segunda-feira, 25 de maio de 2026
Eric Burdon & The Animals - Love Is 1968
Cosmic Michael - Cosmic Michael 1969
"'I am a child of Woodstock nation, I've come a long way from my home...' So sings the one and only Cosmic Michael, on this the opening track of his second album released by the Bliss label in 1970. An album now high on serious psych collector wants lists too... Cosmic Michael. Well, some regard him as a 'Godhead,' the ultimate spiritual hippy, with songs of love, freedom & peace, all delivered with just piano, vocals and kazoo...A true guru... But, what of the music? I guess these days you'd call it loner psych, but back then the term 'freak rock' might have been applied to such a release. After his eponymous, and equally enigmatic debut album released a year earlier, he'd witnessed the Woodstock festival, absorbed the vibe, and relocated to Los Angeles where he then recorded After a While, seemingly quite quickly...'I've seen The Who, and Ten Years After, Jefferson Airplane they nearly blew my mind....' The nine tracks on After a While are stoned '60s DIY rock 'n'roll. You can call it lo-fi or home made, but the message remains: Cosmic Michael preaches love and freedom, and he's a mean boogie-woogie player too. The songs run one after the other, as if part of one spontaneous recording -- the moment one ends, he's into the next, and so on. After a While is of its time, a snapshot of innocence when it was believed music could change the world, and maybe it will yet."
listen hereAlan Silva - Seasons 1970
John Saxby, Lionel Gibson With Cirkus - Future Shock 1977
Tear Gas - Piggy Go Getter 1970
Tear Gas, the Scottish rock outfit, released a pair of albums in the early ’70s that vividly highlighted their talents for guitar-based rock. Though the band kept up a rigorous touring schedule, it only really paid off once a few band members joined with Alex Harvey as The Sensational Alex Harvey Band. Still, Esoteric’s reissues of Piggy Go Getter (in its first-ever official CD release) and its follow up Tear Gas show the band’s early promise.
The Glasgow-based group originally formed in the tail end of the ’60s and included Eddie Campbell on keys, Zal Cleminson on guitar, Chris Glen on bas and vocals, Gilson Lavis on drums, and Andi Mulvey on vocals. By 1970, their lineup had changed. For Piggy Go Getter, Wullie Monroe, late of Ritchie Blackmore’s abortive pre-Deep Purple band Mandrake Root, replaced Lavis (who’d go on to play in Squeeze) and David Batchelor succeeded Mulvey. The band cut their teeth performing gigs all over Glasgow, performing originals and selections from Jethro Tull, Deep Purple, and The Jeff Beck Group (in fact, Tear Gas’s version of Beck’s “Jailhouse Rock/All Shook Up” medley appears on their self-titled album). Their live act caught the attention of Tony Calder, one of The Rolling Stones’ managers. He signed Tear Gas for the Famous Music label, a subsidiary of Paramount, and the group joined up with producer Tony Chapman and engineer Tom Allom to record their debut.
listen heredomingo, 10 de maio de 2026
Michael Gibbs - Tanglewood '63 1971
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Chicken Shack - O.K. Ken 1969
James Carr - You Got My Mind Messed Up 1967
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Rita Lee & Tutti Frutti - Atrás Do Porto Tem Uma Cidade 1974
LaBelle - Pressure Cookin' 1973
The road to reinvention proved to be a long, hard-fought battle for Patti LaBelle and her Blue Belle sisters. At the onset of the ‘70s, Labelle established themselves across the pond and back as vocal powerhouses with surefire determination, sensuality, and fierceness. Their gospel-charged voices contained intense emotion in every wail, coo, and shout. This sorely forgotten 1973 gem, (the lone album they cut for RCA Records), Pressure Cookin‘ signaled the group settling into their groove just a year before they catapulted into the stratosphere. Cookin’ flaunted Labelle’s versatility and Nona Hendryx‘s songwriting in a hybrid of righteous funk and meditative ballads that reflect the changing social landscape. It’s one of Labelle’s rarest, best albums, and a must-hear for classic soul and funk enthusiasts who believe “Lady Marmalade,” and possibly its parent album, their 1974 breakthrough, Nightbirds, is the end-all to be all of Labelle’s legacy.
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