1. Sham noctiluca (8:07) 2. The slough of despond (15:33) 3. Mortuary (4:46) 4. Beyond the clean air (18:45) Bonus track on cd releases: 5. Green forest (8:54)
- Kazuo Katayama / acoustic & electro nic drums, percussion
01. Kick Out The Jams - Empty Heart 8:37
02. Ramblin' Rose 3:07
03. Thunder Express 4:24
04. Rama Lama Fa Fa Fa 10:09
05. Motor City Is Burning 4:22
06. I Can Only Give You Everything 2:57
07. I Just Don't Know 2:36
1. Lady Ace (7:58)
2. I Ain't Laughing (2:36)
3. Poor Sad Sue (5:54)
4. Jump Before You Think (4:52)
5. Its Good to Be Alive (3:31)
6. Happy Being Me (15:54)
7. Virginia (4:52)
CD Bonus Tracks:
8. I Ain't Laughing (2:32)
9. Happy Being Me (single version) (4:01)
10.Virginia (alternate version) (3:32)
The Mamas and Papas have been described as America's first hippies, which is primarily why they're included here. The quartet had originally formed in New York City back in 1963. John Phillips, who was to become their main songwriter was born in Parris Island, South Carolina on 30 August 1935. By the age of 15 he was playing in jazz outfits and he was later a member of the folk outfit, The Journeymen. Holly Michelle Gillian Phillips, born in Long Beach, California on 4th June 1945, had abandoned a promising modelling career to sing alongside him in The Journeymen and married him back in 1962. The Journeymen, incidentally, had also included Scott McKenzie, who would later join the reformed Mamas and Papas in 1985. Cass Elliot, born on 19 September 1943 in Alexandria, Virginia, had earlier been in The Mugwumps with the fourth member of the quartet, Dennis Doherty, (who'd been born on 29 November 1941 in Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada), and future Lovin' Spoonful member Zal Yanovsky. After perfecting their vocal style in the Virgin Isles they settled in Los Angeles in 1964 and signed to Lou Adler's Dunhill label. They preferred the name The Mamas and The Papas to The Magic Circle (the other possibility they were considering at the time), 'Mamas' being what Hell's Angels called their girls.
They soon developed a very distinctive vocal style which was well suited to their hippie image - their songs tended to be about peace, love and doing one's own thing. ...
(Vernon Joynson / Max Waller / Stephane Rebeschini)
Wiki:
Not Just Another Bunch of Pretty Faces is the seventh studio album by British jazz-rock band If, released in 1974.
Side one
"In the Winter of Your Life" – 4:59
"Stormy Every Weekday Blues" – 6:07
"Follow That with Your Performing Seals" – 5:51
Side two
"Still Alive" – 4:29
"Borrowed Time" – 4:30
"Chiswick High Road Blues" – 5:17
"I Believe in Rock & Roll" – 4:53
Geoff Whitehorn – electric and acoustic guitars and vocals
Cliff Davies – drums, congas, vibes and vocals
Dick Morrissey – saxes and flute, lead vocal "Still Alive"
Gabriel Magno – Hammond organ, electric and acoustic piano, electric harpsichord
Walt Monaghan – bass guitar and vocals
Mike Tomich – electric bass on "In The Winter Of Your Life"
Wiki:
Tea Break Over–Back on Your 'Eads!, released in 1975, was the eighth and final studio album by British jazz-rock band If.
The album reflects the band's more rock-influenced style, perfectly balanced with Dick Morrissey's harsher hard bop/bebop sax playing. The title track "Tea Break", referring to the hardships of being "on the road", is the punch line to an old musicians' joke and contains a tribute to Charlie Parker in the lyrics ("The Bird was the man to be heard" and "The music was the word") as well as in a swirling bebop tenor solo. The "Ballad of the Yessirom Kid", a tribute by the band to Dick Morrissey, finishes with a roaring bebop tenor solo. "Song for Alison" features the flute more than holding its own with a rock accompaniment. The song "Don Quixote" opens with an extensive acoustic Spanish guitar solo by Whitehorn.
Side one "Merlin the Magic Man" (Davies) – 5:05
"I Had a Friend" (Davies) – 5:20
"Tea Break Over, Back on Your 'Eads" (Whitehorn, Davies, Monaghan) – 7:50
Side two "Ballad of the Yessirrom Kid" (Davies) – 6:05
"Raw Sewage" (Davies) – 3:55
"Song for Alison" (Morrissey) – 4:30
"Don Quixote's Masquerade" (Davies) – 6:13
Cliff Davies – drums, synthesiser and vocals
Gabriel Magno – keyboards
Carlos Martinez – percussion
Walt Monaghan – bass and vocals
Dick Morrissey - saxophones and flute
Geoff Whitehorn - electric guitars and acoustic guitars
The Rutland Weekend Songbook, sometimes referred to as Rutland Times, is a 1976 album by Eric Idle and Neil Innes featuring songs from the BBC comedy series Rutland Weekend Television.
It was described by Allmusic's reviewer as "really ... as funny as it ought to be. An effortless parody of the last decade or so of British television's most treasured conceits"
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