) – 3:23
11.Mama Gets High (Dave Bargeron, Katz) – 4:09
12.A Look To My Heart (Lipsius) – 2:07

Blood Sweat and Tears
*Dave Bargeron - Trombone, Tuba, Bass Trombone, Baritone Horn, Acoustic Bass
*David Clayton-Thomas - Lead Vocals, Guitar on "Go Down Gamblin'"
*Bobby Colomby - Drums, Percussion
*Jim Fielder - Bass, Guitar on "Redemption"
*Dick Halligan - Organ, Trombone, Piano, Flute
*Steve Katz - Electric Guitar, Acoustic Guitar, Harmonica, Mandolin, Lead Vocals on "Valentine's Day"
*Fred Lipsius - Alto Saxophone, Piano, Organ, Clarinet
*Lew Soloff - Trumpet, Flugelhorn, Piccolo Trumpet
*Chuck Winfield - Trumpet, Flugelhorn
Additional Musicians
*Don Heckman - Clarinet, Bass Clarinet ("Valentine's Day" and "For My Lady")
*Michael Smith - Congas ("Redemption")

The Blood Sweat And Tears
1968  Child Is Father To The Man
1972  New Blood
1973  No Sweat
1974  Mirror Image
1975  New City
1976  More Than Ever
Related Act
1972  David Clayton Thomas

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The Allman Brothers Band - Brothers And Sisters (1973 us, classic superb southern jam psych rock, 2013 Japan SHM super deluxe four disc set edition)

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The Allman Brothers Band's first Number One album, 1973's Brothers and Sisters, was a miracle of recovery and reinvention amid grim, enforced change: the deaths, in 1971 and 1972, respectively, of guitarist Duane Allman and bassist Berry Oakley. Guitarist Dickey Betts took a greater leading and writing role, increasing the country light and buoyancy in the Allmans' electric-blues stampede ("Ramblin' Man,""Southbound,""Jessica") as new pianist Chuck Leavell added more barrelhouse and fusion dynamics. 

The road to that symmetry is caught in this four-CD set by a disc of rehearsals and outtakes that sounds like the work of a more brawny, Southern Grateful Dead, at once winding ("A Minor Jam"), earthy and hurting (Gregg Allman's howling in Ray Charles'"I'm Gonna Move to the Outskirts of Town"). A complete 1973 concert from San Francisco's Winterland shows the new lineup's confidence and style of ascension (the stately, climbing pathos in the middle of "Whipping Post") at bright, striving length – before the family really fell apart.
by David Fricke

To say the Allman Brothers Band were up against a wall in the fall of 1972 would be something of an understatement. Just a year before, they had lost guitarist and co-founder Duane Allman in a motorcycle accident. In November 1972, during the recording of their fifth album, ‘Brothers and Sisters,’ their bass player, Berry Oakley, met a similar fate on his bike just three blocks from where Allman was tragically struck and killed.

You’d think all of this would make Gregg Allman, Dickey Betts and the rest of the band throw their hands up and give in, or at least deliver an album full of dire tunes. But that wasn’t the case when ‘Brothers and Sisters’ finally arrived in stores in August 1973.

Not only did the record continue on in the tradition of their previous LPs, the record’s gatefold sleeve features photos of drummer Butch Trucks’ young son and the grinning Brittany Oakley, the late bassist’s daughter. The picture captures a slight moment of innocence and hope, plopped right onto the cover as if to declare, “Everything is going to be all right.”

‘Brothers and Sisters” opening track, ‘Wasted Words,’ is classic Gregg Allman, boasting an urgency boosted by by Betts’ excellent slide work. ‘Ramblin’ Man’ reached No. 2 on the singles chart, becoming the band’s only Top 10 hit. It’s no surprise that it was so successful: The song is the audio equivalent of a cloudless sky. Tie these in with the driving ‘Southbound,’ the entrancing instrumental ‘Jessica’ and the stomp of ‘Pony Boy,’ and you have one of the group’s most enduring albums.

‘Brothers and Sisters’ chills the longnecks and lets the smoke rise on its own. And it’s the perfect portrait of the band before they stumbled into the rest of the ’70s, which were filled with halfhearted records like ‘Win, Lose or Draw’ and ‘Enlightened Rogues,’ various addictions and Cher.
by Tony Rettman 


Tracks
Disc 1 "Brothers And Sisters" (Remastered) 
1. Wasted Words (Gregg Allman) - 4:20
2. Ramblin' Man (Richard Betts) - 4:48
3. Come And Go Blues (Gregg Allman) - 4:55
4. Jelly Jelly (Trade Martin) - 5:46
5. Southbound (Richard Betts) - 5:10
6. Jessica (Richard Betts) - 7:31
7. Pony Boy (Richard Betts) - 5:51


Disc 2 "Rehearsals, Jams And Outtakes" (Previously Unreleased) 
1. Wasted Words - 5:06
2. Trouble No More - 3:58
3. Southbound - 5:56
4. One Way Out - 5:38
5. I'm Gonna Move To The Outskirts Of Town - 11:14
6. Done Somebody Wrong - 3:50
7. Double Cross - 4:35
8. Early Morning Blues - 9:27
9. A Minor Jam - 16:29


Disc 3 "Live At Winterland", September 26, 1973
1. Introduction By Bill Graham - 1:23
2. Wasted Words - 5:17
3. Done Somebody Wrong - 4:01
4. One Way Out - 8:44
5. Stormy Monday - 8:12
6. Midnight Rider - 3:34
7. Ramblin' Man - 7:33
8. In Memory Of Elizabeth Reed - 17:20
9. Statesboro Blues - 4:27
10.Come And Go Blues - 5:12


