Showing posts with label John Mayall. Show all posts
Showing posts with label John Mayall. Show all posts

Thursday, August 25, 2022

Double Post: Various Artists - Immortal Rock (1977) & Immortal Rock Vol.2 (1979)

 (Compilation - 60's / 70's)

Various Artists - Immortal Rock (1977)

The late 60's and early 70's was an era when rock came of age. This album features a collection of all time rock classics emphasising the strong influence of British and European musicians.

From Hendrix to Status Quo...the Who's Who of Rock's golden era are featured on this highly sort after compilation.
I have always considered this compilation (and it's follow up Vol.2 release) to be the best rock sampler albums to be released on Vinyl, representing the pinnacles of 60 and 70's rock. The only 'legendary' band not represented here are the Beatles, but then how many compilations have you seen with a Beatles track - none? Featured singles are:
 
The Crazy World Of Arthur Brown - Fire
Written by: Arthur Brown/Vincent Crane
Release Date: June, 1968
Highest Chart Position: #1 UK
Album Track: The Crazy World Of Arthur Brown
B-Side Single:  Rest Cure
During live performances and in the black and white promotional television clip, Brown performed the song wearing a burning helmet. The helmet was improvised with a leather skull cap onto which was bolted a metal dish that held lighter fluid or petrol. As the cap was not insulated, the heat from the burning fuel quickly conducted through the fixing bolt to the top of Brown's head, causing him considerable pain. The song is an example of the psychedelic rock of the period, though its lack of guitars or bass guitar distinguished it from many of its contemporaries. The lead instrument in this case was Vincent Crane's Hammond organ, augmented by an orchestral section featuring prominent brass. 

Pinball Wizard - The Who
Written by: Pete Townshend
Release Date: March, 1969
Highest Chart Position: #4 UK
Album Track: Tommy
B-Side Single:  Dogs part Two
In the first week of March 1969, Track released the first sampler from Tommy, a riveting new Townshend song entitled 'Pinball Wizard'. The song had actually been written for Nik Cohn, a journalist who was both a pinball fanatic and a close friend of Pete, Kit Lambert and Chris Stamp. It was by far The Who's best single release since 'I Can See For Miles' eighteen months earlier. "Pinball Wizard" opened with what is perhaps the best guitar part that Pete Townsend has ever written; following a slow, tension-filled build up through a series of unusual, rather melancholy chords, the rhythmic balance is secured with some furious strumming on acoustic guitar down an eight note sequence, each change enhanced by the deep cannon of John's bass guitar.
If there was any doubt that Pete Townsend is the finest rhythm guitarist in the whole of rock, 'Pinball Wizard' sets the record straight. The B-Side incidentally, was Keith Moon's jokey 'Dogs Part II', a throw away track with composition credited to 'Moon, Towser and Jason'. Towser was Pete's pet spaniel and Jason was John's favourite deerhound.

Thunderclap Newman - Something In The Air
Written by: Speedy Keen
Release Date: May, 1969
Highest Chart Position: #1 UK
Album Track: Hollywood Dream
B-Side Single: Wilhelmina
In 1969, Pete Townshend, The Who's guitarist, was the catalyst behind the formation of the band. The concept was to create a band to perform songs written by drummer and singer Speedy Keen, who had written "Armenia City in the Sky", the first track on The Who Sell Out. Townshend recruited jazz pianist Andy "Thunderclap" Newman (a friend from art college), and 15-year-old Glaswegian guitarist Jimmy McCulloch, who subsequently played lead guitar in Paul McCartney and Wings. Keen played the drums and sang the lead.

Jimi Hendrix – Hey Joe
Written by: Billy Roberts
Release Date: Dec, 1966 in UK
Highest Chart Position: #6 UK
Album Track: Are You Experienced?
B-Side: Stone Free (U.K), 51st Anniversary (US)
The lyrics tell of a man who is on the run and planning to head to Mexico after shooting his unfaithful wife. 
Listed at No. 201 on Rolling Stone magazine's The 500 Greatest Songs of All Time in 2010.
"Hey Joe" was the last song Hendrix performed at the Woodstock festival in 1969 and as such, it was also the final song of the whole festival. The song was performed after the crowd, comprising the 80,000 who had not yet left the festival, cheered for an encore

