New album releases in 200 words or less…
Buzzcocks – Sonics In the Soul (Cherry Red Records U.K.)
British punk/new wave legends Buzzcocks built their reputation on Pete
Shelley’s caustic, insightful lyrics; Steve Diggle’s livewire fretwork; and an
overall melodic, high-octane pop-punk sound that became influential far beyond
the band’s modest record sales. Since reuniting in 1989 after an eight-year
hiatus, Buzzcocks has been firing on all cylinders, Shelley and Diggle ensuring
that they remained a vital creative outfit and not a ‘nostalgia’ act. With
Shelley’s death in 2018, the band’s first album without its charismatic frontman
had to be a daunting challenge to record. Diggle proves with
Sonics In the Soul that there’s still gas left in the Buzzcocks’ tank.
Flanked by longtime bassist Chris Remington and drummer Danny Farrant,
Sonics In the Soul is essentially a Diggle solo album, but one sporting
the crucial ‘fast ‘n’ loud’ Buzzcocks sonic ethos. Diggle’s voice takes getting
used to, and his attack-dog guitarplay pales somewhat by the loss of Shelley’s
counterpoint. But songs like the locomotive “Manchester Rain” or the
riff-littered “Bad Dreams” display a fierce creativity and musical deftness
matching or surpassing the band’s previous post-millennial albums. Extra credit
awarded for “Don’t Mess With My Brain”, a rifftastic stomped that blends typical
Buzzcocks’ lyrical wit with stunning instrumentation.
Grade: A-
BUY!
Creedence Clearwater Revival – At The Royal Albert Hall (Craft Recordings)
Just as CCR’s enormous success as a “singles band” (nine Top 10 singles
in four years) often overshadowed their album-making prowess, so too did it
obscure their strength as a live outfit. As proven by 2019’s long-overdue
release of Live At Woodstock, and this recent
At The Royal Albert Hall, Creedence was a white-hot live band, each
performance bristling with fire and brimstone. This is the first release of the
April 1970 show*, which straddles Willie & the Poor Boys and the
upcoming Cosmo’s Factory, but the setlist is well-balanced across albums
and includes all the “classic rock” radio hits – “Fortunate Son”, “Born On the
Bayou”, “Proud Mary”, and “Travelin’ Band” – as well as gems like “Midnight
Special” and an extended “Keep On Chooglin’” jam among its dozen tiki-torches. A
few deep cuts stand out, notably their bluesy cover of “The Night Time Is the
Right Time”, which is closer in spirit to Ray Charles’ version than to Nappy
Brown’s original; the riotous, punk-fierce B-side “Commotion”; and the
swamp-blues fever of “Tombstone Shadow”. It’s a shame that no CCR live LPs
were released during their heyday (Live In Europe was a posthumous
release) as Creedence was a helluva performing outfit.
Grade: A+
BUY!
* The Royal Albert Hall Concert album was released by
Fantasy Records in 1980 to cash in on the band’s lingering reputation, but
mistakes were made and the tapes used were actually from a January 1970 show at
the Oakland Coliseum. Fantasy recalled the album and reissued it months later as
The Concert – same cover, same concert, different title…
Charlie Daniels & Friends –
Volunteer Jam 1, 1974: The Legend Begins (Blue Hat Records)
Southern Rock had been around for a half-decade by the time that Charlie
Daniels held the first ‘Volunteer Jam’ at the War Memorial Auditorium in
Nashville. It could be argued, however, that October 4th, 1974 was the day that
Southern Rock burst into the mainstream, the first of 21 total Volunteer Jams
held over the next 47 years, the event eventually outliving its creator. That
entire 1974 show has never been released commercially (two live songs from the
concert were included on the band’s 1974 Fire On the Mountain LP). Aside
from Daniels’ crackerjack band, the performance includes “friends” like the
Marshall Tucker Band’s Toy Caldwell and Paul Riddle and the Allman Brothers
Band’s Dickey Betts and Jamie Nichol. The twelve-song tracklist skews heavily
towards CDB’s upcoming Fire album, including the Top 30 hit “The South’s
Gonna Do It”, and is fairly indicative of the talented band’s set at the time.
Daniels was a skilled multi-instrumentalist, keyboardist/singer “Taz” DiGregorio
could have fronted his own band, and guitarist Barry Barnes was the CDB’s secret
weapon. Honestly, you either love Southern Rock and the 1970s-era CBD or you
don’t; but for fans, this set is long-overdue document of a talented, hot-shit
band.
