"The debut album from St. Louis (St.Louis, State of Missouri). Was established in 1972, signed a contract with Atco Records. The album was produced Arif Mardin, in what follows a repeated winner of the "Grammy" ... The group performed about the same fate as The Allman Brothers Band (ie, Soulful Southern Rock), is no coincidence that they both performed at the concerts ... Also participated in these concerts Lynyrd Skynyrd, The Charlie Daniels Band, The Outlaws, Todd Rundgren, Alice Cooper, REO Speedwagon ...The band, Mama's Pride, was originally from St. Louis, Missouri USA. In their hometown, they were fondly referred to as "The Pride of St. Louis". The group was formed by brothers Pat and Danny Liston. Members of the original band were: Pat Liston - vocals, slide, electric and acoustic guitars, organ, Danny Liston - vocals, electric and acoustic guitars, Kevin Sanders - drums, percussion, back ground vocals, Max Baker - lead electric guitar, 12-string and acoustic guitars, background vocals, Joe Turek - bass, background vocals, Frank Gagliano - keyboards and synthesizer. Mama's Pride signed with Atco Records (a division of Atlantic Records) in 1974. They recorded and released their first album a short time later. According to Frank Gagliano, the Muscle Shoals tapes are still the highlight of the band then and now! The reason being is those recordings actually sounded live and in concert! Ten tunes--rhythm tracks--vocals--and overdubs recorded and mixed down in "three days"! David Johnson the engineer recorded all the tracks and we had been playing six nights a week for some time and the band was smoking hot!! All the labels that heard those tracks came to Atlanta to make a bid. Atlantic Records and the whole staff flew down to Tampa, Florida to see the group at a club called the PAC--Performing Arts Center. They offered us a major deal after the first show!! We actually met Amet Ertugen the CEO of Atlantic and he offered us a deal we couldn't refuse! Frank Gagliano auditioned for Pat Liston in one of the first groups he had in St. Louis. At the time Frank was 14 years old and played accordian. Pat liked the way Frank played but told him to get a Wurlitzer electric piano and the gig was his! Well Frank picked up a used Wurlitzer and called Pat back and he had already hired somebody else, Ten years later Kevin Sanders---Kevin and Frank played together in bands since they were kids-- joined the group in December of 1973 in Tucson, Arizona and Frank hooked up with the group in April of 1974 in Kearny, Nebraska"
listen herequinta-feira, 25 de junho de 2026
Here Comes Everybody - Here Comes Everybody 1974
Yvonne Fair - The Bitch Is Black 1975
The Meters - The Meters 1969
England - Garden Shed 1977
Klaatu - Hope 1977
Gwen McCrae - Rockin' Chair 1975
Nucleus - Under The Sun 1974
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Gong - Magick Brother 1969
terça-feira, 23 de junho de 2026
Jiro Inagaki & Soul Media - Funky Stuff 1975
sexta-feira, 12 de junho de 2026
Lennie MacDonald - Hard Road 1975
Canned Heat - Canned Heat Cookbook 1969
Genesis - Nursery Cryme 1971
By 1971 Genesis had all the pieces in place. Following the devastating departure of guitar player Anthony Philips and drummer John Mayhew they’d finally found musicians who had the chops to keep up with these posh boys’ grandiose visions. Though (with singer Peter Gabriel especially) their roots lay in white r’n’b it was no longer simply good enough to sing about the simple joys of being young. Their previous album, Trespass, had been full of post-apocalyptic allegory (a subject they’d return to) and anti-violence diatribe. Easing into their self-appointed role as purveyors of very English rock fantasy, they retired to the obligatory ‘place in the country’ and gave the world Nursery Cryme. An album filled with 19th century shaggy dog stories, greek myth and rural life. Genesis had virtually invented their own genre, Edwardian rock.
By this point their roots in the work of prog predecessors, Procol Harum and Family, were still very visible, yet Gabriel’s love of role-playing within song was taking them somewhere else entirely new. Honed by endless gigging at places like Ayelsbury’s Friars club, songs such as ‘’The Musical Box’’ were tailor-made for his use of costume to hide his shyness (a creepy old man in this case). The production was far too rudimentary to really convey their power but recent recruits, Phil Collins (ex-child star and fusion enthusiast) and Steve Hackett (proven track record with sibling John in band, Quiet Sun), made all the difference. Collins’ snappy drums were augmented by his uncanny ability to sound not unlike Gabriel, allowing him to sing on one track (“For Absent Friends”). Hackett’s armoury of tapping and swell techniques really broadened the palette of the band, giving Tony Banks more room for his Delius-lite organ filigrees, not to mention their newly purchased Mellotron, bought from King Crimson who they were now chasing in the ‘most-English band’ contest. “Seven Stones” is a masterclass in pomp, in a good way. And let’s not forget the twelve string guitars. Never has a band had such a chiming about them and hardly surprising; nearly every member played one. So we end up with a series of mini suites about murder by croquet mallet followed by psychosexual haunting (“The Musical Box”), armageddon by enraged plant life (“The Return Of The Giant Hogweed”) or hermaphroditic tales of caution (“The Fountain Of Samalcis”). All of it delivered with a panache that wouldn’t quite put them in the big league but was a large step towards making their mark. bbc.co.uk/ Chris Jones
listen hereJefferson Starship - Red Octopus 1975
The Sound Farm - Harvest 1969
Not much info about this band from Columbia, Missouri. The music is psychedelic/jam blues, and acid rock. Give it a listen!
Comment on my former post. "I freaked out when I first saw the Sound Farm label. I hadn’t seen it since 1969. I lived in Columbia, Missouri from 1967-1970, my name is Sonny Smith, I was the drummer in a different band called “Crystal Clear” & we were friends with the Sound Farm, we’d borrow amps from each other when we had gigs. & Smokey ( Michael Cochran) helped us record a demo out at the Sound Farm, which was a real place by the way. They changed personnel later by adding David “Bean” Walter on keyboards & vocals, & Glen “Bummer the Drummer” Ward on drums. But when I was friends with them, the line-up was… John Slezinger, Bass guitar, vocals. Heidi Upton, organ,piano,vocals. Michael “Smokey” Cochran, Lead, Rhythm, Bass guitars, vocals. Ken (Wikowski) Shepard, Lead, Rhythm,Bass guitars, vocals. Jim “Bozo” Taylor, Drums, Vocals. Guy Wayne Bottom, Percussion, Vocals. I once followed them to St. Louis,Mo where they opened for the Albert King blues band. And I went down to Springfield, Missouri to see them at the new Bijou Theatre later in their career. But the best I ever saw them was when they put on a show at the Hall theatre on 9th street in Columbia,MO in 1968, I was upstairs in the booth working the stage lights, it was a hell of a show. They were popular & well liked around mid-Missouri, I worked at the Ivanhoe restaurant in Columbia at the time, and they hung out there and played there sometimes. I was proud to know them as close friends, they were more experienced than the band I was in, but they helped us out when ever they could, they even sold us their old PA system. I heard Kenny Shepard has passed away, (he owned Crazy Music shop/store) & Michael Cochran is still playing music (Monday in the ozarks) but I’ve never heard anything about the rest of the band because I moved from Columbia decades ago. Me & John Slezinger the bass player were close friends, I’d really like to know what happened to him, if anybody has any information about John, (or the rest of the band members) please let me know. John gave me my copy of this tape recording, I played it so much that the tape wore out, I had to get another copy from him. Thank you for taking me down memory lane." By Sonny Smith, thank you. (Crystal Clear)
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