Derek And The Dominos - Layla
Written by: Eric Clapton/Jim Gordon
Release Date: March, 1971
Highest Chart Position: #7 UK
Album Track: Layla And Other Assorted Love Songs
B-Side Single: Bell Bottom Blues
Clapton originally wrote "Layla" as a ballad, with lyrics describing his unrequited love for Boyd, but the song became a "rocker" when, according to Clapton, Allman composed the song's signature riff. The song's length (7:04) proved prohibitive for radio airplay. As a result, a shortened version of the song, consisting of the first 2:43 of Part I, was released as a single in March 1971 by Atco Records in the United States. This version peaked at number 51 on the Billboard Hot 100 singles chart.

Rod Stewart - Maggie May
Written by: Rod Stewart/Mark Quittenton
Release Date: July, 1971
Highest Chart Position: #1 UK/US
Album Track: Every Picture Tells A Story
B-Side Single: Reason To Believe
Maggie May expresses the ambivalence and contradictory emotions of a boy involved in a relationship with an older woman and was written from Stewart's own experience. The song was released as the B-side of the single "Reason to Believe", but soon radio stations began playing the B-side and "Maggie May" became the more popular side. The song was Stewart's first substantial hit as a solo performer and launched his solo career. 

Eric Burdon And The Animals - Sky Pilot
Written by: Burdon/Briggs/Welder/Jenkins/McCulloch
Release Date: Jan, 1968 
Highest Chart Position: #14 US
Album Track: The Twain Shall Meet
B-Side Single: Sky Pilot Pt. 2
The sprawling single “Sky Pilot,” released at the dawn of that war-torn year, proved to be a game changer, one of rock’s first cinematic songs. At more than seven minutes, the number annexed both sides of the 45 record, its many sonic effects captured in true stereo. Even at that length, Eric Burdon’s song was a hit single, reaching No. 14 in the U.S. and remaining an FM radio staple over the decades. While the song’s subtle anti-war message surely concerned the Vietnam War, its shadowing invoked the two world wars.
The song is a balladic slice of life story about a chaplain who blesses a body of troops just before they set out on an overnight raid or patrol, and then retires to await their return.

Cream - White Room
Written by: Jack Bruce/Pete Brown
Release Date: Sept, 1968
Highest Chart Position: #6 US
Album Track: Wheels Of Fire
B-Side Single: Those Were Thee Days
Cream recorded White Room for the studio half of their 1968 double album Wheels of Fire. In September, a shorter US single edit (without the third verse) was released for AM radio stations, although album-oriented FM radio stations played the full album version. The subsequent UK single release in January 1969 used the full-length album version of the track.
Jack Bruce sang and played bass on the song, Eric Clapton overdubbed guitar parts, Ginger Baker played drums and timpani, and Felix Pappalardi – the group's producer – contributed violas. Clapton played his guitar through a wah-wah pedal to achieve a "talking-effect".

Focus - Hocus Pocus
Written by: Thijs Van Leer/Jan Akkerman
Release Date: July, 1971
Highest Chart Position: #9 US/Dutch
Album Track: Moving Waves
B-Side Single: Janis
An edited version was released as a single (with "Janis" as the B-side) on the Imperial, Polydor and Blue Horizon labels in Europe in 1971, but failed to chart outside of the Netherlands. A faster re-recording of the song (titled "Hocus Pocus 2" or "Hocus Pocus II" in some markets) was released in Europe in 1972. When performing live, Focus would play "Hocus Pocus" even faster. Supposedly the song was a bit of a joke by its authors, but if so, it was a very successful million-selling joke. 

Status Quo - Rain
Written by: Rick Parfitt
Release Date: Feb, 1976
Highest Chart Position: #7 UK
Album Track: Blue For You
B-Side Single: You Lost The Love
"Rain" was intended for Blue for You predecessor On the Level – but, at the time of the recording sessions, Parfitt had not completed the song and so it was held over. It in fact followed guitarist Francis Rossi's new introduction to speed; "That's why songs like 'Rain' were so edgy and fast," he explained.

