Showing posts with label Blues Rock. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Blues Rock. Show all posts

Friday, December 12, 2025

Jethro Tull - Too Old To Rock 'N' Roll: Too Young To Die! (1976)

Year: 23 April 1976 (CD 1987)
Label: Chrysalis Records (Germany), 252 663
Style: Progressive Rock, Gothic Rock, Folk Rock
Country: Blackpool, Lancashire, England
Time: 42:15
Format: Flac Tracks 16/44,1 kHz
Size: 263 Mb

Ian Anderson should stick to music, because he most definitely is not a storyteller. This is the muddled story of one Ray Lomas, “the last of the old rockers,” whose long hair and tight jeans mark him as a person whom time has passed by. After a series of events remarkable only for their lack of humor and originality, we leave the “hero” as he is about to become a pop star in his own right.
So what? We can take comfort, though, in knowing that Anderson’s technical prowess as a composer remains undiminished. The album abounds in breathtaking musical passages. The title cut, for one, is a textbook example of the use of dynamics and nuance in a rock song: instruments subtly creep in during the verses, with the slightest of musical nods to let us know they’re there. The music builds with a tension that heightens a desperate theme, then erupts in the chorus. “Quizz Kid” features, in addition to numerous startling changes in texture, several brief but pungent solos by guitarist Martin Barre, whose playing is exemplary throughout.
(rollingstone.com/music/music-album-reviews/too-old-to-rock-n-roll-too-young-to-die-204560/)

Album recorded and mixed in the analog domain - AAD. That is, a minimum of digital processing.
A=Analog. D=digital. The first letter stands for how the music was recorded. The second letter for how it was mixed. The third letter stands for the format (all CD's will have D as the last letter).

01. Quizz Kid (05:07)
02. Crazed Institution (04:47)
03. Salamander (02:51)
04. Taxi Grab (03:55)
05. From A Dead Beat To An Old Greaser (04:08)
06. Bad-Eyed and Loveless (02:14)
07. Big Dipper (03:37)
08. Too Old To Rock 'N' Roll: Too Young To Die (05:41)
09. Pied Piper (04:32)
10. The Chequered Flag (Dead or Alive) (05:23)

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Monday, December 8, 2025

Johnny Winter - Saint And Sinners (1974) Johnny Dawson Winter III [2LP on 1CD] (1974)

Year: 1974 (CD 2007)
Label: BGO Records (UK), BGOCD766
Style: Blues Rock, Rock
Country: Beaumont, Texas, U.S. (February 23, 1944 - July 16, 2014)
Time: 79:55
Format: Flac Tracks 16/44,1 kHz
Size: 545 Mb

Saints & Sinners is the sixth studio album by Johnny Winter, released in 1974. It follows Winter's pattern of mixing original songs with cover versions. After covering two Jagger-Richards songs on his previous album and previously issuing a live version of "Jumpin' Jack Flash," he covers a further one in "Stray Cat Blues" on this release.
John Dawson Winter III is the seventh studio album by Johnny Winter, released in 1974. It again follows Winter's pattern of mixing original songs with cover versions, including covering an Allen Toussaint song for the second album running.
(en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Johnny_Winter#Discography)

Album recorded and mixed in the analog domain - AAD. That is, a minimum of digital processing.
A=Analog. D=digital. The first letter stands for how the music was recorded. The second letter for how it was mixed. The third letter stands for the format (all CD's will have D as the last letter).

Saint And Sinners (1974):
01. Stone County (03:36)
02. Blinded By Love (04:29)
03. Thirty Days (03:02)
04. Stray Cat Blues (04:18)
05. Bad Luck Situation (02:50)
06. Rollin' Cross The Country (04:34)
07. Riot In Cell Block #9 (03:11)
08. Hurtin' So Bad (04:40)
09. Bony Moroney (02:38)
10. Feedback On Highway 101 (04:24)
11. Dirty (bonus track) (04:02)