Disc 4  "Live At Winterland", September 26, 1973
1. Southbound - 6:01
2. Jessica - 9:46
3. You Don't Love Me (Includes Amazing Grace) - 10:49
4. Les Brers In A Minor (With Drum Solo) - 25:49
5. Blue Sky - 4:49
6. Trouble No More - 4:47
7. Whipping Post - 15:04

The Allman Brothers Band
*Gregg Allman – Lead, Background Vocals, Organ, Rhythm Guitar
*Richard Betts – Lead Vocals, Lead, Slide Guitar, Dobro
*Berry Oakley – Bass
*Lamar Williams – Bass
*Chuck Leavell - Piano, Electric Piano, Background Vocals
*Jaimoe – Drums, Congas
*Butch Trucks – Drums, Percussion, Tympani, Congas
With
*Les Dudek – Lead Guitar On "Ramblin' Man", Acoustic Guitar On "Jessica"
*Tommy Talton - Acoustic Guitar On "Pony Boy"

The Allman Brothers Band
1968-89  Dreams (4 disc box set)
1971  S.U.N.Y. at Stonybrook NY
Related Acts
1974  Richard Dickey Betts - Highway Call
1977-78  Dickey Betts And Great Southern / Atlanta's Burning Down (2010 Retro World reissue)
1977  Sea Level - Sea Level
1977  Sea Level - Cats On The Coast

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The Case - Blackwood (1971 us, terrific primitive misty psychedelia, 2013 release)

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The title alone is portentous, at the very least semi-evil sounding. Fear not, there are no devils, demons, or witches lurking in these woods. Instead we have a heretofore almost completely unknown and rarely spoken of album of nine original tracks, self-released on the legendary RPC Records label by a group of self-motivated teens from Pennsylvania. Luckily for lovers of musical mayhem, the Case got access to their school music room and a four-track recorder over a Christmas break in 1971.

A rock-solid, hard-driving rhythm section lays down the necessary underpinning for moody organ and beautifully-toned guitar. There is sheer joy at play here, a kind of rock ‘n’ roll exuberance—with ample raw talent and wicked riffing—which shines through on every cut. Terrific raw, primitive thrashy rock album, simultaneously loose and intense, like the Velvet Underground at their best.
Light-In The Attic


Tracks
1. Someday - 5:10
2. On My Way - 3:41
3. Ali On The Run - 4:06
4. Crystal Ball - 7:56
5. Coming Home - 2:55
6. Loneliness - 3:14
7. Blackwood - 7:15
8. Lover - 4:32
9. Out Of It - 3:06

The Case
*Bill Nawrocki - Organ, Vocals
*David Curulla - Guitar, Vocals
*Daevid Learn - Drums
*John Johnstone - Bass, Vocals

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The Buttefield Blues Band - In My Own Dream (1968 us, magnificent blues jazzy psych rock)

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Sometimes, one has to wonder whether the youth of the 1960s were really as open to new ideas and new sounds as their press would make you believe. Take the album at hand, In My Own Dream by the Paul Butterfield Blues Band -- their fourth official release (though two others have since gone into their discography at earlier points), it marked the point where the band really began to lose its audience, and all for reasons having nothing to do with the quality of their music. 

They'd gotten past the loss of Michael Bloomfield in early 1967, over which they'd surrendered some of their audience of guitar idolaters, with the engagingly titled (and guitar-focused) Resurrection of Pigboy Crabshaw. In My Own Dream had its great guitar moments, especially on "Just to Be With You," but throughout the album, Elvin Bishop's electric guitar shared the spotlight with the horn section of Gene Dinwiddle, David Sanborn, and Keith Johnson, who had signed on with the prior album and who were more out in front than ever. 

More to the point, this album represented a new version of the band being born, with shared lead vocals, with the leader himself only taking three of the seven songs, and bassist Bugsy Maugh singing lead on two songs, Bishop on one, and drummer Phillip Wilson taking one song. What's more, there was a widely shared spotlight for the players, and more of a jazz influence on this record than had ever been heard before from the group. This was a band that could jam quietly for five minutes on "Drunk Again," building ever-so-slowly to a bluesy crescendo where Bishop's guitar and Mark Naftalin's organ surged; and follow it with the title track, a totally surprising acoustic guitar-driven piece featuring Sanborn, Dinwiddle, and Johnson. The playing was impressive, especially for a record aimed at a collegiate audience, but the record had the bad fortune to appear at a point when jazz was culturally suspect among the young, an elitist and not easily accessible brand of music that seemed almost as remote as classical music (i.e. "old people's" music). 