John Mayall - Moving On
Written by: John Mayall
Release Date: 1973
Highest Chart Position: #116 US
Album Track: Moving On
B-Side Single: Keep Our Country Green
The single was lifted from "Moving On", a live album recorded at the Whiskey AGoGo, Los Angeles on the 10th of July 1972 with the aid of Wally Heider's Mobile Recording Truck. For this album, he reshuffled personnel, choosing Mitchell, Solomon, Larry Taylor, Victor Gaskin, Hartley, Robinson, Watts, flautist Charles Owen and baritone and tenor saxophonist Fred Jackson. The album and single, Moving On, was released in January, 1973.

Golden Earring - Radar Love
Written by: G.Kooyman/H.Hay
Release Date: Aug, 1973
Highest Chart Position: #10 US
Album Track: Moontan
B-Side Single: The Song Is Over
Radar Love is written from the point of view of a truck driver who says he has some sort of psychic connection with his girlfriend — "radar love". He senses that she urgently wants him to be with her, and it makes him reckless. His recklessness causes him to have a fatal accident, but even in the afterlife the song's narrator and his lover still have radar love.

Nazereth - Love Hurts
Written by: Boudleaux Bryant
Release Date: Nov, 1974
Highest Chart Position: #8 US
Album Track: Hair Of The Dog
B-Side Single: Down
Performed as a power ballad, the Nazareth version is the most popular version of the song and the only rendition of "Love Hurts" to become a hit single in the United States, reaching No. 8 on the Billboard Hot 100 in early 1976. Jim Capaladi released a 'more up beat' version of Love Hurts in early 1975 and at one stage both versions were on the same charts at the same time - I personally preferred Nazareth's version.  The album version runs 3:52, with a guitar solo by Manny Charlton that is not on the 3:03 single. The lyrics of the song were changed for Nazareth's 1975 recording, where the original line "love is like a stove/it burns you when it's hot" was changed to "love is like a flame/it burns you when it's hot".
Oh, by the way, did you know that Nazareth got their name from the first line of the Band's "The Weight" - "I pulled into Nazareth..."

Eric Clapton - I Shot The Sheriff
Written by: Bob Marley
Release Date: 1974
Highest Chart Position: #1 US
Album Track: 46 Ocean Boulevard
B-Side Single: Give Me Strength
With respect to the song title, Marley has explained his intention as "I wanted to say 'I shot the police' but the government would have made a fuss, so I said 'I shot the sheriff' instead… but it's the same idea: justice. Clapton kept the underlying reggae beat from Marley's original, but made it more of a rock song, with prominent organ and guitar. In America, reggae was big around this time - in 1972, "I Can See Clearly Now" by Johnny Nash became the first song of that genre to hit #1 in the States. For listeners craving just a touch of reggae with their rock, Clapton's "I Shot The Sheriff" hit the sweet spot.

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Various Artists - Immortal Rock Vol.2  (1979)


 In the tradition of the first Immortal Rock album (Polystar 2475 517) this collection features further examples of all time rock classics from the 60's and 70's. 

From Chuck Berry to Roger Daltrey....the Who's Who (no punn intended)  of Rock's Golden era are featured on this 2nd compilation.



Singles featured on this compilation are:


Jimi Hendrix - All Along The Watchtower 
Written by: Bob Dylan
Release Date: Sept, 1968 
Highest Chart Position: #20
Album Track: Electric Ladyland
B-Side Single: Long Hot Summer Night
Hendrix had been working on and off with the members of the band Traffic as he recorded Electric Ladyland. Traffic guitarist Dave Mason caught Hendrix at a party and the two discussed Bob Dylan's newest album, John Wesley Harding, containing "All Along The Watchtower." Hendrix, long fascinated with Dylan, decided to cover the song on the album. On the resulting track, Mason plays rhythm on a 12-string acoustic guitar.

Rare Bird - Sympathy
Written by: Rare Bird
Release Date: Feb 1970
Highest Chart Position: #27 UK
Album Track: Rare Bird
B-Side Single: Devil's High Concern
"Sympathy" is a song by the English progressive rock band Rare Bird. It became the band's only UK chart entry when it peaked at number 27 in the UK Singles Chart in 1970. The song reached No. 1 in Italy and in France, selling 500,000 copies in France and over one million globally.

