Post by CountryCrock on Jan 2, 2024 20:33:06 GMT
151MB
mega.nz/file/BL0CXLLR#-Cgjl_qLf-NvY7VaveCE3DBduVDybPl6YO4sKFjGAU4
(kind-of, in a very abstract perspective!, a song one could say applies to "New Year's-themed" paradoxes...with the acerbic insight of a then-young Burton Cummings calling-out the hypocritically blind passivity of daily society, which: is STILL as relevant all this time later)
*P.S. Whether or not Kale became a deadbeat opportunist after 1972, you HAVE TO admit the guy always played a very tight and melodic bassline during the first decade of the band's existence key to their sound!
This just might have been the first song by a then-contemporaneous '60s group to, specifically, namecheck Lennon and McCartney in one of its original compositions(?). I mean: there had been numerous novelty songs before about (particularly) Ringo during peak-American Beatlemania and, a couple instances where Eric Burdon had "namechecked" the behemoth that was the Beatles -as the actual Sixties were happening- collectively (when Burdon had improvised lyrics to an Animals' cover of "Sweet Little 16" as well as, the New Animals' song "Winds of Change"...the influence of the Beatles' setting the entire Rock explosion into effect are mentioned). However; in retrospect, though, it (now) seems weird how so many other groups riding the wave of what 2/9/64 had brought about were almost "afraid" to directly acknowledge it while it was taking place.
i.postimg.cc/DzrBC2KQ/Polish-20231229-173627720.jpg
i.postimg.cc/htS81N06/Polish-20240101-203902410.jpg
(Geez!: do THIS guy's records normally sound this scratchy and speed-erratic WITHOUT all the computer software filtering "post-production" he otherwise likes to slather upon them? --- all the uploads of Miles Davis and the late-'70s Prog crap gave the account away immediately; as more from the Internet's resident deaf cokehead Amazon fraud merchant selling $10k turntables)
i.postimg.cc/T304GVwL/Screenshot-20240102-005630-Gallery.jpg
mega.nz/file/BL0CXLLR#-Cgjl_qLf-NvY7VaveCE3DBduVDybPl6YO4sKFjGAU4
(kind-of, in a very abstract perspective!, a song one could say applies to "New Year's-themed" paradoxes...with the acerbic insight of a then-young Burton Cummings calling-out the hypocritically blind passivity of daily society, which: is STILL as relevant all this time later)
*P.S. Whether or not Kale became a deadbeat opportunist after 1972, you HAVE TO admit the guy always played a very tight and melodic bassline during the first decade of the band's existence key to their sound!
This just might have been the first song by a then-contemporaneous '60s group to, specifically, namecheck Lennon and McCartney in one of its original compositions(?). I mean: there had been numerous novelty songs before about (particularly) Ringo during peak-American Beatlemania and, a couple instances where Eric Burdon had "namechecked" the behemoth that was the Beatles -as the actual Sixties were happening- collectively (when Burdon had improvised lyrics to an Animals' cover of "Sweet Little 16" as well as, the New Animals' song "Winds of Change"...the influence of the Beatles' setting the entire Rock explosion into effect are mentioned). However; in retrospect, though, it (now) seems weird how so many other groups riding the wave of what 2/9/64 had brought about were almost "afraid" to directly acknowledge it while it was taking place.
i.postimg.cc/DzrBC2KQ/Polish-20231229-173627720.jpg
i.postimg.cc/htS81N06/Polish-20240101-203902410.jpg
(Geez!: do THIS guy's records normally sound this scratchy and speed-erratic WITHOUT all the computer software filtering "post-production" he otherwise likes to slather upon them? --- all the uploads of Miles Davis and the late-'70s Prog crap gave the account away immediately; as more from the Internet's resident deaf cokehead Amazon fraud merchant selling $10k turntables)
i.postimg.cc/T304GVwL/Screenshot-20240102-005630-Gallery.jpg