Johnny Dawson Winter III (1974):
12. Rock & Roll People (02:46)
13. Golden Olden Days Of Rock & Roll (03:02)
14. Self-Destructive Blues (03:29)
15. Raised On Rock (04:42)
16. Stranger (03:55)
17. Mind Over Matter (04:14)
18. Roll With Me (03:05)
19. Love Song To Me (02:06)
20. Pick Up On My Mojo (03:23)
21. Lay Down Your Sorrows (04:08)
22. Sweet Papa John (03:10)

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Sunday, December 7, 2025

Foghat - Foghat (Rock 'n' Roll) (1973)

Year: March 1973 (CD 2005)
Label: Rhino Records (US), R2 70890
Style: Hard Rock, Blues Rock
Country: London, England
Time: 38:28
Format: Flac Tracks 16/44,1 kHz
Size: 267 Mb

Foghat is the second album, and the second self-titled album, by the English rock band Foghat, released in March 1973. It is generally known by fans as Rock 'n' Roll, because of its cover picture depicting a rock and bread roll.
Formed in 1971 when Lonesome Dave Peverett & Roger Earl left the British blues-rock band, Savoy Brown, Foghat has earned eight Gold records, one Platinum record and one Double-Platinum record.  And they continue to release new music every few years. They have never stopped touring and recording although there have been several ups and downs and changes over the years.  They sadly lost Lonesome Dave Peverett in 2000 and Rod Price in 2005, but Roger Earl kept banging & kicking to keep Foghat's musical legacy going.
According to a recent review "The '70s called...but there is no way in hell we are giving Foghat back to them. The iconic band from the past is rocking just as hard as they did decades ago, if not more! Foghat's thunderous blend of blues, boogie and butt-kickin' rock 'n' roll are shaking walls and fans everywhere. There is so much talent in this band it is ridiculous.  Lead vocalist/lead guitarist Scott Holt played with Buddy Guy for over 10 years, and lead/slide guitarist Bryan Bassett played with Wild Cherry and Molly Hatchet."  Bass player Craig Macgregor who had been with the band since the '70s, unfortunately became ill in 2015 and was unable to play, and we sadly lost him in February of 2018.  Craig had recommended the very talented & personable Rodney O'Quinn as a 'fill-in' who came to Foghat via the Pat Travers band where he proved he knew how to lay down a solid groove. O'Quinn viewed MacGregor as a mentor and is a great permanent addition to the band.  And on drums, of course, is the man we must thank for keeping Foghat going...founding member Roger Earl, who's positive attitude and solid drumming style and pure joy of playing has been an inspiration to all."
If Foghat had only given us 'Slow Ride', the band's place in rock history would be secure.  But the band is so much more than that. As stated by Roger Earl, "we are still a 'work in progress', writing and recording and plan to be until the day we depart this earth".
**We sadly lost our brother, friend and Foghat member Craig MacGregor, who passed away on February 9th, 2018. RIP Mac. We miss you, brother.**
(foghat.com/band/band-bio/)

01. Ride, Ride, Ride (04:24)
02. Feel So Bad (05:08)
03. Long Way to Go (05:07)
04. It's Too Late (05:43)
05. What a Shame (03:52)
06. Helping Hand (04:41)
07. Road Fever (04:22)
08. She's Gone (03:12)

Foghat73-Foghat-Rock-NRoll-01 Foghat73-Foghat-Rock-NRoll-02 Foghat73-Foghat-Rock-NRoll-back

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Saturday, December 6, 2025

Groundhogs - Split [Remastered] (1971)

Year: March 1971 (CD 2003)
Label: Liberty (UK & Europe), 07243 584819 2 1
Style: Rock, Blues Rock
Country: England
Time: 64:39
Format: Flac Tracks 16/44,1 kHz
Size: 400 Mb