"Get Yourself Together" was almost too good a piece of Chicago-style blues, a faux Chess Records-style track that might even have been too "black" for the remnants of Butterfield's old audience. It also anticipated the group's final change of direction, its blossoming into a multi-genre blues/jazz/R&B/soul outfit, equally devoted to all four genres and myriad permutations of each. It might not be essential listening for dedicated fans of the original band, but for those who hung on to its glorious end -- the double-live LP (a double-live CD and twice as long, as of late 2004) -- this is the missing link, how they got there.
by Bruce Eder


Tracks
1. Last Hope's Gone (David Sanborn, Paul Butterfield, Jim Hayne) - 4:52
2. Mine To Love (Bugsy Maugh) - 4:21
3. Get Yourself Together (Bugsy Maugh) - 4:10
4. Just To Be With You (Bernie Roth) - 6:12
5. Morning Blues (Bugsy Maugh) - 4:58
6. Drunk Again (Elvin Bishop) - 6:08
7. In My Own Dream (Paul Butterfield) - 5:48

Musicians
*Paul Butterfield - Harmonica, Vocals
*Elvin Bishop - Guitar, Vocals
*Al Kooper  - Organ
*David Sanborn - Saxophone, Alto, Baritone, Soprano Sax
*Brother Gene Dinwiddie  - Flute, Mandolin, Saxophone, Tambourine, Vocals
*Bugsy Maugh - Bass, Vocals
*Mark Naftalin  - Keyboards
*Phillip Wilson - Drums, Vocals
*Keith Johnson - Trumpet
*Naffy Markham -  Keyboards

Paul Butterfield's back pages
1966-68  Strawberry Jam
1969  Keep On Moving
1970  Live 
1971  Sometimes I Just Feel Like Smilin'
1973  Paul Butterfield's Better Days
1973  It All Comes Back (Japan Edition)
1976  Put It In Your Ear
Related Act
1969-70/72  Elvin Bishop - Party Till The Cows Come Home
1974  Elvin Bishop - Let It Flow
1977  Elvin Bishop - Live! Raisin' Hell

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Euphoria - Euphoria (1969 us, bright ethereal sunny folk, korean remaster)

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Anyone who has ever seen Tom Pacheco perform knows that they have been in the presence of greatness, watching a singer/songwriter who is a master of his craft and who, if there were any justice in the world (even though we know such a commodity is in desperately short supply in the 21st Century), would be as well-known as Woody Guthrie or Bob Dylan.

Tom has lived the life of a troubadour since the mid-1960s, and has now made around 20 original albums which have been released on a variety of labels in the USA (his earliest recordings and several more recently) and Europe (mainly in the last 20 ears). Yet Tom is not - yet - a household name, and one cannot avoid thinking that there are parallels between this often brilliant and always engaging artist and another artist in a different field, the celebrated painter Vincent Van Gogh. 

The latter is now recognised s a genius, yet in his lifetime, he famously failed to sell a single painting. Tom's fate has not been quite so desperate. He has managed to sell small quantities of is amazing albums over the past 35 years, but never as many as his artistry deserved. 

Tom was born on 4th November 1946, in New Bedford, Massachusetts. His father, Tony Pacheco, was a jazz guitarist who played with Django Reinhardt as well as solo in clubs in Europe before returning to the US to raise a family and open a music store, where he also taught guitar.

Tom began playing guitar at the age of 10, studying both Flamenco and classical styles, and in 1965, as a 9 year old, released his first solo album, “Turn Away rom The Storm”, a collection of original folk songs he had written two or three years before. It was made for a small local label known as Witchgreen Records, and Tom thinks they probably only pressed 500 copies. He also notes that he now owns that album and could be leased to license it if anyone's interested. The Van Gogh comparisons continue: that solo album could soon be reissued, and now the Euphoria album.

Tom left Massachusetts to study at Hofstra niversity in New York City, where he formed a band called The Ragamuffins, which supported Jimi Hendrix in a number of occasions and also released two singles on Seville and London Records. These singles are extremely obscure; no doubt, if Tom had become a superstar, they would have been reissued on many occasions, but as it is, hunting through oldies shops probably provides the only solution if anyone feels that owning them is important. 

In 1969 Tom joined forces with The Beckets which actually were Roger and Wendy Penney, they started their entertainment careers as actors, working with Boston's Theatre Company.  Using the stage name Roger and Wendy Beckett, by the mid-'60s the pair had turned their attentions to music, becoming fixtures on New York's Greenwich Village folk club scene.  By the time they released their 1967 debut collection, they'd followed the crowd into a more electrified folk-rock sound with Roger jammin' on electric autoharp, while Wendy had picked up electric bass. After splitting Euphoria the couple toured and released  records as Roger and Wendy and later -in mid seventies- as The Bermuda Triangle.

Back to Euphoria,  Tom recalls: 'Thirty years later, I listened to Eurphoria album and realized it was not as bad as I thought it was, considering the times. If it weren't for that album at that point in my life I might have quit playing music professionally and become an English teacher, something I had gone to University to study". 

Which explains why Tom's lyrics are so impressive. He could have been a great teacher... The sleeve picture of Euphoria is curious, to say the least. A very tall female standing with a male dwarf. Tom explained: "That was a picture of a relative of mine, who was dreadfully poor, but very attractive, and she married a rich dwarf who lived on an island in The Azores, and lived happily ever after with him. The female head has half of Sharon's face and half of Wendy Becket's and the dwarf has half Roger's face and half mine". 