Grade: A
BUY!
Note: With this new CD, six of the first seven Volunteer
Jams have been released on vinyl/CD, with 1976’s self-titled
Volunteer Jam album comprised of a handful of performances from the 1975
Murfreesboro TN event. Jams III (1977) and IV (1978) were condensed onto a
single double-LP set, while VI (1980) and VII (1981) received single-disc
releases. The landmark 1979 (V) jam has never been released, although the show
featured the reunion of Lynyrd Skynyrd for the first time since the 1977 plane
crash that killed several band members; the event also included guests like Toy
Caldwell and George McCorkle from the Marshall Tucker Band, John Prine, Link
Wray, and the Winter Brothers Band, among many others. I was there and it was a
pretty explosive moment when the surviving Skynyrd members hit the stage … so
when will we see the show on CD?
Will Hoge – Wings On My Shoes (Edlo Records)
Nashville’s Will Hoge has long drawn inspiration as a lyricist from the
late, great John Prine but, with the album-opening “John Prine’s Cadillac”, he
picks up the songwriting legend’s mantle with an exquisitely-drawn story-song
that offers up brilliant lyrical imagery while also serving as a reverent
tribute to the fallen troubadour. It’s just the first of an album’s worth of
fine material on Hoge’s Wings On My Shoes, and if the singer/songwriter
has moved slightly away from his earlier power-pop, jangle-rock sound to a
rootsier, Americana sound, it hasn’t lessened his poetic acumen or energetic
delivery. Gorgeous love songs like “It’s Just You” and “The Last One To Go” are
brimming over with romantic yearning while story-songs like “Dead Man’s Hand”
and “Queenie” draw from the Prine/Guy Clark school of penmanship. The wonderful,
nostalgic “Ain’t Like It Used To Be” is about my former hometown, contrasting
the old, rural town with the new, upscale city while “Whose God It This?” is
wickedly satirical, its humorous narrative hitting the MAGA bullseye. Each
performance is infused with soulful vocals, ringing guitars, and a big drumbeat;
if this is the sound of “new country,” then I’m all in…
Grade: A
BUY!
The Pretty Things – Live At the BBC (Repertoire Records U.K.)
Even if relatively obscure stateside, the Pretty Things were one of the
better bands from the British Invasion and they enjoyed a lengthy career that
spanned six decades and a couple dozen albums, right up to the tragic passing of
longtime band frontman Phil May. The material included on this six-disc box set
was originally broadcast by BBC radio and although a lot of it has been
previously-released on a handful of collections, this compilation is the last
word on the British rocker’s hometown performances. Live At the BBC packs
a lot of energy and vitality into its six discs, which offer performances from
as early as an October 1964 appearance on the ‘Saturday Club’ show through a
July 1975 performance for legendary British DJ John Peel. There are a lot of
stops in-between over the decade-plus documented here, capturing the band in its
various guises, from R&B shouters to psychedelic pioneers to hard rockers.
Sure, there’s a lot of duplication of songs from various shows, but where else
are you going to hear turbo-charged live takes on great tunes like “SF Sorrow Is
Born”, “Religion’s Dead”, “Belfast Cowboys”, “Defecting Grey”, “Rosalyn”, and
“Singapore Silk Torpedo”, among many others?
Grade: A+
BUY!
Walter Trout – Ride (Provogue Records)
At 70 years old, Walter Trout still performs with the energy and creative
vitality of an artist half his age. The life-scarred blues veteran has been
treading the bricks for nearly 50 years at this point and with Ride, his
30th album, Trout proves that there’s a lot of life left in the old road dog.
The guitarist is always looking for ways to challenge himself musically, so
Ride showcases Trout’s songwriting and instrumental skills in a variety
of blues-based styles. Album-opening “Ghosts” is a hauntingly-brilliant (pun
intended) blues-rock flamethrower while the biographical title track echoes the
jazz-flecked, guitar-happy Southern rock vibe of the Marshall Tucker Band.
Trout’s underrated skill at balladry is on display with the lush “Follow You
Back Home” and the emotional “Waiting For the Dawn”, which offers up some of
Trout’s most evocative six-string solos. Blues-rock fare like “High Is Low”
(featuring Trout’s overlooked harmonica skills) and “Better Days Ahead” feature
the guitarist at his incendiary, guitar-slinging finest while “Leave It All
Behind” is a classic rock-styled raver complete with raging hornplay and heavy
guitar. Altogether, Walter Trout’s Ride continues a string of excellence
that began with 2008’s The Outsider and continues unabated to this day.
