Showing posts with label Eric Burdon. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Eric Burdon. Show all posts

Thursday, July 25, 2024

Eric Burdon - Soul Of A Man

Album: Soul Of A Man
Size: 141,5 MB
Time: 60:51
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2006
Styles: Blues/Funk/Soul/Rock mix
Art: Full

1. Soul Of A Man (4:16)
2. Kingsize Jones (3:34)
3. Red Cross Store (4:18)
4. Como Se Llama Mama (3:39)
5. Forty Days And Forty Nights (3:00)
6. Feeling Blue (4:48)
7. Never Give Up Blues (4:13)
8. GTO (5:33)
9. Forty Four (4:30)
10. Slow Moving Train (5:26)
11. Don't Ever Let Nobody Drag Your Spirit Down (4:55)
12. Devil Run (3:21)
13. I Don't Mind (5:27)
14. Circuit Rider (3:44)

It can't be considered a comeback because he's never really been away and 2004's My Secret Life - recorded with the same basic band and producer - already proved there was plenty of gas left in Eric Burdon's seemingly bottomless tank. But Soul of a Man finds the ex-Animals lead singer in fine, even feisty form. Credit should be shared by producer/drummer Tony Braunagel and a backing band of veterans, led by guitarist Johnny Lee Schell and organist Mike Finnigan, who find the perfect tone to support Burdon's growling vocals.

Instead of originals, the singer sticks predominantly to covers, a smart move since his own songs have been at best a mixed bag. But aside from a handful of blues classics such as Howlin' Wolf's "44 Blues," "40 Days" (best known through Muddy Waters version), Mississippi Fred McDowell's "Red Cross Store" and Blind Willie Johnson's title track, these are predominantly obscure tunes that Burdon tears into with a gruff fury belying his age (he was 65 at the time of this recording). He's still proudly strutting about the size of his genitals on "Kingsize Jones" and can even meet classic Bad Company on its old turf in "Devil Run."

Without a deft production touch these songs could be embarrassing, but Braunagel keeps the band simmering and Burdon's worst impulses in check. Female backing vocals, horns and percussion fall in line with this funky gospel-laced blues-rock, nailing the ideal tone between a surprising subtlety and Burdon's more typically crusty approach. In this context, "Never Give Up Blues" becomes a rallying cry for a guy who, despite more downs than ups in his post Animals career, has kept releasing new music, mostly to a select hardcore following. He will continue to sing "House of the Rising Sun" nightly, but with albums as strong as this, Burdon is far from washed up and has plenty to be proud of.

Aging fans who might have abandoned him due to years of spotty releases will be shocked at how solid this is. Those who are just catching up will find Soul of a Man to be a dynamic new release from an old warhorse who should not be put out to pasture just yet. /Hal Horowitz, AllMusic

(For personnel details, see artwork included.)

Soul Of A Man mc
Soul Of A Man gofile

Wednesday, April 7, 2021

Eric Burdon - Roxy Live

Size: 137.6 MB
Time: 59:16
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 1999
Styles: Blues Rock
Art: Front & Back

01. Ghetto Child (6:34)
02. First Sight (5:32)
03. Dragon Lady (9:59)
04. House Of The Rising Sun (9:45)
05. Don't Let Me Be Misunderstood (8:13)
06. Freedom/Jim Crow (9:18)
07. River Of Blood (9:52)

The Eric Burdon performance captured here was recorded at the Roxy nightclub in Los Angeles in 1976. Burdon includes extended version of two of his Animals hits, "House of the Rising Sun" and "Don't Let Me Be Misunderstood," but his primary concern is with introducing a batch of new, politically oriented songs written for a proposed film, Mirage, that was never made. The lyrics concern racial and Native American concerns, and Burdon sings them passionately, but the messages are less emphasized than the rock fervor of the band, led by guitarists Aalon Butler and Snuffy Walden and also featuring keyboardist John "Rabbit" Bundrick, bassist Greg Brown, and drummer Alvin Taylor. Their style is screaming '70s rock, with lengthy guitar solos within long, loose arrangements. Burdon, who had released a chart album, Stop, the year before, was not yet an oldies act in 1976, and therefore could justify devoting most of a set to new material. But he still must have tried the patience of his listeners at the time, and subsequent ones won't find much of the familiar Eric Burdon here. This is an album for die-hard Burdon and Animals fans, and a minor effort even for them. ~William Ruhlmann

Roxy Live MP3
Roxy Live FLAC

Tuesday, October 1, 2019

Eric Burdon & Robby Krieger - Live At The China Club And More..