Tom now has a band in Norway with whom he recorded 'The Long Walk', released by Playground Music Scandinavia, which is an album full of his songs, while Jim Welder produced and performed instrumental tracks on 

Tom's newest album, 'Year Of The Big Wind (Bare Bones III)', recorded at Moonhaw Studios in Woodstock and released by Frog's Claw Recordings.
by John Tobler, Washington, 2004


Tracks
1. There Is Now (Tom Pacheco) - 4:17
2. What a Day (Tom Pacheco) - 2:09
3. Seldom Seen Slim (Tom Pacheco) - 4:27
4. Sun and Shadow (Tom Pacheco) - 2:19
5. Sitting In a Rocking Chair  (Rowland Barter) - 3:35
6. Ride the Magic Carpet (Barkan, Dams) - 2:51
7. You Must Forget (Tom Pacheco) - 3:36
8. Tucson (Tom Pacheco) - 3:02
9. Calm Down (Tom Pacheco) - 2:23
10.Sleep (Tom Pacheco) - 2:25
11.Walkin' Through the City (Tom Pacheco) - 1:59

Euphoria
*Sharon Alexander - Percussion
*Tom Pacheco - Guitar
*Roger Penney (Roger Becket) - Vocals, Electric Autoharp, Keyboards
*Wendy Penney (Wendy Becket) - Vocals, Bass

Related Act
1977  Bermuda Triangle

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The Paul Butterfield Blues Band - The Resurrection Of The Pigboy Crabshaw (1967 us, sensational blues rock with jazzy mood)

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The 1968 edition of the Paul Butterfield Blues Band featured a larger ensemble with a horn section, allowing for a jazzier feeling while retaining its Chicago blues core. They also adopted the psychedelic flower power stance of the era, as evidenced by a few selections, the rather oblique title, and the stunning pastiche art work on the cover. 

Butterfield himself was really coming into his own playing harmonica and singing, while his band of keyboardist Mark Naftalin, guitarist Elvin Bishop, drummer Phil Wilson, electric bassist Bugsy Maugh, and the horns featuring young alto saxophonist David Sanborn was as cohesive a unit as you'd find in this time period. Butterfield's most well known song "One More Heartache" kicks off the album, a definitive blues-rock radio favorite with great harmonica and an infectious beat urged on by the top-notch horns. 

The band covers "Born Under a Bad Sign" at a time when Cream  also did it -- which one was better? "Driftin'& Driftin'" is another well known tune, and over nine minutes is stretched out with the horns cryin' and sighin', including a definitive solo from Sanborn  over the choruses. There's the Otis Rush tune "Double Trouble," and "Drivin' Wheel" penned by Roosevelt Sykes; Butterfield wrote two tunes, including "Run Out of Time" and the somewhat psychedelic "Tollin' Bells" where Bishop's guitar and Naftalin's slow ringing, resonant keyboard evokes a haunting sound.

 Likely this is the single best Butterfield album of this time period, and though compilations or "best-of" discs are available (Golden Butter being the best), you'd be well served to pick this one first and go from there. 
by Michael G. Nastos


Tracks
1. One More Heartache (Smokey Robinson, The Miracles) – 3:20
2. Driftin' And Driftin' (Charles Brown, Johnny Moore, Eddie Williams) – 9:09
3. I Pity The Fool (Deadric Malone) – 6:00
4. Born Under A Bad Sign (William Bell, Booker T. Jones) – 4:10
5. Run Out Of Time (Paul Butterfield, Brother Gene Dinwiddie, Peterson) – 2:59
6. Double Trouble (Otis Rush) – 5:38
7. Drivin' Wheel (Roosevelt Sykes) – 5:34
8. Droppin' Out (Paul Butterfield, Tucker Zimmerman) – 2:16
9. Tollin' Bells (Traditional, Arr. Butterfield Blues Band) – 5:23

The Paul Butterfield Blues Band
*Paul Butterfield  - Harmonica, Vocals
*Elvin Bishop - Guitar, Vocals
*David Sanborn - Alto Saxophone
*Brother Gene Dinwiddie - Tenor Saxophone
*Bugsy Maugh - Bass, Vocals
*Mark Naftalin - Keyboards
*Phillip Wilson - Drums
*Keith Johnson - Trumpet

Paul Butterfield's back pages
1966-68  Strawberry Jam
1968  In My Own Dream
1969  Keep On Moving
1970  Live 
1971  Sometimes I Just Feel Like Smilin'
1973  Paul Butterfield's Better Days
1973  It All Comes Back (Japan Edition)
1976  Put It In Your Ear
Related Act
1969-70/72  Elvin Bishop - Party Till The Cows Come Home
1974  Elvin Bishop - Let It Flow
1977  Elvin Bishop - Live! Raisin' Hell

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The Paul Butterfield Blues Band - East West (1966 us, pioneer influental blues psych rock)

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In the fall of 1965, the blues guitar prodigy Michael Bloomfield dropped acid. He had a vision, a musical vision, that he said unlocked the secrets of Indian music.

After the all-night psychedelic experience, he began work on “the raga,” an improbable instrumental mash-up of Eastern drones and scales, and Western free jazz, rock and Chicago blues harmonica.

Bloomfield presented the improvisational concept to his fellow players in the Paul Butterfield Blues Band. Until that point, this was a fairly straightforward group out of Chicago — except for its white leader and its interracial mix of musicians.

“East-West” seemed to come out of nowhere, a full-blown shock of the new, but clues to its genesis could be found in the key players’ musical DNA:

Butterfield, a local harmonica player, had been schooled on blues by Muddy Waters (who called him “my son”). Butterfield’s harp playing was fluid and thoughtful. New to the group was Billy Davenport, a jazz drummer whose heroes included Charlie Parker, Gene Krupa and Max Roach. To pay the bills, he played the blues. A second white guitarist, Elvin Bishop, specialized in the often eerie sounds of seminal bluesman Robert Johnson. Keyboardist Mark Naftalin studied music theory and composition.