Grade: A
BUY!
Previously on That Devil Music.com:
Short Rounds, July 2022: Shemekia Copeland, Jade Warrior, Gwil Owen, Prince & the Revolution, Sour
Ops, Supersonic Blues Machine & ‘Heroes and Villains’
Short Rounds, December 2021:
Calidoscopio, Deep Purple, Tom Guerra, The Specials, The Wildhearts, Sami
Yaffa & ‘I'm A Freak Baby 3’
Short Rounds, September 2021:
Marshall Crenshaw, Crack The Sky, Donna Frost, Mark Harrison & the Happy
Tramps, Christone ‘Kingfish’ Ingram, the Rubinoos, and
Jon Savage’s 1972-1976
Short Rounds, June 2021:
The Black Keys, the Bummers, Michael Nesmith, Greg “Stackhouse” Prevost,
Quinn Sullivan, and the Vejtables
Showing posts with label Creedence Clearwater Revival. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Creedence Clearwater Revival. Show all posts
Saturday, October 1, 2022
Short Rounds: Buzzcocks, Creedence Clearwater Revival, Charlie Daniels & Friends, Will Hoge, The Pretty Things & Walter Trout (October 2022)
Labels:
#bluesrock,
Buzzcocks,
CD Review,
Creedence Clearwater Revival,
Short Rounds,
The Pretty Things,
Walter Trout,
Will Hoge
Location:
Buffalo, Rust Belt, USA
Friday, January 3, 2020
Short Rounds: The Band, Creedence Clearwater Revival, Dana Gillespie, Manfred Mann, Mick Ronson & A-Squared Records (2020)
New album releases in 150 words or less…
The Band – The Band (Capitol Records)
Celebrate the 50th anniversary of the Band’s visionary, groundbreaking sophomore album with this deluxe two-disc reissue. Although the untarnished, pioneering Americana of the original LP, with classic tunes like “The Night They Drove Old Dixie Down,” “Up On Cripple Creek,” and “Across the Great Divide” should be enough to pull you in, a slew of bonus tracks in the form of alternate takes and instrumental mixes round out the first disc. The second CD offers rough mixes of the Band’s appearance at Woodstock 1969, released here for the first time ever, a magnificent performance comprised of eleven classic songs. Another seven bonus tracks comprised of studio outtakes and alternate versions fills out the CD, but it’s the live stuff that you’ll listen to again and again, making the set an essential addition to the library of any fan of the Band, Bob Dylan, or American music overall. Grade: A+ BUY!
Creedence Clearwater Revival – Live at Woodstock (Craft Recordings)
By the time Woodstock happened in August 1969, Creedence Clearwater Revival had released three LPs in little more than a year and had enjoyed a handful of Top 10 singles. One of the festival’s higher-profile acts, CCR nevertheless demurred from appearing in the Woodstock movie or soundtrack albums. Fifty years later, Live at Woodstock marks the first release of the legendary band’s hour-long set from the festival, the eleven tracks here including some of the most revered classic rock songs of all time. The band rips through gems like “Born On the Bayou,” “Bad Moon Rising,” “Proud Mary,” “I Put A Spell On You,” and “Suzie Q” like flaming dervishes. Much like the Band’s Woodstock above mentioned performance, why did it take so damn long to release this show? The CD offers better sound quality than the vinyl release, but the raucous performance stands on its own regardless of format. Grade: A BUY!
Dana Gillespie – What Memories We Make: Complete MainMan Recordings 1971-1974 (Cherry Red Records U.K.)
Blue-eyed soul singer/songwriter Dana Gillespie’s What Memories We Make is a two-disc set that features the powerhouse vocalist’s two RCA Records albums recorded while she was hanging around David Bowie and was managed by Tony Defries’ MainMain. This includes her bluesy, critically-acclaimed 1973 RCA debut Weren’t Born A Man and its rapid follow-up, 1974’s Ain’t Gonna Play No Second Fiddle. Both LPs have long been out-of-print but in-demand with collectors due to Bowie’s involvement and contributions of superstar session players like Rick Wakeman, Eddie Jobson, and Bobby Keys. Throw in some alternative takes and demo recordings from the rare 1971 BOWPROMO promotional-only album and you have a complete document of an important era in the artist’s career. Rediscovery of Gillespie’s immense talents continues apace – aside from What Memories We Make, Rev-Ola Records label also recently reissued the singer’s first two albums for Decca Records on CD as London Social Scene. Grade: A BUY!
