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Showing posts with label The Electric Flag. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Electric Flag. Show all posts

Thursday, June 9, 2011

The Electric Flag 1968 An American Music Band



Genre: Rock
Rate: 320 kbps CBR / 44100
Time: 00:28:58
Size: 66,27 MB

United States


Review by Joe Viglione

With guitarist Hoshal Wright replacing founding member Mike Bloomfield (formerly of Paul Butterfield Blues Band) and Herbie Rich taking full control of the organ (from another ex-Paul Butterfield member Barry Goldberg, along with future Lou Reed keyboardist Mike Fonfara), you have a definite sequel to the Electric Flag's March 1968 debut LP, A Long Time Comin' appearing right on its heels, in December of that same year.

The original album had "An American Music Band" under the group's name, and that slogan becomes the subtitle of this follow-up. Janis Joplin songwriter Nick Gravenites takes the hook out of Barry Goldberg's "Sittin' in Circles" and reinvents it for "Hey, Little Girl" on this instalment. Where 60 percent of the first album was written by the Paul Butterfield exiles Bloomfield and Goldberg, the songwriting is pretty evenly split between the two songs each by Buddy Miles, Harvey Brooks, and Nick Gravenites, with Brooks and Gravenites co-writing an additional title, "Nothing to Do." This makes for a heavier blues recording, co-produced by Brooks and Cheap Thrills album producer John Simon, who doubles on piano here (which he played on Janis Joplin's "Turtle Blues" on the aforementioned Big Brother & the Holding Company disc).

The big revelations, though, are the cover songs, Dr. John's "Qualified" and an unbelievable version of Bobby Hebb's "Sunny," which Buddy Miles just encompasses and devours. The blending of styles is intuitive, as Hebb and Mac Rebennack/Dr. John had worked together on their own. Virgil Gonsalves' flute at the end of "Sunny" is frosting on the cake, but the key is that a song which was a smash on three formats -- R&B, country, and pop charts, and captured the heart of jazz musicians from Ella Fitzgerald to Pat Martino, gets this total reinvention here. As brilliant as Nick Gravenites is as a songwriter, it is Hebb's tune which is the centerpiece of this disc. That Sony would take it and Buddy Miles' "Mystery" for the CD release of the first album is the real mystery. Alto sax player Stemsy Hunter is wonderful on lead vocals for "With Time There Is Change," written by co-producer/bassist Harvey Brooks and perhaps the most captivating original here. They all trade lead vocalist duties, from Nick Gravenites on "Nothing to Do" to Herbie Rich on the Dr. John cover.

It's an amazingly dense set of recordings which, years later, form a remarkable thread of sounds by musicians who worked with Jimi Hendrix, Janis Joplin, the latter day Big Brother & the Holding Company, and who were taking the original concept a step further into uncharted waters. Where the Electric Prunes were a fun psychedelic moment, the neon signs superimposed over Buddy Miles' face didn't get the same immediate recognition. Many of the core players from both discs reunited in 1974 for the Atlantic records release The Band Kept Playing. Real textbook material here, highly enjoyable, and very important.



Tracklist:

01 - Soul Searchin' 02:59

02 - Sunny 03:59

03 - With Time There Is Change 03:16

04 - Nothing To Do 04:21

05 - See To Your Neighbor 02:35

06 - Qualified 03:00

07 - Hey Little Girl 02:38

08 - Mystery 02:55

09 - My Woman Hangs Around The House 03:15





The Electric Flag here:

Get it!

Mirror

Tuesday, March 8, 2011

The Electric Flag 1968 A Long Time Comin'



Genre: Blues-Rock
Rate: 256 kbps CBR / 44100
Time: 00:51:23
Size: 93,98 MB

United States


Review by Joe Viglione

Writer Jeff Tamarkin says "ex Butterfield Band guitarist Mike Bloomfield, drummer Buddy Miles, and others put this soul-rock band together in 1967. This debut is a testament to their ability to catch fire and keep on burnin'." That The Electric Flag do so well -- they appeared at the Monterey International Pop Festival with the Blues Project, Paul Butterfield, and Janis Joplin, and all these groups had some musical connection to each other beyond that pivotal festival.

