Showing posts with label Brian Auger. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Brian Auger. Show all posts

Saturday, June 3, 2023

Brian Auger & Oblivion Express LIVE in San Francisco CA 1975

Brian Auger's Oblivian Express
Winterland Ballroom
San Francisco CA
1975-11-29
KRE-FM Broadcast @320


01. Intro---Band Intro
02. Brain Damage
03. Song Intro
04. Freedom Jazz Dance
05. Bumpin' On Sunset Intro--- 
06. Bumpin' On Sunset
07. Band Intro
08. Foolish Girl
09. Compared To What
10. Outro


Brian Auger - Organ, Vocals
Jack Mills - Guitar
Alex Ligertwood - Vocals, Guitar, Percussion
Clive Chaman - Bass
David Dowle - Drums
Lennox Laington - Congas



 

Wednesday, February 1, 2023

Brian Auger, Julie Driscoll & Trinity - Berlin Jazz Stage1968

Brian Auger, Julie Driscol & the Trinity
Berliner Jazz Stage
November 7, 1968

Unknown broadcast source @320



Setlist:

01 Radio announcer-Red Beans and Rice
02 Freedom Jazz Dance
03 Take Me to the Water
04 Radio announcer-Season of the Witch
05 Shadows of You
06 When I was a Young Girl
07 Wheels of Fire

 

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 )^^(

 

Thursday, August 20, 2020

Julie Driscoll, Brian Auger & The Trinity - Open (1967)

Julie Driscoll, Brian Auger 
& The Trinity - Open (1967)
aka - Jools
Studio soundboard @256
{Out of Print}


Continuing on a theme...

From the outgrowth of Steampacket, a band that included not only Brian Auger and Julie Driscoll, but also a young Rod Stewart, came Auger and Driscoll's collective effort that produced two albums. When Driscoll left in 1969 to pursue a solo career, Auger, drummer Clive Thacker, and bassist Dave Ambrose continued as Brian Auger & the Trinity. Open has been unfairly characterized as a kind of groove jazz rip, one that combines Wes Montgomery, Jimmy McGriff, and the rock sensibilities of the psychedelic era. Whatever. There are many tracks here, from deep grooved funky jazz to lilting ballads and greasy blues numbers and the skronky exotica number "Goodbye Jungle Telegraph." Auger may not have been as gifted an organist as Alan Price technically, but he could more than hold his own on the Hammond B-3 (as evidenced by the first two tracks here which are instrumentals, "In And Out" and "Isola Nate"). He was also able to pull more sounds out of the instrument than any of his peers. Auger wasn't much of a vocalist, but he could dig deep and get the emotion out of a song -- especially in a funky number like "Black Cat," which featured a killer though uncredited studio horn section. Driscoll's contributions are all on the second half of the album, beginning with the shuffling choogle of Lowell Fulsom's "Tramp," continuing through a moving reading of Pops Staples' "Why (Am I Treated So Bad)," two Auger originals, and concluding in a reading of Donovan's "Season of the Witch" that single-handedly established her reputation as a vocalist of great interpretative ability and emotional dexterity. Almost eight minutes in length, it is the perfect interplay for the quartet with its dark, smoky swirling energy and extant soul groove, and capos the album on a high note, making it a delightful precursor to the classic Streetnoise which was to follow.  ~Tom Jurek


Track List:
1. In And Out
2. Isola Natale
3. Black Cat
4. Lament For Miss Baker
5. Goodbye Jungle Telegraph
6. Tramp
7. Why (Am I Treated So Bad)
8. Kind Of Love In
9. Break It Up
10. Season Of The Witch
11. I've Gotta Go Now [CD Bonus Track]
12. Save Me [CD Bonus Track]
13. This Wheel's On Fire [CD Bonus Track]
14. Road To Cairo [CD Bonus Track]


Line-up / Musicians 
- Brian Auger/ vocals, keyboards
- Julie Driscoll/ vocals
- Gary Boyle / guitar
- Dave Ambrose / bass guitar
- Roger Sutton / bass guitar
- Clive Thacker/drums



Thanks to RockinBlues room on DC++


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Monday, August 17, 2020

Brian Auger's Oblivian Express - Live Dallas, TX. 1974

Rebooted... 
Originally posted July 1, 2015

Brian Auger's Oblivian Express 
Live Dallas Sound Studio
May 1, 1974
Dallas, Texas
Unknown Station FM Source @ VBR


Band:
Brian Auger - hammond b3, keyboards
Alex Ligertwood - vocals
Barry Dean - bass
Jack Mills - guitar
Stephen Ferrone - drums

Set List:
01-Radio intro
02-Back To The Beginning
03-Inner City Blues
04-Straight Ahead
05-Freedom Jazz Dance
06-Maiden Voyage
07-Truth
08 -Compared To What (fade out)


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Saturday, August 15, 2020

Brian Auger's Oblivion Express (1971)

Brian Auger's Oblivion Express (1971)
Studio Soundboard @320
{Out Of Print}

The first outing by Brian Auger's jazz-rock ensemble the Oblivion Express, first issued in 1971, is one of the great masterpieces of jazz-rock fusion. Auger, having just disbanded his longtime band the Trinity in 1970, still had plenty of rock and roll in his system. His yearning for the open frontiers of electric jazz was certainly the driving force -- in the same way that it was for Miles Davis on A Tribute to Jack Johnson, and Lifetime was for Tony Williams -- but it was anchored in the visceral application of rock. With guitarist Jim Mullen, bassist Barry Dean, and drummer Robbie McIntosh, Auger charted into the unknown. This album fits like a glove, each tune moving ever forward into the next. From the opening knotty, rhythmic twists in "Dragon Song," to the subterranean counterpoint in "Total Eclipse," to the band's theme song that closes the album with its pumping bass and guitar interludes, and Auger's Lemmy Kilmister-like vocals, Oblivion Express is a classic in its genre. There is a rawness in passion and intent here that is balanced by wondrously imaginative arrangements for rock band instrumentation, and an aesthetic that is disciplined and visionary. ~Thom Jurek AllMusic


Track List:
Dragon Song    
Total Eclipse    
The Light    
On The Road    
The Sword    
Oblivion Express



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