Unlike other contemporary bands, economy of notes was not part of the Groundhogs agenda. On Split, more than any other Groundhogs album, they played in a shamanic whirling that shattered and scattered the beat around in several directions at once. The frenzied drumming of Ken Pustelnik reduced the kit to the role of moronic streetgang defenseless against one lone Kung Fu hero. Stun-guitars wah-wah’d and ricochet’d at random against concrete walls, leaving passers by mortally wounded but deliriously happy. Even Pete Cruickshank’s bass, that one remaining anchor, was no anchor at all, but a freebass undermining the entire structure. As McPhee explained in a Zigzag interview of the time: “[Ken] just wallops everything in sight and sometimes I lose him completely. Like I often come back in during a solo and can’t work out where he is — so I just have to play a note and let it feed back until I can find my way back in. And Pete doesn’t help either, because he’s all over the place and he follows me rather than Ken … so when we fall apart, we really fall apart.”
The brutal honesty of this quote showcases Tony McPhee’s determination to follow his muse to the end. His singing is confused and compassionate, dazed and un-macho at a time of hoot‘n’holler chest beating. And despite the wonder-fuelled strengths of Split’s first side, each song is reduced to the anonymity of mere numbers: “Split 1”, “Split 2”, “Split 3” and “Split 4”. Yet each is complete and each is anything but anonymous. The furious “Split 1” careers through its description of McPhee’s “suicidal derangement” as he termed it with murderous bass and wah guitar interplaying. “Split 2” de-tunes itself into awesome/awful life with a chasm guitar riff that snare shatters into a tearing riff account of McPhee leaping out of bed in black hole terror, before the floor of the room gives way and he ends: “I must get help before I go insane”.
(full version: headheritage.co.uk/unsung/album-of-the-month/groundhogs-split)

01. Split [Part One] (04:29)
02. Split [Part Two] (05:14)
03. Split [Part Three] (04:30)
04. Split [Part Four] (05:43)
05. Cherry Red (05:43)
06. A Year In The Life (03:15)
07. Junkman (05:02)
08. Groundhog (05:53)
09. Split [Part One] [Bonus Track, Live] (09:46)
10. Split [Part Two] [Bonus Track, Live] (06:17)
11. Split [Part Four] [Bonus Track, Live] (04:31)
12. Cherry Red [Bonus Track, Live] (04:10)

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Friday, December 5, 2025

Bad Company - Burnin' Sky [Japanese Ed.] (1977)

Year: March 3, 1977 (CD Mar 7, 2007)
Label: Swan Song (Japan), WPCR-12545
Style: Hard Rock, Blues Rock
Country: London, England
Time: 45:08
Format: Flac Tracks 16/44,1 kHz
Size: 296 Mb

Charts: UK #17, AUS #15, CAN #16, NDL #14, NOR #45, NZ #32, SWE #32, US #15. US: Gold.
Before you can even digest or vomit back up Run With The Pack (or "Run With The Night", as lameass North Carolina DJ "Cosmo" so eloquently called it that time I heard him play "Young Blood" - right before he declared it to be a "great song" off of a "great album." Lameass.), the "talentless boys of rock 'n' roll" are back to shove more poorly-written dreck down your listening ear.
I'll give 'em this though: even though all these melodies sound like they were written in about two minutes, most of them are amazingly catchy. The title track, "Morning Sun," "Too Bad," "Everything I Need," "Peace Of Mind" - all disgustingly simple, but not self-parodic like on the last album. It sounds, rather, like a postmodern lo-fi college band imitating Bad Company. It's not bombastic (except for a couple of really crappy numbers); it's just a bunch of poorly-arranged songs. I like 'em! It's actually a pretty good record, though definitely not worthy of classic rock radio play. If you see it in a dollar bin, get it. It's at least an interesting, semi-unpredictable record. A cover of "Valerie, Valerah?" A seven-minute groove jam? Wow. Bad Company stretches out and tries something new. Who knows how far this'll go? Embarrassing. And the cover of "Young Blood" is unlistenable.
(albumoftheyear.org/user/markprindlebot/album/119320-burnin-sky/)

01. Burnin' Sky (05:09)
02. Morning Sun (04:06)
03. Leaving You (03:23)
04. Like Water (04:19)
05. Knapsack (01:20)
06. Everything I Need (03:23)
07. Heartbeat (02:37)
08. Peace Of Mind (03:25)
09. Passing Time (02:30)
10. Too Bad (03:52)
11. Man Needs Woman (03:45)
12. Master Of Ceremony (07:13)

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Monday, December 1, 2025

Johnny Winter - Johnny Winter And (1970)

Year: September 1970 (CD ????)
Label: Columbia Records (Austria), COL 472769-2
Style: Blues Rock, Hard Rock
Country: Beaumont, Texas, U.S. (February 23, 1944 - July 16, 2014)
Time: 41:42
Format: Flac Tracks 16/44,1 kHz
Size: 254 Mb

Johnny Winter And... Rick Derringer (vocals, guitar), Randy Jo Hobbs (vocals, bass), Randy Zehringer (drums).