Hollies - He Ain't Heavy, He's My Brother
Written by: Bob Russell/Bobby Scott
Release Date: Sept, 1969
Highest Chart Position: #3 UK
Album Track: Non-album Single
B-Side Single: 'Cos You Like to Love Me
The Hollies' recorded the song in June 1969 at the Abbey Road Studios, with Allan Clarke on lead vocals. Elton John, who was still called 'Reg' at the time and was working as a session musician at the time, played piano on the song. He got paid 12 pounds for his trouble. 
In the Guardian newspaper of February 24, 2006, Hollies guitarist Tony Hicks said: "In the 1960s when we were short of songs I used to hang around publishers in Denmark Street. One afternoon, I'd been there ages and wanted to get going but this bloke said: 'Well there's one more song. It's probably not for you.' He played me the demo by the writers [Bobby Scott and Bob Russell]. It sounded like a 45rpm record played at 33rpm, the singer was slurring, like he was drunk. But it had something about it. There were frowns when I took it to the band but we speeded it up and added an orchestra. The only things left recognizable were the lyrics.

Rod Stewart - Mandolin Wind
Written by: Rod Stewart
Release Date: June, 1971
Highest Chart Position: #66 Aust 
Album Track: Every Picture Tell's A Story
B-Side Single: (I Know) I'm Losing You
"Mandolin Wind" was first released on Stewart's 1971 album Every Picture Tells a Story and later as the b-side of a single from that album, his version of "(I Know) I'm Losing You.
"Mandolin Wind" has been highly praised by music critics. In his review of Every Picture Tells a Story in Rolling Stone, John Mendelsohn refers to the song as being "nearly as good" as the #1 single off the album, "Maggie May."
The identity of the mandolin player on "Mandolin Wind" is unclear. The liner notes state that "the mandolin was played by the mandolin player in Lindisfarne" but that Rod Stewart had forgotten his name. In 2003, Ray Jackson claimed to be the mandolin player on the album, at least for the song "Maggie May." Jackson is the mandolin player from English folk-rock band Lindisfarne.

Allman Brothers - Ramblin' Man
Written by: Dickey Betts
Release Date: Aug, 1973 in US
Highest Chart Position: #2 US
Album Track: Brothers and Sisters
B-Side: Pony Boy
It was one of the first songs, alongside "Wasted Words", recorded for Brothers and Sisters (1973). They went to the studio to record a demo of the song to send to a friend, which is where the long guitar jam near the finale of the song was created. It is considerably more inspired by country music than other Allman Brothers Band compositions, which made the group reluctant to record it initially.

James Brown - It's A Man's, Man's, Man's World
Written by: James Brown/Betty Jean Newsome
Release Date: April, 1966
Highest Chart Position: #1 US
Album Track: It's A Man's Man's Man's World
B-Side Single: Is It Yes or Is It No?
The song's title is a word play on the 1963 comedy film It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World. Brown's co-writer and onetime girlfriend, Betty Jean Newsome, wrote the lyrics based on her own observations of the relations between the sexes. Newsome claimed in later years that Brown did not write any part of the song, and she argued in court that he sometimes forgot to pay her royalties. Australian musician Renée Geyer recorded a version in 1974. The song was released in November 1974 as the second single from her second studio album, It's a Man's Man's World. The song peaked at number 44 on the Australian Kent Music Report, becoming her first Australian top 50 single.

Roger Daltrey - Walking The Dog
Written by: Rufus Thomas
Release Date: June, 1975
Highest Chart Position: #52 UK
Album Track: Ride A Rock Horse
B-Side Single: Proud
Walking The Dog was recorded during Daltrey's filming commitments for Ken Russell's film Lisztomania. Daltrey’s version of the regularly rendered song basically sticks to the original blueprint, with the exception of a rather hauntingly repetitious tone slipped into the stew. It is quite baffling that the album from which this single was taken from, Ride a Rock Horse drew mixed responses when initially released. No doubt expectations simply ran too high for the Who celeberity, as this is certainly a potent piece of work. Daltrey’s amazing vocals, combined with sympathetic and inspired instrumentation anchor each number. Had Daltrey been an unknown entity and Ride a Rock Horse marked his maiden vinyl voyage, critics would have probably penned rapturous reviews. Those who wrote this album off the first time around should seriously give it another listen, while those just being introduced to Ride a Rock Horse will be suitably impressed.