Manfred Mann – Radio Days, Volumes 1-4 (Umbrella Records)
I’m gonna cheat here and include all four of these two-disc BBC collections of the British rock ‘n’ roll legends in one review. Curated and authorized by the band, these are absolutely essential for any Manfred Mann fan – volume one features the Paul Jones era, volume two features singer Mike D’Abo – and both sets include the band’s hits and rarities alike from a five-year period circa 1964 to 1969, great songs like “Pretty Flamingo,” “If You Gotta Go,” and “Mighty Quinn” as well as band interviews. Radio Days, Volume 3, representing the band’s ‘Chapter III’ incarnation, is a little too-much jazz-skronky for my tastes, but it’s the road that took Mann and cohorts to Radio Days, Volume 4 featuring the Earth Band, “Get Your Rocks Off,” and a different slant on the same ol’ prog-rock. At a minimum, at least three of these volumes deserve a place in your library. Grade: A BUY!
Mick Ronson – Only After Dark: The Complete MainMan Recordings (Cherry Red Records U.K.)
I’ve written of Mick Ronson’s talents before, and the lack of respect he’s proffered as one of the great rock guitarists of the 1970s. Perhaps it’s the dearth of solo material available that has prevented a re-estimation of Ronson’s status an as innovator rather than a mere sideman, an injustice that the four-disc Only After Dark box should right. Documenting every note Ronson recorded for manager Tony Defries’ MainMan company, the set includes both of the guitarist’s excellent 1970s-era solo records (1974’s Slaughter On 10th Avenue and 1975’s Play Don’t Worry), both enhanced with a slew of live tracks and demos. The other discs feature previously-unreleased recordings (including some of Guam, Dylan’s backing band on the Rolling Thunder 1975 tour) and live performances showcasing Ronson’s creative depths. Only After Dark is reasonably-priced, too, allowing listeners to re-discover the extraordinary guitarist trusted by legends like David Bowie and Ian Hunter. Grade: A BUY!
Various Artists – An A-Squared Compilation (Third Man Records)
The Reverend lived in Detroit circa 1979-81 and witnessed the city’s high-octane rock ‘n’ roll bands of that era in person. The real action took place during the decade of the ‘60s, though, and many of the best of Detroit’s rockers could be found on A-Squared Records, formed by producer Jeep Holland and named for his hometown of Ann Arbor, Michigan. This two-disc vinyl reissue from Motor City native Jack White’s Third Man Records expands upon a 2008 CD compilation, offering up two-dozen electrifying tracks by bands like rockers the Scott Richard Case (SRC), blue-eyed soul legends the Rationals, guitar hero Dick Wagner & the Frost, the Prime Movers (with Iggy Pop), Stoney & the Jagged Edge and others, and features updated liner notes by music historian Alex Palao. Not all of these tracks were released by Holland’s revered label, but they all crackle with pure rock ‘n’ roll energy. Grade: A BUY!
Previously on That Devil Music.com:
Short Rounds, December 2019 (Holiday Gift Suggestions): Cindy Lee Berryhill, Black Pumas, Alice Cooper, Robyn Hitchcock & Andy Partridge, Handsome Dick Manitoba, The Muffs, Harry Nilsson, The Rosalyns & Bobby Rush
Short Rounds, April 2019: Steve Earle, Nils Lofgren, Lone Justice, Sour Ops, Robin Trower & Jimmie Vaughan
The Band – The Band (Capitol Records)
Celebrate the 50th anniversary of the Band’s visionary, groundbreaking sophomore album with this deluxe two-disc reissue. Although the untarnished, pioneering Americana of the original LP, with classic tunes like “The Night They Drove Old Dixie Down,” “Up On Cripple Creek,” and “Across the Great Divide” should be enough to pull you in, a slew of bonus tracks in the form of alternate takes and instrumental mixes round out the first disc. The second CD offers rough mixes of the Band’s appearance at Woodstock 1969, released here for the first time ever, a magnificent performance comprised of eleven classic songs. Another seven bonus tracks comprised of studio outtakes and alternate versions fills out the CD, but it’s the live stuff that you’ll listen to again and again, making the set an essential addition to the library of any fan of the Band, Bob Dylan, or American music overall. Grade: A+ BUY!
