Cerca:graham bond organisation
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Experimental prog act East Of Eden’s daring debut album Mercator Projected was released by Deram in 1969. Former Graham Bond Organisation bassist Steve York and drummer Dave Dufort supply the tough rhythmic backbone on which frontman Geoff Nicholson weaves his edgy guitar, with Dave Arbus’s electric violin supplanting what would normally be played on rhythm guitar, Adrian Martins’ sax and flute completing the picture with central European melodies. Hard rocking, melodically meandering, and including a one-off take of ‘Eight Miles High,’ this is prog with a bold difference. A killer set from start to finish!
- A1: A World Without Love – Peter & Gordon
- A2: Wishin’ And Hopin’ – Dusty Springfield
- A3: Don’t Throw Your Love Away – The Searchers
- A4: Beat Girl (1993 Remaster) – The John Barry Orchestra
- A5: Starstruck – The Kinks
- A6: You’re My World – Cilla Black
- B1: Wade In The Water (Live At Klooks Kleek) – The Graham Bond Organisation
- B2: I’ve Got My Mind Set On You – James Ray
- B3: (Love Is Like A) Heat Wave – The Who
- B4: Puppet On A String – Sandie Shaw
- B5: Land Of 1000 Dances – The Walker Brothers
- B6: There’s A Ghost In My House – R. Dean Taylor
- C1: Happy House – Siouxsie & The Banshees
- C2: (There’s) Always Something There To Remind Me – Sandie Shaw
- C3: Eloise – Barry Ryan
- C4: Anyone Who Had A Heart – Cilla Black
- D1: Last Night In Soho – Dave Dee, Dozy, Beaky, Mick & Tich
- D2: Neon (Soundtrack Edit) – Steven Price
- D3: Downtown (A Capella) – Anya Taylor-Joy
- D4: Downtown (Uptempo) – Anya Taylor-Joy
Half a century ago, legendary rhythm and blues drummer Ginger Baker (Cream, the Graham Bond Organisation etc) moved to Nigeria to work with Fela Kuti and his dextrous drummer, Tony Allen. The resultant recordings, which featured Kuti, Baker, Allen and the rest of the Africa 70 ensemble, were released on the brilliant Live With Ginger Baker LP in 1972, which here gets a deserved, expansive reissue. What you get this time around is the original album - a freewheeling, ultra-percussive Afrobeat masterpiece, full of duelling drum solos, righteous horns and killer grooves - plus a second slab of wax. One side of that is etched, with the over featuring recordings of an infamous drum battle between Allen and Baker that's extraordinarily heavy, sweaty and on-point. In a word: essential!
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