After two late-'60s albums on Columbia, Johnny Winter hit his stride in 1970 working with Rick Derringer and the McCoys, now recruited as his sidemen and collaborators (and proving with just about every note here how far they'd gotten past "Hang on Sloopy"). In place of the bluesy focus on his first two albums, Winter extended himself into more of a rock-oriented mode here, in both his singing and his selection of material. This was hard rock with a blues edge, and had a certain commercial smoothness lacking in his earlier work. Derringer's presence on guitar and as a songwriter saw to it that Winter's blues virtuosity was balanced by perfectly placed guitar hooks, and the two guitarists complemented each other perfectly throughout as well. There wasn't a weak moment anywhere on the record, and if Johnny Winter And wasn't a huge commercial success, it was mostly because of the huge amount of competition at the time from other, equally inspired players, that kept numbers like the Winter originals "Prodigal Son" and "Guess I'll Go Away" as well as Derringer co-authored pieces such as "Look Up" from having the impact they should have had on FM radio.
(allmusic.com/album/johnny-winter-and-mw0000312588)

01. Guess I'll Go Away (03:28)
02. Ain't That A Kindness (03:29)
03. No Time To Live (04:36)
04. Rock And Roll, Hoochie Koo (03:31)
05. Am I Here? (03:24)
06. Look Up (03:34)
07. Prodigal Son (04:18)
08. On The Limb (03:36)
09. Let The Music Play (03:15)
10. Nothing Left (03:30)
11. Funky Music (04:55)

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Friday, November 28, 2025

Bad Company - Run With The Pack (1976)

Year: January 30, 1976 (CD 1994)
Label: Swan Song (Europe), 7567-92435-2
Style: Hard Rock, Blues Rock
Country: London, England
Time: 36:30
Format: Flac Tracks 16/44,1 kHz
Size: 247 Mb

Charts: UK #4, AUS #9, CAN #13, FRA #19, NDL #11, NOR #11, NZ #32, SWE #23, US #5. UK: Gold; US: Platinum.
The cover of the Coasters single "Young Blood" peaked at No. 20. The album also spawned rock radio classics "Silver, Blue & Gold", "Live for the Music", and the title track. "Silver, Blue & Gold" was never released as a single, but is one of the band's most popular compositions.
Cash Box said of "Do Right by Your Woman" that it "is an acoustic number, with some twelve-string work" and that "the harmonies are excellent, at times reminiscent of CSNY, and a low-down harmonical fill."
Classic Rock History critic Janey Roberts rated the title track as Bad Company's greatest song, saying that its energy "just simply defines what Bad Company was all about" and praising the "great intros" and "pulsating verses that built up to superman style choruses." Classic Rock critic Malcolm Dome rated it as Bad Company's 6th best song, praising its "panache and subtlety."
The album was remastered and re-released in 1994. The vinyl album had a shiny, silver cover, but CD versions feature a simple, light grey cover. The original album cover also came as a gatefold, with a photo of the band inside, sitting around a couch near a television tuned in to a Bugs Bunny cartoon.
(en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Run_with_the_Pack)

01. Live For The Music (03:58)
02. Simple Man (03:38)
03. Honey Child (03:17)
04. Love Me Somebody (03:08)
05. Run With The Pack (05:23)
06. Silver, Blue and Gold (05:04)
07. Young Blood (02:41)
08. Do Right By Your Woman (02:53)
09. Sweet Lil' Sister (03:31)
10. Fade Away (02:52)

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Thursday, November 27, 2025

Edgar Winter - Edgar Winter's White Trash (1971)