Creedence Clearwater Revival – Live at Woodstock (Craft Recordings)
By the time Woodstock happened in August 1969, Creedence Clearwater Revival had released three LPs in little more than a year and had enjoyed a handful of Top 10 singles. One of the festival’s higher-profile acts, CCR nevertheless demurred from appearing in the Woodstock movie or soundtrack albums. Fifty years later, Live at Woodstock marks the first release of the legendary band’s hour-long set from the festival, the eleven tracks here including some of the most revered classic rock songs of all time. The band rips through gems like “Born On the Bayou,” “Bad Moon Rising,” “Proud Mary,” “I Put A Spell On You,” and “Suzie Q” like flaming dervishes. Much like the Band’s Woodstock above mentioned performance, why did it take so damn long to release this show? The CD offers better sound quality than the vinyl release, but the raucous performance stands on its own regardless of format. Grade: A BUY!
Dana Gillespie – What Memories We Make: Complete MainMan Recordings 1971-1974 (Cherry Red Records U.K.)
Blue-eyed soul singer/songwriter Dana Gillespie’s What Memories We Make is a two-disc set that features the powerhouse vocalist’s two RCA Records albums recorded while she was hanging around David Bowie and was managed by Tony Defries’ MainMain. This includes her bluesy, critically-acclaimed 1973 RCA debut Weren’t Born A Man and its rapid follow-up, 1974’s Ain’t Gonna Play No Second Fiddle. Both LPs have long been out-of-print but in-demand with collectors due to Bowie’s involvement and contributions of superstar session players like Rick Wakeman, Eddie Jobson, and Bobby Keys. Throw in some alternative takes and demo recordings from the rare 1971 BOWPROMO promotional-only album and you have a complete document of an important era in the artist’s career. Rediscovery of Gillespie’s immense talents continues apace – aside from What Memories We Make, Rev-Ola Records label also recently reissued the singer’s first two albums for Decca Records on CD as London Social Scene. Grade: A BUY!
Manfred Mann – Radio Days, Volumes 1-4 (Umbrella Records)
I’m gonna cheat here and include all four of these two-disc BBC collections of the British rock ‘n’ roll legends in one review. Curated and authorized by the band, these are absolutely essential for any Manfred Mann fan – volume one features the Paul Jones era, volume two features singer Mike D’Abo – and both sets include the band’s hits and rarities alike from a five-year period circa 1964 to 1969, great songs like “Pretty Flamingo,” “If You Gotta Go,” and “Mighty Quinn” as well as band interviews. Radio Days, Volume 3, representing the band’s ‘Chapter III’ incarnation, is a little too-much jazz-skronky for my tastes, but it’s the road that took Mann and cohorts to Radio Days, Volume 4 featuring the Earth Band, “Get Your Rocks Off,” and a different slant on the same ol’ prog-rock. At a minimum, at least three of these volumes deserve a place in your library. Grade: A BUY!
Mick Ronson – Only After Dark: The Complete MainMan Recordings (Cherry Red Records U.K.)
I’ve written of Mick Ronson’s talents before, and the lack of respect he’s proffered as one of the great rock guitarists of the 1970s. Perhaps it’s the dearth of solo material available that has prevented a re-estimation of Ronson’s status an as innovator rather than a mere sideman, an injustice that the four-disc Only After Dark box should right. Documenting every note Ronson recorded for manager Tony Defries’ MainMan company, the set includes both of the guitarist’s excellent 1970s-era solo records (1974’s Slaughter On 10th Avenue and 1975’s Play Don’t Worry), both enhanced with a slew of live tracks and demos. The other discs feature previously-unreleased recordings (including some of Guam, Dylan’s backing band on the Rolling Thunder 1975 tour) and live performances showcasing Ronson’s creative depths. Only After Dark is reasonably-priced, too, allowing listeners to re-discover the extraordinary guitarist trusted by legends like David Bowie and Ian Hunter. Grade: A BUY!
Various Artists – An A-Squared Compilation (Third Man Records)
The Reverend lived in Detroit circa 1979-81 and witnessed the city’s high-octane rock ‘n’ roll bands of that era in person. The real action took place during the decade of the ‘60s, though, and many of the best of Detroit’s rockers could be found on A-Squared Records, formed by producer Jeep Holland and named for his hometown of Ann Arbor, Michigan. This two-disc vinyl reissue from Motor City native Jack White’s Third Man Records expands upon a 2008 CD compilation, offering up two-dozen electrifying tracks by bands like rockers the Scott Richard Case (SRC), blue-eyed soul legends the Rationals, guitar hero Dick Wagner & the Frost, the Prime Movers (with Iggy Pop), Stoney & the Jagged Edge and others, and features updated liner notes by music historian Alex Palao. Not all of these tracks were released by Holland’s revered label, but they all crackle with pure rock ‘n’ roll energy. Grade: A BUY!