Size: 168,9 MB
Time: 72:34
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2012
Styles: Blues Rock
Art: Front

01. Roadhouse Blues (Feat. Lee Oskar) (Live) (7:19)
02. Tobacco Road (Live) (7:27)
03. Back Door Man (Live) (5:49)
04. Medley: Boom Boom / Around And Around (Live) (5:49)
05. Medley: 16 Tons / Hoochie Coochie Man (Feat. Lee Oskar) (Live) (7:49)
06. I'm Crying (Live) (9:21)
07. No More Elmore (Live) (8:50)
08. Livin' In The 1990's (Live) (4:20)
09. Sunrise (Live) (4:49)
10. Union Street (Live) (3:04)
11. Travelin' Man (Live) (4:21)
12. The Wayward Wind (Live) (3:32)

As the lead singer of the Animals, Eric Burdon was one of the British Invasion's most distinctive vocalists, with a searingly powerful blues-rock voice. When the first lineup of the group fell apart in 1966, Burdon kept the Animals' name going with various players for a few years. Usually billed as Eric Burdon & the Animals, the group was essentially Burdon's vehicle, which he used to purvey a far more psychedelic and less R&B-oriented vision. Occasionally he came up with a good second-division psychedelic hit, like "Sky Pilot"; more often, the music was indulgent, dating it almost immediately. Burdon's real triumphs as a solo artist came at the beginning of the '70s, when he hooked up with a bunch of L.A. journeyman soul/funksters who became his backing band, War. Recording three albums' worth of material in the year or two that they were together, the Burdon/War records could ramble on interminably, and would have benefited from a lot of editing. But they contained some spacy funkadelia of real quality, especially their number three hit single "Spill the Wine," which was almost recorded as an afterthought in the midst of sessions dominated by exploratory jams. Eric Burdon & War were already big stars on record and stage when Burdon, for reasons unclear to almost everyone, quit the band in 1971. War defied expectations and became even bigger when left to their own devices; Burdon, after recording an album with veteran bluesman Jimmy Witherspoon, cut a series of generally desultory solo albums. He recorded off and on after that, at times with the Animals, but has never come close to reaching the heights of his work with the early Animals and War. Burdon was always a riveting live performer, though, and he continued to tour with various incarnations of the Animals and as a solo act, branching out as a painter and author as well, and working in the studio when it suited him.

Burdon continued on this journeyman path until well into the new millennium, recording such solid albums as 2004's My Secret Life and 2006's Soul of a Man. In 2012, he experienced an unexpected comeback when Bruce Springsteen made him a cornerstone of his keynote speech at South by Southwest. Burdon joined Springsteen on-stage and was soon in demand. First, he recorded an EP with the Ohio-based garage rockers the Greenhornes, and then he devoted himself to the full-length 'Til Your River Runs Dry, which received a high-profile launch in January 2013. ~ Richie Unterberger

Live At The China Club And More..

Wednesday, August 26, 2015

Eric Burdon - F#¢k Me! I Thought He Was Dead!

Size: 153,8 MB
Time: 66:03
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 1999
Styles: Blues Rock
Art: Full

01. We Gotta Get Out Of This Place (7:48)
02. Don't Let Me Be Misunderstood (6:30)
03. Boom Boom (4:46)
04. Don't Bring Me Down (5:07)
05. It Hurts Me Too (10:20)
06. No More Elmore (10:10)
07. Tobacco Road (5:27)
08. It's My Life (4:47)
09. I'm Crying (4:56)
10. House Of The Rising Sun (6:07)