Year: 1971 (CD 1989)
Label: Epic Records (US), EK 30512
Style: Blues Rock, Rock and Roll, Funk, Gospel
Country: Beaumont, Texas, U.S. (December 28, 1946)
Time: 43:30
Format: Flac Tracks 16/44,1 kHz
Size: 286 Mb

A quite brilliant album and no mistake and maybe the man’s most beloved of all his album releases that combines a heady mixture of rock, R&B, gospel and funk. When this album first appeared in 1971 it blew a breath of fresh air through the album releases of the time. Highlights include a smattering of gospel with Fly Away (featuring a full vocal chorus that adds the uplifting spirit of the track) and Save the Planet (a real rabble rousing song that demands that you jump off your chair and clap your hands in time to the words) on one side of the coin along with chart material such as the lower end of the Top 40 cut, Keep Playin’ That Rock and Roll while not forgetting the lovely Dying to Live that includes some fine piano work and pokes an effective dig at Vietnam, the cause celebre of the time.
In terms of audiophile reproduction, this track is a good example of the nature of the pressing which is effectively quiet without any blurring in the upper mids or smudging of the bass. There is a tremendous dynamic range in evidence here. Winter’s piano is accurate and tonally solid while Winter’s own vocal delivery is passionate, fervent but lusty in terms of the complexity that can be heard through those rasping vocal chords of his.
If there is one overarching personality of this album that links each track together, it is its joyous nature and sense of never-ending rhythm, a forward motion that also creates a perfect sense of escapism. I will bet that, before long, once you’ve learned a few lines of your own, you won’t be able to resist in singing along to much of this disc yourself.
(theaudiophileman.com/edgar-winters/)

Album recorded and mixed in the analog domain - AAD. That is, a minimum of digital processing.
A=Analog. D=digital. The first letter stands for how the music was recorded. The second letter for how it was mixed. The third letter stands for the format (all CD's will have D as the last letter).

01. Give It Everything You Got (04:32)
02. Fly Away (03:02)
03. Where Would I Be (03:59)
04. Let's Get It On (05:05)
05. I've Got News for You (03:56)
06. Save the Planet (05:41)
07. Dying to Live (04:04)
08. Keep Playin' That Rock 'n' Roll (03:46)
09. You Were My Light (05:02)
10. Good Morning Music (04:20)

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Wednesday, November 26, 2025

Jethro Tull - War Child (1974)

Year: 14 October 1974 (CD 1990)
Label: Chrysalis Records (US), F2 21067
Style: Progressive Rock, Gothic Rock, Folk Rock
Country: Blackpool, Lancashire, England
Time: 39:07
Format: Flac Tracks 16/44,1 kHz
Size: 262 Mb

For an album splotched together from a failed recording project, a failed movie project, a concept involving anthropomorphism and one song from the Aqualung sessions, War Child turned out reasonably well. It would have turned out even better had they locked David Palmer in the basement during the recording process.
Palmer’s string arrangements on War Child are consistently overdone and too loud in many of the mixes. They appear in many tracks that would have been better off without them. More Martin, less David would have been nice. On the plus side, Ian Anderson’s vocals are quite energetic and the song mix displays Tull’s versatility exceptionally well. When they’re not buried by the string section, the band sounds Tull-tight.
The original War Child concept had to do with the story of a teenage girl in the afterlife meeting up with God, Lucifer and St. Peter. I’m glad they didn’t go there, as there is such a thing as spending too much time on religion. The more interesting theme-a perceptible thread that runs through “War Child” and “Queen and Country”-is the idea that all of us who live in modern society are war children who live off the fruits of conquest, whether that conquest involves shooting wars or capitalist competitiveness. While we enjoy ourselves in “the bright city mile” or while the ministers enjoy their “social whirls,” we forget that all of our fun is made possible to some extent by war and its cousins. Now that would have made for a very intriguing concept album, particularly since Al Qaeda later justified the 9/11 attacks on innocent civilians with the response, “They pay taxes, don’t they?” If we benefit from the spoils of war, are we still responsible for the war even if we don’t fire a shot?
As it is, the title track opener is an interesting and unusual piece of music. Ian was still in love with the soprano saxophone during this period, so that’s what we hear as the music fades in following the breakfast-and-battle sequence. The chord sequence is deceptive, particularly in the chorus, where a key shift takes us to A but the chorus resolves on Bb before taking us back to the incongruous E root of the verse. Ian Anderson was by this time pretty nimble with unusual chord sequences, but this one’s particularly sweet and almost Charlie Parkerish in the use of the flattened sixth. The rhythmic changes are pretty zippy, too, especially when they speed up the tempo for Ian’s sax solo. The lyrics work if you can imagine them as the start of a longer narrative; by themselves they feel like orphans. All in all, an intriguing opening if you tune out David Palmer’s string barrage.
(full version: altrockchick.com/2014/03/07/classic-music-review-war-child-by-jethro-tull/)

