Label: Disconforme SL (Andorra), DISC 1903 CD
Style: Progressive Rock, Art Rock, Psychedelic Rock
Country: United Kingdom
Time: 43:21
Format: Flac Tracks 16/44,1 kHz
Size: 253 Mb
This
was Brian Auger's proper solo debut album. It's billed to Brian Auger
& the Trinity, but Julie Driscoll, who sang with Brian Auger &
the Trinity on the act's most popular and best late-'60s recordings, is
not present. Auger dominates the record not just with his organ, but
also as composer of most of the original material, and as the vocalist.
Auger was a good organ player, but not up to the level of the best
British rock electric keyboardists of the 1960s, like Alan Price, Rod
Argent, Graham Bond, and Vincent Crane. He's also no more than adequate
as a singer and songwriter, and the record is only adequate, sounding
like a more progressive-minded Georgie Fame. Auger's principal
influences are obvious in the songs he covers by Booker T. & the
MG's, Wes Montgomery, and Mose Allison, although there's also an odd
version of "A Day in the Life" that is bolstered by an orchestra's worth
of horns and strings. He gets into a Roland Kirk vibe on the title
track, which is the longest, most ambitious, and not necessarily best
cut. The CD reissue on Disconforme has a bonus track, "What You Gonna
Do?," of undisclosed origin; it's a standard Brian Auger soul-rock
original, taken from a vinyl source by the sound of things, as surface
noise can be heard.
(allmusic.com/album/definitely-what%21-mw0000118437)
01. A Day In The Life (05:15)
02. George Bruno Money (03:58)
03. Far Horizon (05:10)
04. John Brown's Body (03:03)
05. Red Beans And Rice (05:43)
06. Bumpin' On Sunset (04:57)
07. If You Live (03:49)
08. Definitely What (08:04)
09. What You Gonna Do? (03:20)
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