From this cauldron emerged one of the boldest experiments in the history of blues and rock. The group’s second album, “East-West,” hit the street a year later, its title song running 13-plus minutes. This, however, was not the full-blown “East-West,” which in performance could top an hour’s length.

“This song was based, like Indian music, on a drone,” Naftalin has said. “In Western musical terms it ’stayed on the one.’”

Bloomfield, Butterfield and Bishop take solo turns and come together just the song’s unforgettable climax. The stucture is that of a suite, with different modes (scales) ruling different sections. Bishop takes the first solo spot, with Bloomfield doing the heavy lifting throughout, running through his acid-flash collection of exotic modes while his partner drones along.

Davenport works furiously in the background, applying the (oxymoronic) disciplines of free jazz. He sometimes imitates the tabla and mridanga drummers of Indian sitar ensembles. At other times he plays what sounds like bossa nova/samba.

Butterfield provides ballast and encouragement throughout, before propelling “East-West” in its final minutes, his blues harp channeling Coltrane as the guitars go spinning-dervish around him. At one point, Butterfield responds to the creative chaos with dissonant honks, a brilliant and somehow logical move.

“East/West” influenced many of the California psychedelic bands, lighting the way to free-form improvisation, instrumental textures for their own sakes, dissonance and non-traditional scales. Few of these hippie acts had the musical chops to even approximate the Butterfield band’s achievement, but some did — such as Quicksilver Messenger Service, Santana and to some extent the Grateful Dead.

Bloomfield left the band after the “East-West” album, never to hit those heights again. He died a drug user. Butterfield, too, died early, but not before the spirit of “East-West” infused a series of excellent albums by his growing band, notably 1968’s “In My Own Dream.” Bishop went on to a career in Southern rock and enjoyed a few hit singles.

Indian and Arabic sounds never left rock. The Beatles’ George Harrison, of course, became the highest-profile student of Eastern sounds, studying with the sitar master Ravi Shankar. In 1966, the brought the instruments to the Beatles recordings with “Norwegian Wood.” The Beatles continued with the instrument for several years.


Tracks
1. Walkin' Blues (Robert Johnson) - 3:15
2. Get Out Of My Life, Woman (Allen Toussaint) - 3:13
3. I Got A Mind To Give Up Living  (Traditional) - 4:57
4. All These Blues (Traditional) - 2:18
5. Work Song (Nat Adderley, Oscar Brown) - 7:53
6. Mary, Mary (Michael Nesmith) - 2:48
7. Two Trains Running (Muddy Waters) - 3:50
8. Never Say No (Traditional) - 2:57
9. East-West (Mike Bloomfield, Nick Gravenites) - 13:10

The Paul Butterfield Blues Band
*Paul Butterfield - Harmonica, Vocals
*Mike Bloomfield – Guitar
*Elvin Bishop – Guitar, Vocals
*Mark Naftalin – Keyboards
*Jerome Arnold – Bass
*Billy Davenport - Drums

Paul Butterfield's back pages
1966-68  Strawberry Jam
1967  The Resurrection Of The Pigboy Crabshaw
1968  In My Own Dream
1969  Keep On Moving
1970  Live 
1971  Sometimes I Just Feel Like Smilin'
1973  Paul Butterfield's Better Days
1973  It All Comes Back (Japan Edition)
1976  Put It In Your Ear

Elvin Bishop
1969-70/72  Party Till The Cows Come Home
1974  Elvin Bishop - Let It Flow
1977  Live! Raisin' Hell (2012 remaster)

Mike Bloomfield's tapestry
1967  Electric Flag - The Trip
1968-69  Electric Flag - An American Music Band / A Long Time Comin' 
196?-7?  The Electric Flag - Live
1968  Al Kooper, Mike Bloomfield - The Lost Concert Tapes, Filmore East
1969  Mike Bloomfield And Al Kooper - The Live Adventures
1969  Michael Bloomfield with Nick Gravenites & Friends - Live At Bill Graham's Fillmore West
1969  Nick Gravenites - My Labors
1973  Bloomfield, Hammond, Dr.John - Triumvirate (Japan remaster)
1976  KGB - KGB
1976-77  Michael Bloomfield - Live at the Old Waldorf
1977  Prescription For The Blues

The Paul Butterfield Blues Band - The Paul Butterfield Blues Band (1965 us, superb prime blues rock)

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Even after his death, Paul Butterfield's music didn't receive the accolades that were so deserved. Outputting styles adopted from Howlin' Wolf and Muddy Waters among other blues greats, Butterfield became one of the first white singers to rekindle blues music through the course of the mid-'60s. 

His debut album, The Paul Butterfield Blues Band, saw him teaming up with guitarists Elvin Bishop and Mike Bloomfield, with Jerome Arnold on bass, Sam Lay on drums, and Mark Naftalin playing organ. The result was a wonderfully messy and boisterous display of American-styled blues, with intensity and pure passion derived from every bent note. In front of all these instruments is Butterfield's harmonica, beautifully dictating a mood and a genuine feel that is no longer existent, even in today's blues music. 

Each song captures the essence of Chicago blues in a different way, from the back-alley feel of "Born in Chicago" to the melting ease of Willie Dixon's "Mellow Down Easy" to the authentic devotion that emanates from Bishop and Butterfield's "Our Love Is Drifting.""Shake Your Money Maker,""Blues With a Feeling," and "I Got My Mojo Working" (with Lay on vocals) are all equally moving pieces performed with a raw adoration for blues music. 