Previously on That Devil Music.com:
Short Rounds, December 2019 (Holiday Gift Suggestions): Cindy Lee Berryhill, Black Pumas, Alice Cooper, Robyn Hitchcock & Andy Partridge, Handsome Dick Manitoba, The Muffs, Harry Nilsson, The Rosalyns & Bobby Rush
Short Rounds, April 2019: Steve Earle, Nils Lofgren, Lone Justice, Sour Ops, Robin Trower & Jimmie Vaughan
![]() |
| The talented Dana Gillespie |
Thursday, August 1, 2019
New Music Monthly: August 2019 Releases
August is shaping up nicely for music, with rockin' new albums by Ty Segall, the Hold Steady, Redd Kross, Oh Sees, the Hangmen, the Futureheads, and King Gizzard & the Lizard Wizard (their second this year!). It's also a great month for blues fans with new tunes from Bobby Rush, Coco Montoya, Ronnie Earl & the Broadcasters, and the Nick Moss Band featuring Dennis Grueling. If that's not your cuppa, how about reissues of great albums by Gregg Allman, John Lee Hooker, Linda McCartney, Steve Goodman, and the talented, effervescent Cindy Lee Berryhill?
Finally, the vaults were opened to sneak out vintage (and previously-unreleased) live sets from Creedence Clearwater Revival and Richard Thompson as well as Jefferson Airplane's complete Woodstock performance on three LPs. If you’re interesting in buying an album, just hit the ‘Buy!’ link to get it from Amazon.com...it’s just that damn easy! Your purchase puts valuable ‘store credit’ in the Reverend’s pocket that he’ll use to buy more music to write about in a never-ending loop of rock ‘n’ roll ecstasy!
AUGUST 2
Berlin - Transcendance BUY!
Cindy Lee Berryhill - Garage Orchestra [CD reissue] BUY!
Cindy Lee Berryhill - Straight Outta Marysville [CD reissue] BUY!
Creedence Clearwater Revival - Live at Woodstock [CD & vinyl] BUY!
Cherie Currie & Brie Darling - The Motivator BUY!
John Lee Hooker - The Country Blues of John Lee Hooker [vinyl reissue] BUY!
Linda McCartney - Wide Prairie [vinyl reissue] BUY!
Ty Segall - First Taste BUY!
Richard Thompson - Across A Crowded Room: Live At Barrymore’s 1985 BUY!
AUGUST 9
Steve Goodman - Santa Ana Winds [CD reissue] BUY!
Steve Goodman - Unfinished Business [demos & outtakes] BUY!
Jefferson Airplane - Woodstock: Sunday August 17,1969 [3-LP vinyl reissue] BUY!
Rocky Kramer - Firestorm BUY!
The Nick Moss Band featuring Dennis Gruenling - Lucky Guy! BUY!
Slipknot - We Are Not Your Kind BUY!
AUGUST 16
The Hold Steady - Thrashing Thru the Passion BUY!
King Gizzard & the Lizard Wizard - Infest the Rats' Nest BUY!
Peter, Paul & Mary - At Newport 1963-65 BUY!
Oh Sees - Face Stabber BUY!
Ride - This Is Not A Safe Space BUY!
Bobby Rush - Sitting On Top of the Blues BUY!
Sleater-Kinney - The Center Won't Hold BUY!
Frank Turner - No Man's Land BUY!
Versus - Ex Voto BUY!
AUGUST 23
Crobot - Motherbrain BUY!
Arlo Guthrie - Alice's Restaurant OST [CD & vinyl] BUY!
The Hangmen - Cactusville BUY!
Coco Montoya - Coming In Hot BUY!
Redd Kross - Beyond the Door BUY!
The Rembrandts - Me and Fate BUY!
The Rubinoos - From Home BUY!
AUGUST 30
Gregg Allman - Laid Back [deluxe CD & vinyl reissue] BUY!
Gregg Allman - The Gregg Allman Tour [vinyl reissue] BUY!
Ronnie Earl & the Broadcasters - Beyond the Blue Door BUY!
The Futureheads - Powers BUY!
Jesse Malin - Sunset Kids BUY!
Nirvana - Live and Loud [vinyl reissue] BUY!
