Recorded Live [Remaster]Ten Years After
Release Date: 09/15/2003
Original Release:
1973
# of Discs:
1
J&R Item # 751717_CD
UPC # 017261203415
Label: Beat Goes On
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Disc: 1
1.
One of These Days - (studio)
2.
You Give Me Loving - (studio)
3.
Good Morning Little Schoo - (studio)
4.
Hobbit - (studio)
5.
Help Me - (studio)
6.
Classical Thing - (studio)
7.
Scat Thing - (studio)
8.
I Can't Keep From Cryin S - (studio)
9.
Silly Thing - (studio)
10.
Slow Blues in 'C' - (studio)
11.
I'm Going Home - (studio)
12.
Choo Choo Mama - (studio)
Performer: Ten Years After
Distributor: MSI Music Distribution Notes: 2 LPs on 1 CD; the song "The Hobbit" is ommitted from the original LP release. Ten Years After: Alvin Lee (vocals, guitar); Chick Churchill (piano, organ); Leo Lyons (bass); Ric Lee (drums). Recorded live in Amersterdam and Rotterdam, The Netherlands; Frankfurt, Germany; Paris, France. Originally released as a double LP set, RECORDED LIVE was a response to the proliferation of bootlegs of the band's concerts. It was to be as faithful a representation of the band's onstage firepower as possible. In this regard, it succeeds; it's better recorded than their breakthrough UNDEAD, and the performances are generally stronger. The highpoint is the jazzy, nearly 16-minute assault on "I Can't Keep From Crying." (Historical note: On the Blues Project's REUNION IN CENTRAL PARK album, also released in 1973, Al Kooper, who wrote the song, tells the audience that Ten Years After's version paid for his new car that year). There are also enthusiastic run-throughs of the band's best known numbers, including their salacious take on "Good Morning Little Schoolgirl" and (of course) their Woodstock showstopper "I'm Going Home."
Best known for their epic performance of "I'm Going Home" in the WOODSTOCK film, British blues-rock band Ten Years After was a vital part of the U.K./U.S. rock scene in the hippie era, but over time, their legacy hasn't lasted as well as that of their peers. Led by blazing guitarmeister Alvin Lee, the band debuted in 1967, their psych-tinged blues-rock taking a more accessible tone on 1971's A PLACE IN TIME, which contained their biggest hit, "I'd Like To Change The World." The band broke up in 1974, with Lee going solo, though there were a couple of brief reunions (one without Lee) in later decades.
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Influences:
Beatles (The) Berry, Chuck Guy, Buddy Harpo, Slim Hooker, John Lee James, Elmore King, Albert King, B.B. Mayall, John Reed, Jimmy (Blues) Rolling Stones (The) Walker, T-Bone Waters, Muddy Wolf, Howlin' Yardbirds (The)
Similar Genres:
British Blues |