Bachman Turner Overdrive - You Ain't Seen Nothing Yet
Written by: Randy Bachman
Release Date: Sept, 1974
Highest Chart Position: #1 US
Album Track: Not Fragile
B-Side Single: Free Wheelin'
The chorus of the song includes the song's famous stutter, and speaks of a devil woman looking at a man with big brown eyes and saying, "You ain't seen nothin' yet. B-b-b-baby, you just ain't seen na-na-nothin' yet. Here's somethin' that you're never gonna forget. B-b-b-baby, you just ain't seen na-na-nothin' yet.
Randy Bachman insists that the song was performed as a joke for his brother, Gary, who had a stutter, with no intention of sounding like the Who's "My Generation" which featured a stuttered lyric.  They only intended to record it once with the stutter and send the only recording to Gary.

Cream - Sunshine Of Your Love
Written by: Jack Bruce/Pete Brown/Eric Clapton
Release Date: Dec, 1967
Highest Chart Position: 
Album Track: Disraeli Gears
B-Side Single: SWLABR
With elements of hard rock, psychedelia, and pop, this song is one of Cream's best known and most popular songs. Cream bassist and vocalist Jack Bruce based it on a distinctive bass riff he developed after attending a Jimi Hendrix concert. Guitarist Eric Clapton and lyricist Pete Brown later contributed to the song and drummer Ginger Baker plays a distinctive tom-tom drum rhythm.

Jon English - Turn The Page
Written by: Bob Seger
Release Date: 1974
Highest Chart Position: #20 Aust
Album Track: It's All A Game
B-Side Single: Just the Way I Am
Turn The page is about life on the road, and the rigors musicians face when they're touring. It presents the other side of fame which the public doesn't see - the loneliness and aggravation.



Lovin' Spoonful - Summer In The City
Written by: John & Mark Sebastian
Release Date: July, 1966
Highest Chart Position: #1 US
Album Track: Hums of the Lovin' Spoonful
B-Side Single: Butchie's Tune
The Lovin' Spoonful recorded "Summer in the City" in two sessions at Columbia Studios in New York in March 1966. The recording is an early instance in pop music of added sound effects, made up of car horns and a pneumatic drill to mimic city noises. The effects were among the first on a pop song to employ an overlapping crossfade, an effect that had typically only been used on comedy albums. 

Eric Burdon & The Animals - Monterey
Written by: Burdon/Briggs/Welder/Jenkins/McCulloch
Release Date: Dec, 1967
Highest Chart Position: #15 US
Album Track: The Twain Shall Meet
B-Side Single: Ain't That So
The song provides an oral account of the June 1967 Monterey Pop Festival, at which the Animals performed. Burdon namedrops several of the acts who performed at the festival such as The Byrds, Jefferson Airplane, the Who, the Grateful Dead, and Jimi Hendrix. Chart wise, the song reached number 9 in Australia and number 20 in New Zealand. It did not appear as a hit in the UK, where the image of the Monterey festival was not as strong.

Chuck Berry - No Particular Place To Go
Written by: Chuck Berry
Release Date: May, 1964
Highest Chart Position: #3 UK
Album Track: St. Louis To Liverpool
B-Side Single: You Two
The song is a comical four verse story. In the first verse, the narrator is riding in his car as his girlfriend drives, and they kiss. In the second, they start to cuddle, and drive slow. In the third, they decide to park and take a walk, but are unable to release the seat belt. In the last verse, they drive home, defeated by said recalcitrant seat belt.

Slade - Get Down & Get With It
Written by: Bobby Marchan
Release Date: May, 1971
Highest Chart Position:  #16 UK
Album Track: Sladest
B-Side Single: Gospel According To Rasputin
Prior to recording the song in the studio, the band had established "Get Down and Get with It" as a popular number in their live-set, based on Little Richard's version. 
Impressed by the general audience reception of the song, Chandler suggested recording the song as a single. The band entered Olympic Studios in Barnes to record it and Chandler told the band: "Just play it like you do on-stage. Blast it out like it's live, and pretend that there's an audience in there with you." Successfully recorded in a single take, the band included foot-stomping and hand-clapping in the recording to give the song a live feel.

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This post consists of FLACs ripped from my Vinyl copies of these two compilation albums. Quality of these records is excellent although some base enhancements have been made to some tracks.
Full album artwork and label scans are included for vinyl - as far as I can tell, neither of these compilations have been released on CD.