Album of the Month: Creedence Clearwater Revival's Live at Woodstock is the first release of the legendary band's hour-long set from the August 1969 festival. Celebrating the 50th anniversary of Woodstock, the eleven tracks here include some of the most revered classic rock songs of all time. John Fogerty and crew rip through gems like "Born On the Bayou," "Bad Moon Rising," "Proud Mary," "I Put A Spell On You," and "Suzie Q" from CCR's first three LPs. My only question is why did it take so damn long to release this performance? Available on CD or groovy black vinyl...
Finally, the vaults were opened to sneak out vintage (and previously-unreleased) live sets from Creedence Clearwater Revival and Richard Thompson as well as Jefferson Airplane's complete Woodstock performance on three LPs. If you’re interesting in buying an album, just hit the ‘Buy!’ link to get it from Amazon.com...it’s just that damn easy! Your purchase puts valuable ‘store credit’ in the Reverend’s pocket that he’ll use to buy more music to write about in a never-ending loop of rock ‘n’ roll ecstasy!
AUGUST 2
Berlin - Transcendance BUY!
Cindy Lee Berryhill - Garage Orchestra [CD reissue] BUY!
Cindy Lee Berryhill - Straight Outta Marysville [CD reissue] BUY!
Creedence Clearwater Revival - Live at Woodstock [CD & vinyl] BUY!
Cherie Currie & Brie Darling - The Motivator BUY!
John Lee Hooker - The Country Blues of John Lee Hooker [vinyl reissue] BUY!
Linda McCartney - Wide Prairie [vinyl reissue] BUY!
Ty Segall - First Taste BUY!
Richard Thompson - Across A Crowded Room: Live At Barrymore’s 1985 BUY!
AUGUST 9
Steve Goodman - Santa Ana Winds [CD reissue] BUY!
Steve Goodman - Unfinished Business [demos & outtakes] BUY!
Jefferson Airplane - Woodstock: Sunday August 17,1969 [3-LP vinyl reissue] BUY!
Rocky Kramer - Firestorm BUY!
The Nick Moss Band featuring Dennis Gruenling - Lucky Guy! BUY!
Slipknot - We Are Not Your Kind BUY!
AUGUST 16
The Hold Steady - Thrashing Thru the Passion BUY!
King Gizzard & the Lizard Wizard - Infest the Rats' Nest BUY!
Peter, Paul & Mary - At Newport 1963-65 BUY!
Oh Sees - Face Stabber BUY!
Ride - This Is Not A Safe Space BUY!
Bobby Rush - Sitting On Top of the Blues BUY!
Sleater-Kinney - The Center Won't Hold BUY!
Frank Turner - No Man's Land BUY!
Versus - Ex Voto BUY!
AUGUST 23
Crobot - Motherbrain BUY!
Arlo Guthrie - Alice's Restaurant OST [CD & vinyl] BUY!
The Hangmen - Cactusville BUY!
Coco Montoya - Coming In Hot BUY!
Redd Kross - Beyond the Door BUY!
The Rembrandts - Me and Fate BUY!
The Rubinoos - From Home BUY!
AUGUST 30
Gregg Allman - Laid Back [deluxe CD & vinyl reissue] BUY!
Gregg Allman - The Gregg Allman Tour [vinyl reissue] BUY!
Ronnie Earl & the Broadcasters - Beyond the Blue Door BUY!
The Futureheads - Powers BUY!
Jesse Malin - Sunset Kids BUY!
Nirvana - Live and Loud [vinyl reissue] BUY!
Album of the Month: Creedence Clearwater Revival's Live at Woodstock is the first release of the legendary band's hour-long set from the August 1969 festival. Celebrating the 50th anniversary of Woodstock, the eleven tracks here include some of the most revered classic rock songs of all time. John Fogerty and crew rip through gems like "Born On the Bayou," "Bad Moon Rising," "Proud Mary," "I Put A Spell On You," and "Suzie Q" from CCR's first three LPs. My only question is why did it take so damn long to release this performance? Available on CD or groovy black vinyl...
Labels:
#newreleases,
Bobby Rush,
Cindy Lee Berryhill,
Creedence Clearwater Revival,
Jefferson Airplane,
John Lee Hooker,
King Gizzard & the Lizard Wizard,
New Music Monthly,
Nick Moss,
Redd Kross,
Steve Goodman
Location:
Buffalo, Rust Belt, USA
Sunday, October 21, 2018
Creedence Clearwater Revival Complete Studio Albums
Creedence Clearwater Revival had a well-earned reputation as a rock ‘n’ roll jukebox, a singles band that chalked up nine Top 10 hits in the space of four years circa 1968-72 with songs like “Proud Mary,” “Bad Moon Rising,” “Down On the Corner,” and “Travelin’ Band.” One of their earliest singles – CCR’s cover of the Dale Hawkins’ classic “Suzie Q” – barely missed the mark, peaking at #11 on the Billboard Hot 100, and they also had a few other high-charting singles to cement their reputation as radio-ready rockers.
