Loading ....
Groundhogs - Blues Obituary
Added at:    22 April 2007, 07:30
Views:  

Groundhogs - Blues Obituary

PW = purgatory

mp3 @ 224 kb/s

All artwork included

Recorded during June of 1969 at Marquee Studios in London with Gary Collins and Colin Caldwell engineering, the trio of Groundhogs put the blues to rest on Blues Obituary in front of a castle on the Hogart-designed cover while six black and whites from photographer Zorin Matic grace the back in morbid Creepy or Eerie Magazine comic book fashion. Composed, written, and arranged by Tony "T.S." McPhee, there are seven tracks hovering from the around four- to seven-minute mark. The traditional "Natchez Burning," arranged by McPhee, fits in nicely with his originals while the longest track, the six-minute-and-50-second "Light Is the Day," features the most innovation — a Ginger Baker-style tribal rant by drummer Ken Pustelnik allowing McPhee to lay down some muted slide work while Pete Cruickshank's bass drives along with the mayhem. This track in particular sounds like where Blue Cheer wanted to be, and lacking the proficiency of these gents, the West Coast acid rock/blues group had no alternative but to slug it out and experiment. As the tempo on the final track elevates along with manic guitar runs by McPhee, the jamming creates a color separate from the rest of the disc while still in the same style. Vocals across the board are kept to a minimum. It is all about the sound, Cream without the flash, bandleader McPhee vocally emulating Alvin Lee (by way of Canned Heat's Alan Wilson) on the four-minute conclusion to side one that is "Mistreated." While Americans like Grand Funk's Mark Farner turned the format up a commercial notch, Funk's "Mean Mistreater" sporting the same sentiment while reaching a wider audience, the Groundhogs on this late-'60s album keep the blues purely in the underground. The pumping beat on "Mistreated" embraces the lead guitarist's vocal, which poses that eternal blues question: "what have I done that's wrong?" Blistering guitar on the opening track, "B.D.D.," sets the pace for this deep excursion into the musical depths further down than Canned Heat ever dared go. While "Daze of the Weak" starts off sludgy enough, it quickly moves like a train out of control, laying back only to explode again. "Times" get things back to more traditional roots on an album that breaks little new ground, and is as consistent as Savoy Brown when they got into their primo groove.
1 B.D.D. McPhee 3:50
2 Daze of the Weak McPhee, McPhee 5:16
3 Times McPhee, McPhee 5:19
4 Mistreated McPhee, McPhee 4:04
5 Express Man McPhee, McPhee 3:59
6 Natchez Burning McPhee, Traditional 4:38
7 Light Was the Day McPhee, McPhee 6:53

Enjoy


Groundhogs - Blues Obituary
 
 

Comments




Release Count
46974
Search

World TOP
USA TOP
Europe TOP
UK TOP
Fresh Releases
Full List »
Popular Searches
the //assets/snippets/reflect/snippet.reflect.php?refl hardstyle you black SOUNDTRACK AGE 2010 house john For LOUNGE quatro chris Abercrombie All del ROck LIVE Gaga album Love peter PARK mix Hits four blüe BEST pinoy METALLICA JAMES band bad Will Paul OUT one jazz Beatles and van Rihanna reim OST New Kings Electro RED only Night metal linkin dion Country /bbs...te.php/?board_skin_path=h guns Project promo Radio Shrek god disco days dance Chill Big are 2009 pat hill foo fire Club amy World soul mathias jason Jackson Heart good ///bbs//com.br/images/root=http://www.jondan.co.kr bruce david dead flac TRANCE pink parsons ministry madonna king Joe fighters city ciara belinda Air alicia



Mac software on Rapidshare
Templates, Fonts, Photos on RapidShare
Books on Rapidshare
Rapidshare Movies
Games Rapidshare






Download From Rapidshare, depositfiles, megaupload, badongo, filef
actory, rapidshare, megaporn,uploadbox,uploaded, usenet without Premium!