Best of all, the music that pours from this album is unfiltered...blared, clamored, and let loose, like blues music is supposed to be released. A year later, 1966's East West carried on with the same type of brash blues sound partnered with a jazzier feel, giving greater to attention to Bishop's and Bloomfield's instrumental talents.
by Mike DeGagne


Tracks
1. Born in Chicago (Nick Gravenites) – 2:55
2. Shake Your Moneymaker (Elmore James) – 2:27
3. Blues With a Feeling  (Walter Jacobs) – 4:20
4. Thank You Mr. Poobah  (Mike Bloomfield, Paul Butterfield, Mark Naftalin) – 4:05
5. I Got My Mojo Working (Muddy Waters) – 3:30
6. Mellow Down Easy  (Willie Dixon) – 2:48
7. Screamin' (Bloomfield) – 4:30
8. Our Love Is Drifting  (Bloomfield, Elvin Bishop) – 3:25
9. Mystery Train  (Junior Parker, Sam Phillips) – 2:45
10.Last Night  (Jacobs) – 4:15
11.Look Over Yonders Wall (James Clark) – 2:23

The Paul Butterfield Blues Band
*Paul Butterfield – Harmonica, Vocals
*Mike Bloomfield – Guitar
*Elvin Bishop – Guitar
*Mark Naftalin – Organ
*Jerome Arnold – Bass
*Sam Lay – Drums, Lead Vocal on "I Got My Mojo Working"

Paul Butterfield's back pages
1966  East West
1966-68  Strawberry Jam
1967  The Resurrection Of The Pigboy Crabshaw
1968  In My Own Dream
1969  Keep On Moving
1970  Live 
1971  Sometimes I Just Feel Like Smilin'
1973  Paul Butterfield's Better Days
1973  It All Comes Back (Japan Edition)
1976  Put It In Your Ear

Elvin Bishop
1969-70/72  Party Till The Cows Come Home
1974  Elvin Bishop - Let It Flow
1977  Live! Raisin' Hell (2012 remaster)

Mike Bloomfield's tapestry
1967  Electric Flag - The Trip
1968-69  Electric Flag - An American Music Band / A Long Time Comin' 
196?-7?  The Electric Flag - Live
1968  Al Kooper, Mike Bloomfield - The Lost Concert Tapes, Filmore East
1969  Mike Bloomfield And Al Kooper - The Live Adventures
1969  Michael Bloomfield with Nick Gravenites & Friends - Live At Bill Graham's Fillmore West
1969  Nick Gravenites - My Labors
1973  Bloomfield, Hammond, Dr.John - Triumvirate (Japan remaster)
1976  KGB - KGB
1976-77  Michael Bloomfield - Live at the Old Waldorf
1977  Prescription For The Blues

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Brian Auger's Oblivion Express - Closer To It (1973 uk, magnificent jazz progressive rock, japan remaster)

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British keyboard maestro Brian Auger achieved something virtually unheard of with this classic album upon its 1973 release. Closer To It, Brian's heady mix of jazz, soul, funk and rock entered the US Billboard Jazz, R 'n' B and Rock charts simultaneously! He had done such a great job blending and blurring musical boundaries.

Brian had been forging this very single minded path for nearly ten years previously in various groups The Steampacket and then The Trinity (with Julie Driscoll) his avowed aim to overlay funk, pop and soul rhythms with jazz harmony and solos. It was on Closer To It that Brian finally felt he had got as near as he could to the sound in his head and what a gloriously contemporary sound it still is. With Brian's vocals, his highly individual Hammond organ sound and funky electric piano stylings leading the way backed by a wonderfully smokey, deep dish rhythm section, this album joined the ranks of other undoubted jazz fusion 'must have' records.

Tracks like 'Whenever You're Ready', 'Voices of Other Times' and the oft sampled, Auger-fied version of Marvin Gaye's 'Inner City Blues' have since become club classics and broke new ground for the Rare Groove, Acid jazz and Neo Funk scenes that were to follow in Brian's experimental footsteps.

Almost certainly his finest recorded moment when first released this CD edition boasts 2 previously unreleased tracks including another take of 'Happiness Is Just Around The Bend' which was covered and made into a hit by The Main Ingredient the US soul outfit incidentally fronted by one Cuba Gooding Snr!

In 2005 it may be harder to appreciate just how ground-breaking this particular recording was but when you know that this release is a well-loved underground classic it is easier to understand why everybody, from Herbie Hancock to The Beastie Boys, puts Brian Auger's Oblivion Express' Closer to It somewhere near the very top of their all-time great recordings. The greatest musical entity to emerge from Shepherds Bush bar none!
by  Greg Boraman, 2005 


Tracks
1. Whenever You're Ready (Brian Auger, Barry Dean) - 6:22
2. Happiness Is Just Around the Bend (Brian Auger) - 6:34
3. Light On The Path (B. Auger, B. Dean, L. Laington, G. McLean, J. Mills) - 4:56
4. Compared To What (Gene McDaniels) - 7:55
5. Inner City Blues (Make Me Wanna Holler) (Marvin Gaye) - 4:34
6. Voices Of Other Times (Brian Auger, Barry Dean) - 5:58
7. Happiness Is Just Around The Bend (Alternative take) (Brian Auger) - 7:26
8. Inner City Blues (7" Version) (Marvin Gaye) - 3:28

The Oblivion Express
*Brian Auger - Mellotron, Moog, Organ, Percussion, Piano, Vocals
*Barry Dean - Bass
*Lennox Laington - Congas, Drums
*Godfrey McLean - Bells, Cowbell, Drums
*Jack Mills - Guitar

Brian Auger's Oblivion Express
1971 A Better Land (2006 japan remaster)
1972 Second Wind (2006 japan remaster)

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Paul Revere And The Raiders - Alias Pink Puzz (1969 us, exceptional psychedelic, country and folk amalgam, Sundazed remaster with extra tracks)

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The seismic changes in the musical landscape of the late 1960s influenced the sound of nearly every major pop and rock act, and Paul Revere and the Raiders were no exception. As bassist Keith Allison explains in his new liner notes, the title of Alias Pink Puzz refers to the fact that the Raiders submitted an advance pressing of a new song to a Los Angeles FM rock station under the pseudonym "Pink Puzz" in an effort to sidestep the band's Top 40 pop image. 