This live recording is drawn from two different sources. The bulk of it, the first nine of the ten tracks, comes from a performance by Eric Burdon at the Metropol club in Berlin in the early '80s that was staged specially to be filmed for the 1982 documentary Comeback. The singer is backed by a sextet consisting of guitarist Snuffy Walden; pianist Ronnie Barron; saxophonist, organist, and harmonica player Bobby Martin; guest saxophonist Rosa King; bassist Terry Wilson; and drummer Tony Brunagel. The final track, a version of Burdon's biggest Animals hit, "House of the Rising Sun," was recorded in the early '70s at the Whiskey-a-Go-Go in Los Angeles. Here the backup band is a quartet consisting of guitarist John Sterling, organist Terry Ryan, bassist Kim Kesterson, and drummer George Suranovich. Despite the title, which annotator Bruce Ginsburg says is a variant on a remark made to Burdon by a cab driver, the singer seems alive and even lively on these performances, which do feature some of the hits he scored with the Animals. "We Gotta Get out of This Place," "Don't Let Me Be Misunderstood," "Boom Boom," "Don't Bring Me Down," "It's My Life," "I'm Crying," and, of course, "The House of the Rising Sun" were indeed chart hits for the Animals between 1964 and 1966. From the sound of it, Burdon had been singing them ever since, and, 15 years on, the arrangements had gotten loose and the singer himself had transformed the songs into vehicles of personal expression. This is not the album to buy to hear letter-perfect re-creations of old hits; it is for anyone who wants to hear what Burdon has made of his legacy. At around the age of 40, he is a self-possessed blues singer with his own style, just as his models were. ~by William Ruhlmann

F#¢k Me! I Thought He Was Dead!

Friday, July 24, 2015

Eric Burdon - 'Til Your River Runs Dry

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 54:33
Size: 124.9 MB
Styles: Soul/R&B/Blues
Year: 2013
Art: Front

[4:18] 1. Water
[4:35] 2. Memorial Day
[4:19] 3. Devil And Jesus
[3:43] 4. Wait
[3:57] 5. Old Habits Die Hard
[5:28] 6. Bo Diddley Special
[4:08] 7. In The Ground
[4:24] 8. 27 Forever
[5:57] 9. River Is Rising
[4:36] 10. Medicine Man
[5:51] 11. Invitation To The White House
[3:14] 12. Before You Accuse Me

Til Your River Runs Dry, Eric Burdon's most personal album to date, features original tracks written by Burdon including Water, Bo Diddley Special, The River Is Rising, Wait and Memorial Day with a blues-rooted feel that has made him one of the most enduring artists spawned by the British Invasion of the 1960s. Til Your River Runs Dry was produced by Burdon and Tony Barnacle and recorded in New Orleans and Southern California where Eric recorded his last two albums. Til Your River Runs Dry is the long awaited return of one of rock's most creative, incisive songwriters and, certainly, an unparalleled vocal force.

A Rock and Roll Hall of Fame inductee, hailed by Rolling Stone as one of the 100 Greatest Voices of All Time, Eric Burdon continues as a vital contemporary artist while his legacy as front man of The Animals, with WAR at its inception and as a solo artist continues to grow as his influence enjoys a resurgence with both new artists and superstars.

'Til Your River Runs Dry mc
'Til Your River Runs Dry zippy

Friday, August 29, 2014

Eric Burdon & Jimmy Witherspoon - Guilty

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 48:37
Size: 111.3 MB
Styles: Rock, Electric blues
Year: 1971/2003/2014
Art: Front

[3:45] 1. Driftin' / Once Upon A Time
[4:23] 2. Steam Roller
[4:53] 3. The Laws Must Change
[3:47] 4. Have Mercy Judge
[6:21] 5. Goin' Down Slow
[5:02] 6. Soledad
[7:12] 7. Home Dream
[3:35] 8. Wicked Wicked Man
[4:26] 9. Headin' For Home
[5:09] 10. The Time Has Come

Guilty! (called Black & White Blues in re-releases) is a 1971 album by Eric Burdon and Jimmy Witherspoon. It was the first release by Burdon after he left his band War.

In September 1970, Jimi Hendrix died after a jam session with Eric Burdon & War at Ronnie Scott's Jazz Club in London. After that, Burdon often broke down on stage. On 5 February 1971 he finally left the band in the middle of their European tour, allegedly due to exhaustion. After returning home and taking time off, the bulk of the album was recorded in summer with Witherspoon. The backing band, called Tovarish, consisted mainly of members from War.

"Going Down Slow" was recorded live in May 1971 in the San Quentin State Prison, with backing from Ike White and the San Quentin Prison Band. "Home Dream" was taken from Eric Burdon & War's back catalog; the song's title refers to the John Phillips Studios in Los Angeles. "Soledad" was released as a single.

The album was re-released as Black & White Blues in 1976. Remastered CD issues, also with the alternate album title, were made in 1995 by MCA and in 2003 by BMG.

Guilty