This was John Mayall's studio-recorded follow-up to the live The Turning Point, featuring the same drumless quartet of himself, guitarist Jon Mark, reed player Johnny Almond, and bassist Steve Thompson. Mayall was at a commercial and critical peak with this folk-jazz approach; the album's leadoff track, "Don't Waste My Time," had become his sole singles chart entry prior to the LP's release, and although his former label, London, confused matters by releasing the two-year-old Diary of a Band, Vol. 1 in the U.S. just before this new album appeared in early 1970, the new crop of fans he'd found with The Turning Point stuck with him on this gentle, reflective release. Empty Rooms hit Number 33 in the U.S.; in the U.K. it got to Number Nine. AMG.
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2 comentários:
When Mayall created this config (with no drummer) it sounded really different from what we used to listen to (in blues or in rock). It was (and also is nowadays) attractive and innovative. Maybe this studio album is less known than "The Turning Point" and I feel it harder to appreciate.
Hi Psegpp, yes! he was brave, that's no question and it was an amazing choice! love it and remember the same year he drop some words in the Flock's first album! yes!
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