01. WarChild (04:34)
02. Queen and Country (03:01)
03. Ladies (03:19)
04. Back-Door Angels (05:29)
05. SeaLion (03:37)
06. Skating Away on the Thin Ice of the New Day (03:58)
07. Bungle in the Jungle (03:37)
08. Only Solitaire (01:29)
09. The Third Hoorah (04:51)
10. Two Fingers (05:09)

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Sunday, November 23, 2025

Groundhogs - Blues Obituary (1969)

Year: 1969 (CD 1999)
Label: Akarma Records (Italy), AK 039
Style: Rock, Blues Rock
Country: England
Time: 34:01
Format: Flac Tracks 16/44,1 kHz
Size: 208 Mb

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. 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.
(allmusic.com/album/blues-obituary-mw0000363074)

01. B.D.D. (03:50)
02. Daze of the Weak (05:16)
03. Times (05:19)
04. Mistreated (04:04)
05. Express Man (03:59)
06. Natchez Burning (04:38)
07. Light Was The Day (06:53)

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Friday, November 21, 2025

Bill Wyman (The Rolling Stones) - Back To Basics (2015)

Year: 22 June 2015 (CD Jun 22, 2015)
Label: Ripple Productios Ltd (UK), PRDCD125
Style: Pop Rock, Blues Rock, Classic Rock
Country: Lewisham, London, England (24 October 1936)
Time: 43:19
Format: Flac Tracks 16/44,1 kHz
Size: 300 Mb

When Bill Wyman left his post as bassist for the Rolling Stones in 1993 after thirty years, it wasn’t a departure from the musical world. He’s been recording and touring with his band the Rhythm Kings since then, but now is releasing a new solo album; the first UK release under his own name in thirty three years! Back To Basics is aptly named, as it is totally stripped back, while touching on the easy-going feeling that the Rhythm Kings give off. Its strength is in its unashamed simplicity.
A large part of this comes from the fact that Wyman’s vocals are just so chilled. The opening track What & How & If & When & Why, for example, is an instrumentally upbeat blues-rock track with a brass section and recurring guitar, but the delivery of the lyrics subdues the overall tone. It’s a raspy, half talking, half singing kind of delivery that feels intimate and very honest; there’s nothing pretentious going on here.
Every track is fluid, instrumentally, and adds various extras to develop its own character. We get some call and response with a female vocalist in Seventeen, flamenco style Spanish guitar in November and some sultry blues harmonica  and melancholy organ in the closer I Got Time, which ends the album on a bit of a downer.
As a whole, though, everything is really cohesive, and Wyman sounds totally at home with the songwriting and delivery. The lyrics are simple, and can be easily comprehended. It’s nice to be able to hear every single word without having to even concentrate, and the themes are relatable “We had it all when we were together/We had it all, thought it was forever” (from Running Back To You). Although it’s an enjoyable listen top to bottom, Stuff (Can’t Get Enough) is definitely a stand out track for me. The rhythm of the vocals in the chorus over straight instrumental backing is a contagious and playful combination that is sure to follow you around for the rest of the day.
Back To Basics isn’t a novel release that breaks into new territory, but if it were, the album would be falsely named. It is a record that reflects the extensive musical career of a man who has nothing to prove. This is not a release aimed at boosting Bill Wyman’s profile, it’s an expression of one of the man’s passions that is still burning bright.
(renownedforsound.com/album-review-bill-wyman-back-to-basics/)