Tracklist - Immortal Rock (1977)
A1   The Crazy World Of Arthur Brown  – Fire
A2   The Who  –  Pinball Wizard
A3   Thunderclap Newman  –  Something In The Air
A4   Jimi Hendrix  –  Hey Joe
A5   Derek And The Dominos  –  Layla
A6   Rod Stewart  –  Maggie May
A7   Eric Burdon And The Animals  –  Sky Pilot
B1   Cream –  White Room
B2   Focus –  Hocus Pocus
B3   Status Quo  –  Rain
B4   John Mayall  –  Moving On
B5   Golden Earring  –  Radar Love
B6   Nazareth – Love Hurts
B7   Eric Clapton  –  I Shot The Sheriff

Immortal Rock Link (327Mb) New Link 18/10/2023


Tracklist - Immortal Rock Vol.2 (1979)
A1 Jimi Hendrix – All Along the Watchtower
A2 Rare Bird –   Sympathy
A3 The Hollies – He Ain't Heavy He's My Brother
A4 Rod Stewart – Mandolin Wind
A5 The Allman Brothers Band –   Ramblin' Man
A6 James Brown – It's A Man's Man's Man's World
A7 Roger Daltrey – Walking The Dog
B1 Bachman-Turner Overdrive –   You Ain't Seen Nothing Yet
B2 Cream – Sunshine Of Your Love
B3 Jon English – Turn The Page
B4 The Lovin' Spoonful – Summer In The City
B5 Eric Burdon & The Animals –  Monterey
B6 Chuck Berry – No Particular Place To Go
B7 Slade – Get Down & Get With It

Immortal Rock Vol.2 Link (307Mb) New Link 18/10/2023

Sunday, May 3, 2020

John Mayall - New Bluesbreakers ' The Blues Collection' (1994)

(U.K 1956 - Present)
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John Mayall's Bluesbreakers started out in the late 1950s in England. This was a band that used American style blues as a starting basis for their sound. The sound has changed from album to album. And while at one point John Mayall was playing a fairly jazzy sound, he has eventually come back to the blues.

One of the interesting features of the Bluesbreakers, is that the personnel changed on a very regular basis, and many members have gone on to much well deserved fame and fortune with other bands and as solo acts. Past members have included: Eric Clapton, Jack Bruce, Peter Green, John McVie, Mick Fleetwood, Mick Taylor, ...

John Mayall seems to have been very careful in keeping track everything that he ever recorded. Nearly every album has an exact recording date and location. And when crosschecked against Peter Green's book, they agree exactly.


When John Mayhall hit hard times and the bottle during the 1970's, his best days looked behind him. But the 1980s found him back at his best with a new version of his band the Bluesbreakers and bringing the blues to new, receptive European audiences who had missed out on the first blues boom of the 1960s.


This in-concert set from 1987 is a successful attempt by Mayall to contemporize the electric Chicago blues style. Mayall and his band, including the great guitarists, Walter Trout and Coco Montoya cover tunes by great artists including Sonny Boy Williamson, and Otis Rush.

John Mayall & Walter Trout
The 11-minute "Room to Move," with Mayall on harmonica, is a standout track. Over the years Mayall has swung his musical output between acoustic and electric, and although much of his less blues orientated material remains very much in demand, it's a great change to hear the man get back to basics, and play some authentic blues standards.

This album was recorded live in Frankfurt, Bonn, and Munster, Germany between 19th, and 21st April 1987. The UK magazine series 'The Blues Collection' No.8 includes a CD with the same tracks as the LP 'The Power of the Blues'. The album has also been released on other labels with different sleeve/CD covers. However, the track list is the same on most of them.


Finally, I recommend you listen to the brilliant John Mayall & the Bluesbreakers 1967 "Crusade" album, and John's equally brilliant 1968 "Blues from Laurel Canyon" album. British blues doesn't come much better than these two albums, and of course this live set featured here.
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This post consists of FLACs ripped from my Blues Collection CD (released by Orbis, a German publication house. The series comprised of 90 fortnightly issues, each including a thin magazine-sized biography and an album on CD or cassette tape). A shortened version of this recording was released on vinyl, entitled 'The Power Of The Blues' (see cover below) . Also included is artwork for both CD and LP releases.  
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Tracklist
01 - Ridin' On The L&N 5:51
02 - Help Me 6:51
03 - Racehorse Man 6:55
04 - All Your Love 4:49
05 - I Ain't Got You 4:14
06 - Wild About You 5:53
07 - It Ain't Right     4:25
08 - Room To Move 11:02

