terça-feira, 14 de julho de 2026
Hell Preachers Inc. - Supreme Psychedelic Underground 1968
Mike Bloomfield & Al Kooper - Live Adventures of Mike Bloomfield & Al Kooper 1968
One of the seminal live albums of the late '60s, Live Adventures of Al Kooper & Mike Bloomfield was a natural, organic offshoot of the hugely successful Super Session album from 1968, which contained performances by both of these groundbreaking musicians, as well as Stephen Stills. The idea of musical spontaneity both in live performance and in the recording studio had reached a certain apex in 1968, and spontaneous excursions by musicians such as Jimi Hendrix, Steve Winwood, and the Southern California musical covenant that eventually became Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young, as well as a host of others, were indeed a sign of the times. But it was the union of Bloomfield and Kooper that can truly claim an origination of the phenomenon, and this album takes it to another level entirely. Utilizing a fine and tight rhythm section of John Kahn and Skip Prokop, the two musicians duel and embrace each other on such cuts as the accurately named "Her Holy Modal Highness" and a great, revamped rock/soul re-working of Paul Simon's "Feelin' Groovy," which is buttressed by a guest studio vocal overdub by the author himself. The album's high point may be Bloomfield's rendering of Albert King's epic "Don't Throw Your Love on Me So Strong," which may indeed also be one of his finest career recordings. Like the Super Session album, history repeated itself, as Bloomfield's chronic insomnia caught up with him by the morning of the second night of the two-night gig, rendering him unavailable. Kooper enlisted the help of Steve Miller and a practically unknown Carlos Santana (himself a Bloomfield devotee) for several tracks, particularly a loose and free version of "Dear Mr. Fantasy," which sort of embodies the whole affair and era. Undoubtedly a necessity from the period, the record has been remastered for CD, and the results are truly glorious, and do this legendary album justice. AMG.
listen hereZalman Yanovsky - Alive And Well In Argentina 1968
Water - The Second Day 1975
Paul Brett's Sage - Paul Brett´s Sage 1970
Herbie Hancock - Flood 1975
Clouds - Scrapbook 1968
Clouds were a progressive rock group from Edinburgh, Scotland who never found true commercial success despite rave reviews for their records and concerts. Not to be confused with The Clouds (2) (1980s indie rock band from Glasgow, Scotland).
In their earlier incarnation as '1-2-3', Edinburgh's Clouds had a now-legendary residency at the Marquee club in early 1967, directly influencing many important bands such as Yes, The Nice, and King Crimson. They were managed by Brian Epstein and Nems, but this association ended shortly after Epstein’s death, and the band was signed by Terry Ellis to the fledgling Chrysalis empire. But the success of Jethro Tull took the focus away from Clouds, and despite successful European and American tours, and numerous recordings with Island records, the band failed to capture the imagination of the record-buying public, and disbanded in Oct 1971. As years passed, however, it was the band's earlier incarnation as 1-2-3 that became the subject of a critical reappraisal. With accolades from the likes of David Bowie and others, the band's distinctive guitar-less, organ-driven sound is now viewed as a definitive precursor to the progressive rock movement.
Ted Nugent - Ted Nugent 1975
terça-feira, 30 de junho de 2026
Doc Holliday - Doc Holliday 1973
Singer/guitarist Frank Carillo was the band's driving force. Carillo had previously been a member of the band Hot Soup which recorded an obscure single and album in the mid-'60s before calling it quits. Carillo's next job was as a member of Peter Frampton's post-Humble Pie recording and touring band (he played in "Winds of Change" and "Frampton's Camel"). With support from manager Phil Loritoe he then decided to form his own band, recruiting the talents of bassist Thomas Arlotta, drummer Robert Liggio, and singer/guitarist Robert Mayo. Signed by the small Metromedia label, the band's debut album teamed them with Rolling Stones producer Chris Kimsey. Metromedia apparently had high hopes for the band, shipping them to London to record 1973's "Doc Holliday" at the famed Olympic Sound Studios. With Carillo and Frank Paul Spagnuolo credited with writing most of the eight tracks (bassist Arlotta wrote 'Come Down Sally'), the album wasn't particularly original, reflecting a wide array of outside influences including FM rockers like Humble Pie, boogie bar band (Faces), more pop oriented groups (Badfinger), and even a touch of glam. In this case the lack of originality was a major criticism. Among other gifts, the band was blessed with a pair of strong lead singers. Carillo was the gruffer of the two, which made him wonderful on tracks like the opener 'Fix Me' and the single 'Whiskey Lady'. In contrast Mayo's voice was a bit more commercial which was great for tracks like the ballad 'Captain Cooke'. As mentioned, musically they were all over the place including a stab at country-rock ('Restless Days') , but for these guys it wasn't a major drawback since there wasn't a single truly awful performance on the LP. Hard to put my finger on it, but "Doc Holliday" is an album with a distinctive British rock feel and it's an album far better than the individual compositions (which are themselves quite good).RYM.
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Wally Richardson - Soul Guru 1968
Maffit And Davies - The Rise And Fall Of Honesty 1968
The record starts off with a brilliant version of Bob Dylan’s Just Like A Woman. Maffitt/Davies transform this standard into a heartbreaking orchestrated folk track that must surely rank as one of the best versions of this song.
Forest Lawn, the album’s failed single, has a distinct Face to Face Kink’s sound though it’s notable for its dobro and freaky church organ. Tom Thumb’s Blues is the other Dylan cover on this record and shows the band taking a Byrds/Everly Brothers vocal harmony approach. The playing is topnotch throughout the record (check out instrumental Lungi Dal Caro Beni) and the duo’s vocal harmonies are tight if a bit unconventional. This is a quiet, tranquil record that never bores and reminds me of prime late 60’s Dillards on their folk-rock outings.
One of my favorite tracks on the album is Landscape Grown Cold. This is a visionary slice of American music that predates the alt. country/folk boom with dark lyrics, strings, phasing towards the end, and a vibe similar to Texas band Euphoria. More noteworthy tracks are Kingswood Manor which is a good folk-rock track that flirts with psychedelia by way of tabla (and drug references within the lyrics) while country-rocker City Sidewalks is very trancey and will appeal to any true Byrds fan. About 3 or 4 tracks on the album include drums though electric guitar fans should note with caution that most of this disc is acoustic.
The music is time worn, ancient and has that lived in feel but always inventive and never short on ideas. What ever happened to these musicians? Does anyone know? Anyway, if Americana or folk-rock is your bag, prepare yourself for a really good one. The Rising Storm. listen here