01. What & How & If & When & Why (03:37)
02. I Lost My Ring (03:36)
03. Love, Love, Love (03:40)
04. Stuff (Can't Get Enough) (04:05)
05. Running Back to You (04:00)
06. She's Wonderful (03:56)
07. Seventeen (03:49)
08. I'll Pull You Through (03:06)
09. November (03:44)
10. Just a Friend of Mine (03:41)
11. It's a Lovely Day (02:05)
12. I Got Time (03:54)

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Thursday, November 20, 2025

Keith Richards (The Rolling Stones) - Eileen [Maxi-Single] (1993)

Year: January 1993 (CD 1993)
Label: Virgin Records (US), V25H-12647
Style: Rock, Classic Rock
Country: Dartford, Kent, England (18 December 1943)
Time: 23:55
Format: Flac Tracks 16/44,1 kHz
Size: 161 Mb






01. Eileen (04:31)
02. Gimme' Shelter (Live) (06:29)
03. Wicked As It Seems (Live) (05:22)
04. How I Wish (Live) (04:10)
05. Key To the Highway (03:21)

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Keith Richards (The Rolling Stones) - Crosseyed Heart (2015)

Year: 18 September 2015 (CD Sep 18, 2015)
Label: Mindless Records (US), 602547394002
Style: Blues Rock, Classic Rock
Country: Dartford, Kent, England (18 December 1943)
Time: 58:07
Format: Flac Tracks 16/44,1 kHz
Size: 405 Mb

The Rolling Stone’s first solo album in 23 years contains exactly what one might hope for. There are beautifully played old blues songs, storming Stonesy rockers (Heartstopper, the ferocious Blues in the Morning), a sublime Gregory Isaacs reggae cover (Love Overdue) and outlaw songs about evading the authorities (Trouble). There’s dry humour in a touching lament about, ahem, the theft of a “stash” (Robbed Blind, in which he cackles: “The cops, I can’t involve them”) and the jerkily funny Amnesia, about the 2006 incident in which he fell out of a tree (“Thought I met my mother / She said: ‘You don’t belong to me’”). Contrarily, there are also several beautiful, heartfelt ballads. Richards’ fag-soaked voice isn’t as conventionally strong as Mick Jagger’s, but it is rich with character and knowing. The gorgeous Nothing on Me – about surviving whatever life throws at him – is as great a song as the 71-year-old has put his name to in decades. A terrific album, worthy of one of rock’s founding fathers.
(theguardian.com/music/2015/sep/17/keith-richards-crosseyed-heart-review)

01. Crosseyed Heart (01:52)
02. Heartstopper (03:04)
03. Amnesia (03:35)
04. Robbed Blind (04:00)
05. Trouble (04:17)
06. Love Overdue (03:28)
07. Nothing On Me (03:47)
08. Suspicious (03:42)
09. Blues In The Morning (04:26)
10. Something For Nothing (03:28)
11. Illusion (03:48)
12. Just A Gift (04:01)
13. Goodnight Irene (05:46)
14. Substantial Damage (04:21)
15. Lover's Plea (04:23)

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Wednesday, November 19, 2025

Foghat - Foghat (1972)

Year: July 1972 (CD ????)
Label: Rhino Records (US), R2 70887
Style: Hard Rock, Blues Rock
Country: London, England
Time: 38:10
Format: Flac Tracks 16/44,1 kHz
Size: 259 Mb