What a lot of people have forgotten, or overlooked, is that CCR was also a damn impressive album band as well. Fronted by singer, songwriter, and guitarist John Fogerty and including rhythm guitarist Tom Fogerty (John’s brother), bassist Stu Cook, and drummer Doug Clifford the band released seven classic studio albums during its tenure, including three in 1969 alone. The music just seemed to pour out of Fogerty and crew, and the bourgeoning FM radio band lapped up these albums like a hobo with a bottle of ripple. Five of CCR’s studio albums charted Top 10, the sixth peaked at #12, and six of ‘em were eventually awarded Platinum album sales status, with their masterpiece, Cosmo’s Factory, moving over 4,000,000 copies.
That’s a heady legacy, indeed, so in honor of the 50th anniversary of the band, on November 30th, 2018 Craft Recordings will be releasing Creedence Clearwater Revival’s Complete Studio Albums box set. The seven-LP set features the entire CCR studio catalog – their self-titled 1968 debut; 1969’s Bayou Country, Green River, and Willy and the Poor Boys; 1970’s Cosmo’s Factory and Pendulum; and 1972’s swansong, Mardi Gras. Each album is pressed on 180-gram vinyl and has been mastered at half-speed at Abbey Road Studios to create an “exceptional level of sonic clarity” and vibrancy. Each LP comes in a tip-on jacket that replicated the original album sleeves, and the box set includes an 80-page book featuring new liner notes by music journalist Roy Trakin along with archive photos and memorabilia.
The set is pricey even as these things go, running roughly $250 on Amazon, which averages out to better than $35 an album…definitely not for the faint of heart or low of budget. Clean copies of most of CCR’s albums can be had for less than half of that, so this is another label archival set targeting well-heeled fans with plenty of disposable income. Will the new pressings sound better than the originals? Maybe…but me, I’ll be happy with my beat-up old CCR vinyl and ten-year-old CD reissues.
Buy the box set on Amazon (if you dare): Creedence Clearwater Revival’s Complete Studio Albums
What a lot of people have forgotten, or overlooked, is that CCR was also a damn impressive album band as well. Fronted by singer, songwriter, and guitarist John Fogerty and including rhythm guitarist Tom Fogerty (John’s brother), bassist Stu Cook, and drummer Doug Clifford the band released seven classic studio albums during its tenure, including three in 1969 alone. The music just seemed to pour out of Fogerty and crew, and the bourgeoning FM radio band lapped up these albums like a hobo with a bottle of ripple. Five of CCR’s studio albums charted Top 10, the sixth peaked at #12, and six of ‘em were eventually awarded Platinum album sales status, with their masterpiece, Cosmo’s Factory, moving over 4,000,000 copies.
That’s a heady legacy, indeed, so in honor of the 50th anniversary of the band, on November 30th, 2018 Craft Recordings will be releasing Creedence Clearwater Revival’s Complete Studio Albums box set. The seven-LP set features the entire CCR studio catalog – their self-titled 1968 debut; 1969’s Bayou Country, Green River, and Willy and the Poor Boys; 1970’s Cosmo’s Factory and Pendulum; and 1972’s swansong, Mardi Gras. Each album is pressed on 180-gram vinyl and has been mastered at half-speed at Abbey Road Studios to create an “exceptional level of sonic clarity” and vibrancy. Each LP comes in a tip-on jacket that replicated the original album sleeves, and the box set includes an 80-page book featuring new liner notes by music journalist Roy Trakin along with archive photos and memorabilia.
The set is pricey even as these things go, running roughly $250 on Amazon, which averages out to better than $35 an album…definitely not for the faint of heart or low of budget. Clean copies of most of CCR’s albums can be had for less than half of that, so this is another label archival set targeting well-heeled fans with plenty of disposable income. Will the new pressings sound better than the originals? Maybe…but me, I’ll be happy with my beat-up old CCR vinyl and ten-year-old CD reissues.
Buy the box set on Amazon (if you dare): Creedence Clearwater Revival’s Complete Studio Albums
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