Bass – Bobby Haynes
Drums – Joe Yuele
Guitar, Vocals – Coco Montoya, Walter Trout
Vocals, Guitar, Harmonica, Keyboards – John Mayall
 
John Mayall's New Bluesbreakers Link (303Mb) New Link 31/05/2021
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Wednesday, September 11, 2019

John Mayall - The Blues Alone (1967)

(English 1956 - Present)
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John Mayall was the leader and musical prodigy of the British Bluesbreakers Band which featured some of the most successful rock musicians of the '60s and '70s. Celebrated for his legendary songwriting ability, Mayall was, as well, a remarkable performer.

This recording is truly Mayall's blues alone. Recorded in London at the Decca studios in May of '67, this CD was co-produced by Mike Vernon and Mayall. It was engineered by David Grinstead and Gus Dudgeon and spent five weeks on the Billboard charts in the summer of '68.  The cover art and the original LP sleeve design are by John Mayall. Sleeve notes, including track notes, were written by noted DJ John Peel (see below).

With a release coming only two months after Crusade, The Blues Alone, the first Mayall “solo” album (i.e. without The Bluesbreakers), was John Mayall’s third album of 1967, or fourth, if you count the various artists compilation Raw Blues. Like Raw Blues, it was released initially on Decca’s discount Ace of Clubs label to distinguish it from a regular Mayall album, although the distinction has been lost over time. It was actually recorded p
rior to Crusade on May 1, 1967. Mayall played and overdubbed all instruments except drums, which were handled by Bluesbreaker Keef Hartley, which was one way of dealing with his ongoing personnel difficulties (by this time, his bassist, John McVie, had left to join Fleetwood Mac).

It also served notice that, despite his band being a spawning ground for several British stars by now, the real star of the group was its leader. But it didn’t quite prove that, since Mayall, while certainly competent on harmonica, keyboards, and guitars, doesn’t display the flair of an Eric Clapton or Peter Green, and the overdubbing, as is so often the case, robs the recording of any real sense of interplay. (The Blues Alone hit #24 in the U.K. and #128 in the U.S.)



Celebrated “Underground” disc jockey John Peel, who'd achieved popularity with his late-night “Perfumed Garden” show on the pirate Radio London, was embraced by Auntie after the pirates were scuttled, and worked for many years on BBC Radio 1. He wrote the quirky sleeve notes, in a track-by-track breakdown you may find familiar, and I'm presenting them here:

[Liner notes by John Peel]
In the summer of  1966, I was working for a radio station in Southern California and, in my capacity as  resident Englishman  and  therefore  intimate friend of alt groups, I had to contribute a column of light hearted chatter about the British  music scene to the station  paper.



Part of this column was a listing of the current  British top ten.  As far as the inhabitants of San Bernadino and Riverside counties knew John Mayall's Bluesbreakers had a string of enormous hits during that summer - a number of them being, in some curious fashion, LP tracks. Chart-rigging was a hideous reality in unsuspecting California.


Shortly after returning to London, I met John Mayall and found him to be a very warm-hearted person despite his somewhat  forbidding  stage presence. He has a huge laugh that springs from some deep recess within him and tumbles into all corners of the room. I was featuring his LP 'A Hard Road' (Decca LKA 4853) on the air and was amazed that, in addition to writing 8 of the 12 numbers on the record, playing 5 and 9 string guitar, organ, piano, harmonica, and singing, he had written the sleeve notes and painted the portrait of the group on the front cover. With this new LP he has carried all of this to its logical conclusion and has produced a record featuring  no other musician than himself except for the occasional aid of his drummer Keef Hartley. This then is John Mayall - one of the greatest bluesmen in the world.

John Mayall & Jeff Hartley
BRAND NEW START
John plays harmonica, guitar, piano, drums and also sings. A hymn of earthy praise to his current woman with some of his best recorded harmonica. Strangely remote 'popping' guitar adds a touch of deep melancholy.

PLEASE DONT TELL
(Vocal,  harmonica, guitar,  bass)
John has apparently  uncovered something new in the popular field of male/female  relationships — after exhaustive research — and wants to keep it a secret. In his writing he always adds something fresh and interesting to traditional concepts — whatever that means.