Breaking away from Savoy Brown to form this band, the members of Foghat knew from the start what sort of record they wanted to make. With heavy emphasis on the hard boogie, Foghat got down to work with the help of Dave Edmunds and crafted a hard rock gem. Covering Chuck Berry's "Maybellene," they goosed the beat up until it was almost a precursor of the heavy metal yet to come. Interspersing covers with original material, they immediately found a place for themselves in the rock world.
(allmusic.com/album/foghat-mw0000194603)
The band initially featured Dave Peverett ("Lonesome Dave") on guitar and vocals, Tony Stevens on bass, and Roger Earl on drums, after all three musicians left Savoy Brown in December 1970. Rod Price, on guitar/slide guitar, joined after he left Black Cat Bones. The new line-up was named "Foghat" (a nonsense word from a Scrabble-like game played by Peverett and his brother) in January 1971. There is a cartoon drawing on the back cover of the group's first album of a head wearing a foghat.
(en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Foghat)

01. I Just Want To Make Love To You (04:21)
02. Trouble, Trouble (03:20)
03. Leavin' Again (Again!) (03:36)
04. Fool's Hall Of Fame (02:58)
05. Sarah Lee (04:36)
06. Highway (Killing Me) (03:51)
07. Maybelline (03:36)
08. A Hole To Hide In (04:06)
09. Gotta Get To Know You (07:43)

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Keef Hartley Band - Halfbreed (1969)

Year: March 1969 (CD 2008)
Label: Esoteric Recordings (Europe), ECLEC 2050
Style: Blues Rock, Progressive Rock
Country: Plungington, England (8 April 1944 - 26 November 2011)
Time: 50:48
Format: Flac Tracks 16/44,1 kHz
Size: 296 Mb

Trk. 1a) “Sacked (Introducing Hearts and Flowers)” (Arranged by Keef Hartley) In this mock-up of a cringe-making phone call, John Mayall rings up Keef to say “I’ve got a bit of bad news for you….” and terminates his position with the Bluesbreakers, whereupon there’s
1b) a very short snatch of the old tune by Moses Theodore-Tobani which was so famously used to accompany all the sad bits in the silent movies, and a few disjointed noises before
1c) “Confusion Theme.” Credited to Hartley and Cruickshank, this minute-long instrumental opens with tom-toms, followed by a solo guitar improvisation on an eastern scale. A menacing, funky riff develops behind the guitar, before it all fades out. I’d love to have heard more, but instead we get
1d) “The Halfbreed.” Softly plucked guitar and a roll of toms lead into this compelling 12 bar instrumental. Credited to Harley, Cruickshank and Dines, the sequence is similar to Ben Tucker’s “Comin’ Home Baby” recorded first by the Dave Bailey Quintet in 1961, then shortly after by Herbie Mann, and in vocal form by Mel Torme. There’s Hammond riffing, and lead guitar with a somewhat Santana-like flavour, smooth and overdriven but with bite and some very strong vibrato. I see “Spit” pictured with a Gibson SG, and that sounds about right to these ears. Stabbing brass punctuates, drums rattle, and a very moody organ solo follows. Keef subtly runs through different rhythmic patterns without upsetting the flow, taking a turn round the tom-toms during the final guitar solo, then bringing the beat onto the snare as the brass returns and the piece fades. Very enjoyable.
Trk. 2) “Born to Die” is credited to Dines, Hartley, Thain, and Fiona Hewitson – Miller Anderson writing under his wife’s name for contractual reasons. Hymnal Hammond and thoughtful guitar open this slow Blues, which benefits from a chord sequence differing from the usual straight twelve. Anderson’s voice is at once strong, expressive and questioning as he bewails his situation. Tuneful guitar fills which are drenched in reverb during the verses give way to a very lyrical and understated solo from ‘Spit,’ which over the course of four rounds, slowly escalates to a fiery pitch. The band sympathetically builds up with him, but never dominates, and the sounds are rich and warm. Everything drops down to a whisper for the last verse, then another chromatic turnaround on the outro swells to a powerful climax with pounding percussion, as the track slowly fades. Ten minutes of Blues heaven.
(full version: https://earlyblues.org/british-blues-classic-albums-halfbreed/)

01. Confusion Theme - The Halfbreed (07:56)
02. Born To Die (10:01)
03. Sinnin' For You (05:53)
04. Leavin' Trunk (05:57)
05. Just To Cry (06:21)
06. Too Much Thinking (05:32)
07. Too Much To Take (05:37)
08. Leave It 'Til The Morning (03:27)

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