The station's management liked the song, but was livid when they learned the truth. Such trickery wasn't necessary for the Raiders to score one of their most memorable hits with the insistent rocker "Let Me!" and one of their most-covered tunes with "Freeborn Man." Despite the psychedelic-sounding pseudonym, Alias Pink Puzz largely features a rootsy, laid-back sound boasting a variety of blues, country and swamp-rock influences, with such titles as "Frankfort Side Street" and "Down in Amsterdam" reflecting the band's overseas touring experiences. The Sundazed edition of Alias Pink Puzz features four alternate/demo versions as bonus tracks.


Tracks
1. Let Me! - 3:58
2. Thank You - 3:01
3. Frankfort Side Street - 3:00
4. Hey Babro - 2:30
5. Louisiana Redbone (Keith Allison, Mark Lindsay) - 2:06
6. Here Comes The Pain (Keith Allison, Mark Lindsay) - 3:10
7. The Original Handy Man - 2:28
8. I Need You (Keith Allison, Mark Lindsay) - 2:13
9. Down In Amsterdam (Keith Allison, Mark Lindsay) - 2:59
10.I Don't Know - 5:29
11.Freeborn Man (Keith Allison, Mark Lindsay) - 3:33
12.Let Me! (Single Version) - 2:30
13.Too Much Talk (Demo Version) - 2:25
14.Get Out Of My Mind (Demo Version) - 2:52
15.I Don't Know (Alternate Version) - 6:24
All songs by Mark Lindsay except where indicated.

Paul Revere And The Raiders
*Mark Lindsay - Vocals
*Freddy Weller - Lead Guitar
*Joe Correro, Jr. - Drums
*Keith Allison - Bass
*Paul Revere - Organ

Paul Revere And The Raiders
1963-65  Mojo Work Out (Sundazed issue)
1967  A Christmas Present... And Past
Related Act
1970  Mark Lindsay - Arizona / Silverbird

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The Youngbloods - Beautiful! Live In San Francisco (1971 us, amazing west coast psych, Sundazed edition)

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Recorded live at Pacific High Recorders in December 1971 for radio broadcast on KSAN in San Francisco, this is a fine-sounding document of the Youngbloods playing live shortly before their breakup. It does catch them a little past their prime -- most of the songs are from their later career, not their better, first half -- and the energy's a little lower than it was during their best folk-rocking days in the late '60s. There's also a greater tilt toward rootsy country and blues sounds than there is toward the folk-rock-pop that distinguished some of their finest earliest work. 

Still, the band does play well here, and Jesse Colin Young's distinctive tenor voice and Banana Levinger's equally distinctive jazzy electric piano are both in fine shape. There's also the bonus of a few songs that didn't make it onto the Youngbloods' albums, including a cover of Dave Dudley's country trucking classic "Six Days on the Road," the folk song "Old Dan Tucker," and the Young original "Country Home," which he'd record on an early solo album. The highlights are still the original pieces in which they combine folk-rock and laid-back jazzy psychedelia, including the hit "Get Together," a version of which closes the set. 
by  Richie Unterberger

By the time the Youngbloods, always crowd faves at the west coast ballrooms, performed live for San Francisco’s free-form radio pioneer KSAN in 1971, they’d honed their set to a fine gloss. Featuring the smooth as apple-butter voice of Jesse Colin Young and the guitar/keyboard wizardry of Banana, backed by the rock-solid bass-and-drum tandem of Michael Kane and Joe Bauer, the Youngbloods positively sparkle here. We’re elated to present a lengthy, previously unissued 13-song set that’s equal parts rocking R&B, dreamy jazzers and honky tonk flag-wavers, with just a little bit of psychedelic weirdness—topped off, of course, by a knockout version of their generational anthem, “Get Together.” The Youngbloods: at the top of their game, making it all look so easy—and so damn beautiful. - See more at: 


Tracks
1. Six Days on the Road (Earl Green, Carl Montgomery) - 3:45
2. Country Home (Jesse Colin Young) - 3:56
3. On Sir Francis Drake (Lowell Levinger) - 2:46
4. Dreamboat (Jesse Colin Young) - 3:24
5. Drifting and Drifting (Jesse Colin Young) - 6:23
6. Interlude (Lowell Levinger) - 2:23
7. Old Dan Tucker (Traditional) - 1:59
8. You Can't Catch Me (Chuck Berry) - 4:15
9. On Beautiful Lake Spenard (Lowell Levinger) - 4:52
10.Josianne (Jesse Colin Young) - 7:13
11.Explosion (Lowell Levinger) - 0:29
12.Beautiful (Jesse Colin Young) - 5:52
13.Get Together song review (Chester Powers) - 4:07