DOWN THE LINE
(Vocal, piano, 9-string guitar)
In the clubs the appearance of the Mayallian nine-string is greeted with shouts of approval. On this number the distinctive  sliding  sounds  keep up an almost unbearable tension  behind the sparse  piano. A searing, incredibly lonely sound.

SONNY BOY BLOW
(Vocal, harmonica, jangle piano)
A tribute to the late Sonny Boy Williamson—not a sad, gloomy tribute but a rollicking, cantering thing filled with unrestrained outbursts on the harmonica and some rolling boogie woogie from John's famous 'jangle' piano.

MARSHA'S MOOD
(Piano, drums)
A portrait of an attractive and independent girl. I think I know the Marsh of the title and if I'm right then this superb piano solo fits her well.

NO MORE TEARS
(Vocal, 9 & 6 string guitars, bass)
A  great track featuring John's obviously underrated guitar. Although his efforts are unlikely to start a mass movement of blues guitarists to the bridges of the Thames this should be a revelation for those who've tended to concentrate more on John's celebrated  lead guitarists than on the man himself. I'm glad he recorded this one.

CATCH THAT TRAIN
(Harmonica with train) Blues  harmonica players favour trains to a degree where they might be suspected  of a locomotive fetish — a rare condition. This must surely be the first time that an  actual train has been used as an accompanying instrument. All of this poses an interesting demarcation question — did the N.U.R. receive recording  wages? Incidentally I  am the train's agent so don't get any ideas.

CANCELLING OUT
(Vocal, piano, organ) We all know the  'Put-together  girl - probably one of the main causes of international confusion. John sings of his intention to cancel out that kind of chick. He underlines this laudable decision with grumbling bass figures on the  piano  and  fiery organ playing.  Is this a protest song?

HARP MAN
(Harmonica, celeste, bass)
Music-Box type celeste sounds -— a very emotional music-box let me  hastily add — and wandering harmonica phrases.
There is no truth to the  rumours that the Bluesbreakers will be using dulcimer, sackbut and psaltery. Let's face it, gutteral cries of   "Let's hear your sackbut, son" can only lead to violence.

BROWN SUGAR
(Vocal,  piano,  guitar,  organ) You don't need me to tell you what this is all about. Just listen to the lyrics. More slide guitar playing Tate and Lyle.

BROKEN WINGS
(Vocal, organ)
This is the sort of thing that be heard on the car radio late at night driving  alone  in  the  rain.   A  very gently, caressing and beautiful song. You needed to know this side of John Mayall.

DON'T KICK ME
(Vocal, organ, piano, guitar, baas)
For the final track on this astounding LP, which shows every facet and talent of the limitless John Mayall, a rumbling plea not to kick him when he's down. I get the impression you'd be in a rather dramatic situation if you tried it.

Thank you, John, for letting me write these notes for what is an essential record for anyone with any interest in any kind of good music - especially the Blues  [John Peel]
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This post consists of a freshly ripped set of FLACs taken from my prized vinyl which I have owned for yonks (that's ages folks).  Not sure where I bought it - secondhand I think and still very playable. I have taken the time to manually remove pops and crackles and applied a small amount of bass enhancement on some tracks.  Although I don't have a lot of Mayall's material in my record collection, I hold the greatest respect for this Master Bluesman, as did John Peel based on his liner notes.
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Tracklist
A1 Brand New Start 3:22
A2 Please Don't Tell 2:30
A3 Down The Line 3:43
A4 Sonny Boy Blow 3:49
A5 Marsha's Mood 3:13
A6 No More Tears 3:11
B1 Catch That Train 2:17
B2 Cancelling Out 4:19
B3 Harp Man 2:42
B4 Brown Sugar 3:44
B5 Broken Wings 4:16
B6 Don't Kick Me 3:11


Recorded at Decca Studios, West Hampstead On May 1, 1967. 

Drums – Keef Hartley (tracks: A2, A4, A6, B2 to B6)
Vocals, Piano, Celesta, Organ, Harmonica, Guitar, Guitar [6-string], Guitar [9-string], Bass, Drums - John Mayall



John Mayall FLAC Link (217Mb)
New Link 08/02/2024
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