Showing posts with label Cold Blood. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cold Blood. Show all posts

Friday, November 12, 2021

Cold Blood - The Best Of Cold Blood

Album: The Best Of Cold Blood
Size: 167,5 MB
Time: 72:23
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 1995
Styles: Blues/Funk/Soul mix
Art: Full

1. I Just Want To Make Love To You (5:14)
2. I'm A Good Woman (3:37)
3. Let Me Down Easy (4:50)
4. You Got Me Hummin' (5:45)
5. Funky On My Back (6:54)
6. Lo And Behold (4:15)
7. Down To The Bone (5:43)
8. You Had To Know (5:49)
9. My Lady Woman (4:06)
10. Watch Your Step (5:26)
11. I Wish I Knew How It Would Feel To Be Free (5:59)
12. If You Will (5:34)
13. No Way Home (3:28)
14. I'll Be Long Gone (5:36)

Aside from an almost-ran in "You Got Me Hummin'," Cold Blood never really had any hits to speak of, so assembling a best-of is less a matter of picking hit singles than of individual taste. As such, this is a decent compilation of this San Francisco workhorse. It's also the only release readily available on CD, probably because it's all most listeners will need. It includes all of their debut album, as well as some of their better later tracks like "Lo and Behold." Cold Blood stayed true to its female-belter and brass-band blues formula throughout its career, with the result that this retrospective coheres as an album in its own right. /Paul Collins, AllMusic

(For personnel details, see artwork included.)

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Thursday, January 28, 2016

Cold Blood - S/T

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 36:29
Size: 83.5 MB
Styles: R&B, Funk, Soul, Blues
Year: 1969/2008
Art: Front

[5:56] 1. I Wish I Knew (How It Would Feel To Be Free)
[5:29] 2. If You Will
[5:43] 3. You've Got Me Hummin'
[5:11] 4. I Just Want To Make Love To You
[3:21] 5. I'm A Good Woman
[5:24] 6. Let Me Down Easy
[5:23] 7. Watch Your Step

Cold Blood was one of the Bay Area's non-psychedelic contributions to pop music in the late '60s and early '70s. Their R&B-influenced combination of rock, blues, and jazz stood out from the guitar-driven acid rock bands most identified with that scene. After establishing themselves at dancehalls such as the Avalon or Bill Graham's Winterland Ballroom, Cold Blood became one of the first acts signed to Graham's Fillmore record label -- which was named after another one of his venerable venues. Their 1969 self-titled debut -- although somewhat contained in comparison to their live shows -- is a good representation of their soulful, horn-driven funk. One of the major reasons for the band's success is the unadulterated and otherwise raw vocal style of Lydia Pense. The album features a mixture of dramatic ballads -- such as the medley of "I'm a Good Woman" and "Let Me Down Easy" -- as well as full-blown R&B rave-ups on the cover of Sam & Dave's "You Got Me Hummin'" or their freewheeling version of "I Just Want to Make Love To You." Keyboardist Raul Matute's contribution, "If You Will," is a perfect vehicle for Pense's vocals as it glides between licks from lead guitarist Larry Fields and the five-piece brass section. Inevitable comparisons have been made between Pense, Janis Joplin, and Lynn Hughes -- of another San Fran rock and soul combo, Stoneground. However, there is a smoky scintillation to Pense's approach -- particularly potent on the gospel-tinged opener, "I Wish I Knew How It Would Feel to Be Free" -- that is downplayed or altogether lacking from her contemporaries. This intangible quality would become increasingly pronounced and evident on Cold Blood's follow-up LP, the classic Sisyphus(1971). In 2001 Collectables reissued this album along with Sisyphus as part of two LPs on one CD collection. Although marred by sloppy mastering, it is recommended as the only place to hear this album in its entirety. ~Lindsay Planer

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