A Long Time Comin' is the "new soul" described appropriately enough by the late critic Lillian Roxon, and tunes like "She Should Have Just" and "Over-Lovin' You" lean more towards the soul side than the pop so many radio listeners were attuned to back then. Nick Gravenites was too much of a purist to ride his blues on the Top 40 the way Felix Cavaliere gave us "Groovin'," so Janis Joplin's eventual replacement in Big Brother & the Holding Company, Gravenites, and this crew pour out "Groovin' Is Easy" on this disc.

It's a classy production, intellectual ideas with lots of musical changes, a subdued version of what Joplin herself would give us on I Got Dem Ole Kozmic Blues Again, Mama two years later, with some of that album written by vocalist Gravenites. Though launched after Al Kooper's the Blues Project, A Long Time Comin' itself influenced bands who would go on to sell more records. In the traditional "Wine," it is proclaimed "you know Janis Joplin, she'll tell you all about that wine, baby." As good as the album is, though, the material is pretty much composed by Mike Bloomfield and Barry Goldberg, when they're not covering Howlin' Wolf's "Killing Floor" and adding spoken-word news broadcasts to the mix. More contributions by Buddy Miles and Gravenites in the songwriting department would have been welcome here.

The extended CD version has four additional tracks, Bobby Hebb's "Sunny" and "Mystery," both which appear on the self-titled Electric Flag outing which followed this LP, as well as other material which shows up on Old Glory: The Best of Electric Flag, released in 2000. "Sittin' in Circles" opens like the Doors' "Riders on the Storm," the keyboards as well as the sound effects, and a hook of "hey little girl" which would resurface as the title of a Nick Gravenites tune on the aforementioned follow-up disc, where Gravenites and Miles did pick up the songwriting slack, Bloomfield having wandered off to Super Session with the Blues Project's Al Kooper.

Amazing stuff all in all, which could eventually comprise a boxed set of experimental blues rock from the mid- to late sixties. Either version of this recording, original vinyl or extended CD, is fun listening and a revelation.



Tracklist:

01 - Killing Floor 04:12

02 - Groovin' Is Easy 03:07

03 - Over-Lovin' You 02:13

04 - She Should Have Just 05:04

05 - Wine 03:16

06 - Texas 04:49

07 - Sittin' In Circles 03:55

08 - You Don't Realize 04:57

09 - Another Country 08:48

10 - Easy Rider 00:54

11 - Sunny 04:03

12 - Mystery 02:57

13 - Look Into My Eyes 03:08





The Electric Flag here:

Get it!

Mirror



Enjoy the music!

Thursday, November 18, 2010

The Electric Flag 1983 Groovin' Is Easy

MMG Distribution CDTB 006 (P)1983

Tracks 01-05: 1974 Outtakes
Tracks 06-09: 1968 San Francisco Live







Tracklist:

01 - Spotlight

02 - I Was Robbed Last Night

03 - I Found Out

04 - Never Be Lonely Again

05 - Losing Game

06 - My Baby Wants To Test Me

07 - I Should Have Left Her

08 - You Don't Realise

09 - Groovin' Is Easy


The Electric Flag:

Michael Bloomfield, guitars
Harvey Brooks, bass
Nick Gravenites, vocal, percussion
Sivuca, guitar, percussion
Barry Goldberg, keyboards
Herbie Rich, keyboards, tenor sax
Mike Fonfara, keyboards
Buddy Miles, drums, percussion
Peter Strazza, tenor sax
Marcus Doubleday, trumpet
Richie Havens, sitar
Paul Berver, moog synthesizer



Download

APE: Part1 Part2 Part3

MP3: Mirror




Enjoy the music!
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