The Youngbloods 
*Joe Bauer - Drums
*Banana - Guitar, Keyboards
*Jesse Colin Young - Guitar, Vocals
*Michael Kane - Bass

1967/69  The Youngbloods / Earth Music / Elephant Mountain (2 disc set)
1972  High On A Ridge Top 
Related Act
1973  Jesse Colin Young - Song For Juli (2009 edition)

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Stalk-Forrest Group - St. Cecilia, The Elektra Recordings (1970 us, outstanding hard psych, pre Blue Oyster, remaster with bonus tracks)

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For a band that issued only one single, and that only pressed in a quantity of a few hundred, the Stalk-Forrest Group have a very confusing history, and are very well-known by collectors. Much of this notoriety stems from the fact that the group evolved into Blue Öyster Cult shortly after the one Stalk-Forrest Group 45 was issued by Elektra. The Stalk-Forrest Group did manage to record an entire unreleased album for Elektra in 1970, in a much lighter and more psychedelic style than that for which Blue Öyster Cult became known. In the late '60s, the nucleus of the Long Island band that would become Blue Öyster Cult was playing under the name of Soft White Underbelly. 

With Les Braunstein as lead singer, they were signed by Elektra; Buck Dharma has recalled that Elektra exec Jac Holzman may have been looking for an East Coast Doors. An album was attempted, but eventually abandoned, in early 1969, and Braunstein was replaced by the band's equipment manager and soundman, Eric Bloom. Soft White Underbelly had been signed in large part because of Braunstein, and it took them a while to convince Elektra that they would be viable with the higher-voiced Bloom as lead singer.

In early 1970, however, the band, now renamed the Stalk-Forrest Group, was able to record an album for Elektra in Los Angeles. Co-produced by Sandy Pearlman and Jay Lee, the group was under the impression that it would get released, but it never was. Material from the album circulated among collectors for a long time, and shows a band considerably different than Blue Öyster Cult. The songs were psychedelic and tuneful, somewhat in the manner of two other Elektra acts, Love and the Doors, although poppier than either of those two groups. 

The arrangements were full of high harmonies and fluid, accomplished, psychedelic guitar interplay, and the songs were dominated by rather fanciful and oblique trippy imagery, as was evident from titles like "Ragamuffin's Dumplin,""Bonomo's Turkish Tuffy,""Arthur Comics," and "A Fact About Sneakers." Though perhaps in need of fine tuning or embellishment, it was certainly up to release quality.

Elektra tried to get Don Gallucci (from the band Don & the Goodtimes) in to produce them, but after an exploratory meeting he left for California without informing the group. Around the time Joe Bouchard replaced Andy Winters on bass, they were dropped from Elektra, although the label did press about 200 copies of a single with two of the songs from the unreleased album sessions, "What Is Quicksand?"/"Arthur Comics." After running through some more band names, the musicians finally got their recording career off the ground as Blue Öyster Cult in the early '70s, playing in a harder rock style than they had as the Stalk-Forrest Group. An extremely limited-edition LP of ten songs from the unreleased Stalk-Forrest Group album sessions came out in Germany in 1998.
by Richie Unterberger


Tracks
1. What Is Quicksand? (Allen Lanier, Richard Meltzer) - 3:20
2. I'm On The Lamb (E. Bloom, A. Bouchard, S. Pearlman) - 3:00
3. Gil Blanco County (Lanier, Pearlman) - 3:36
4. Donovan's Monkey (Bouchard, Meltzer) - 3:44
5. Ragamuffin Dumplin' (Bouchard, Meltzer) - 5:12
6. Curse Of The Hidden Mirrors (Bouchard, Meltzer) - 3:17
7. Arthur Comics (Bouchard, Meltzer) - 3:10
8. A Fact About Sneakers (Bouchard, Meltzer) - 7:53
9. St. Cecila (Bouchard, Pearlman, Andrew Winters) - 6:44
10.Ragamuffin Dumplin'(Alternate Mix) (Bouchard, Meltzer) - 5:19
11.I'm On The Lamb (Alternate Version) (E. Bloom, A. Bouchard, S. Pearlman) - 2:52
12.Curse Of The Hidden Mirrors (Alternate Mix) (Bouchard, Meltzer) - 3:16
13.Bonomo's Turkish Taffy (Bouchard, Meltzer) - 2:13
14.Gil Blanco County (Alternate Mix) (Lanier, Pearlman) - 6:47
15.St. Cecilia (Alternate Mix) (Bouchard, Pearlman, Andrew Winters) - 6:45
16.A Fact About Sneakers (Alternate Version) (Bouchard, Meltzer) - 3:07
17.What Is Quicksand? (Mono Single Version) (A. Lanier, R. Meltzer) - 3:19
18.Arthur Comics (Mono Single Version) (Bouchard, Meltzer) - 3:10
Tracks 1-9 from the unreleased and untitled Elektra album EKS-74046
Tracks 10-16 previously unreleased
Tracks 17 and 18 are from the Elektra single EKM-45693

Stalk-Forrest Group
*Eric Bloom Aka "Jesse Python" - Lead Vocals, Guitars
*Donald Roeser Aka "Buck Dharma" - Lead Guitar, Vocals
*Andrew Winters - Bass, Acoustic Guitar On His Composition "St. Cecilia"
*Allen Lanier Aka "La Verne" - Keyboards, Guitar
*Albert Bouchard Aka "Prince Omega" - Drums, Vocals

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