The Blues Magoos - Psychedelic Lollipop (1966) + Electric Comic Book (1967) [Lossless FLAC]seeders: 0
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The Blues Magoos - Psychedelic Lollipop (1966) + Electric Comic Book (1967) [Lossless FLAC] (Size: 403.53 MB)
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The Blues Magoos - Psychedelic Lollipop (1966) + Electric Comic Book (1967) [1999]
Includes: Files by track, ripped at FLAC 8 using Easy CD-DA Extractor (www.poikosoft.com) Tracks have full tags (including embedded thumbnail). All artwork in jpgs at 300 d.p.i. Rotated and cropped losslessly using jpegcrop. (Includes large folder.) AMG Bio.txt AMG Review.txt Notes.txt (which is simply these notes included in the torrent) Bio from All Music: A Bronx-based quintet, denizens of the Greenwich Village club scene, and originally known by the tres psychedelic moniker the Bloos Magoos, the Blues Magoos made their mark in 1967 with a rousing, full-throttle, sub-literate, psychedelic garage rock single, "(We Ain't Got) Nothin' Yet." It wasn't a spacy, pretentious song, nor did it contain vague attempts at hippie-era mysticism, but was rather the kind of simple, direct, infectious rock & roll you could imagine five guys from the Bronx making. With a snotty lead vocal from keyboardist Ralph Scala and some wild-eyed guitar playing courtesy of then-16-year-old Emil "Peppy" Thielheim, America made the Magoos' debut single a Top Ten hit, sending it to number five in January 1967. With this impetus, the band used all the trappings of marketable psychedelia to promote their second album, Psychedelic Lollipop, which, despite the title's obvious pandering, was a fairly cool chunk of psych-garage rock. The album featured trebly, crappy-sounding guitars, a whiny Farfisa organ, yelled vocals, and a rhythm section that shelved nuance for thudding simplicity. But as the psychedelic era gave way to the hippie era's extended raga-rock proclivities, by 1969, the Magoos seemed anachronistic. Amazingly, they released a third album, with an equally absurd title, Electric Comic Book, that wasn't nearly as bad as it sounds. The original Magoos split up in 1969, but Thielheim couldn't resist beating a dead horse and led a mediocre blues-rock version of the band into 1972. Taken from: http://wc05.allmusic.com/cg/amg.dll?p=amg&sql=11:d9ftxqr5ldte~T1 All Music Album Excerpt for Psychedelic Lollipop: ... Psychedelic Lollipop is a solid and precious gem from the Nuggets vaults, the difference between this and other one-hit artists being that you can play the entire album repeatedly, quite an accomplishment coming from the era of the hit single. That such a tremendous smash like "(We Ain't Got) Nothin' Yet" kicks the whole thing off is just an added bonus. Read entire review here: http://wc05.allmusic.com/cg/amg.dll?p=amg&sql=10:wzfpxql5ld6e All Music Album Excerpt for Electric Comic Book: ... this recording will please those who can't get enough of this style of music. All due respect to bands like the Lyres who have spent a lifetime re-creating this sound, there's no point in going there when you can listen to this and hear the real thing. Read entire review here: http://wc05.allmusic.com/cg/amg.dll?p=amg&sql=10:3zfqxql5ld6e Track List: 01. We Ain't Got Nothin' Yet 02. Love Seems Doomed 03. Tobacco Road 04. Queen Of My Nights 05. I'll Go Crazy 06. Gotta Get Away 07. Sometimes I Think About 08. One By One 09. Worried Life Blues 10. She's Coming Home 11. Pipe Dream 12. There's A Chance We Can Make It 13. Life Is Just A Cher o' Bowlies 14. Gloria 15. Intermission 16. Albert Common Is Dead 17. Summer Is The Man 18. Baby, I Want You 19. Let's Get Totether 20. Take My Love 21. Rush Hour 22. That's All Folks My other torrents: http://www.demonoid.com/files/?uid=3919015&seeded=2 Sharing Widget |
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