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Artist: Ten Years After
Label: Hip-O Records Category: Music Average customer rating: Media: Audio CD Number Of Discs: 2 UPC: 731455636123 EAN: 0731455636123 ASIN: B000063VEV Release Date: 2002-04-09 |
Anthology 1967-1971
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Say what you will, but England's Ten Years After certainly knew when to peak: their manic, 12-minute workout of "I'm Going Home" (included here) upstaged a veritable army of '60s superstars and remains one of the highlights of the film <I>Woodstock</I>. As blues-smitten U.K. rockers go, TYA may not have been as inventive as the Yardbirds, guitarist/frontman Alvin Lee neither as tastefully polished as Clapton nor as bombastic and exotic as Page, but their sheer dedication and steamroller determination (exemplified by nearly <I>30</I> American tours during the Woodstock era) were second to none. This double-disc, 26-track anthology spans the band's eight-albums-in-five-years prime, from its workmanlike 1967 covers of blues staples "I Want to Know" and "Spoonful" through a pair of rare 1968 singles (highlighted by Lee's quirky, country-folk "Portable People") to its 1971 pop hit, "I'd Love to Change the World." Lee's primitivist urges and legendary, lightning-fingered guitar heroics fuel everything from moody, simmering dirges like "Help Me" and upbeat Chi-town shuffles in the "Me and My Baby" mold to the Cro-Magnon riff-rock of "Love Like a Man" and the proto-psych-blues of "50,000 Miles Beneath My Brain." If TYA's music is often as nimble and slick as a stegosaur--and arguably as timely--it's equally as leathery, unrelenting, and hard to ignore. <I>--Jerry McCulley</I>Customer Reviews:
Got me through Nam.......2005-08-31
They Finally Get The Justice They Deserve!.......2004-01-19
First of all, the Woodstock version of "I'm Going Home" was always edited down to 9 minutes. But this compilation features the FULL version, all 12 minutes of it, in it's entirety. There has never, I repeat - NEVER been another song in the world that defines energetic, ballsy, sweaty rock 'n roll like this one. Describing it in words seems almost useless, and the energy that the boys display in the song is practically unearthly. Of course, Alvin Lee is the main hero of the song, unleashing crazy hurricanes of mind-blowing licks that are both fast and controlled at the same time. But the rhythm section is equally vicious, particularly at the end, where Ric Lee (drums) and Leo Lyons (bass) keep pounding their instruments so intensely that you'd think they were trying to shatter them! Definitely the most powerful rhythm section that I've ever heard. This song is just unreal, folks. Play it loud and feel yourself gasping for breath in no time. The end will give you a rush of adrenaline like you've never experienced. Nobody has ever played rock 'n roll like this before or since. Nobody.
This anthology also features four songs from their debut album, which is not available here in America (of course), so that's all the more reason to buy this! I can't discuss all of the songs on here, 'cause there's too many. Suffice it to say that they are ALL excellent and they all jam.
Stuffed 2-CD anthology of British blues legends.......2002-06-01
Hip-O's 2-CD collection gathers cuts from eight of the band's original albums (leaving out only 1972's "Rock & Roll Music to the World" and 1974's "Positive Vibrations"), plus a pair of singles and a track from Woodstock, creating a superb overview of the band's original run. This is both a splendid introduction to the band and a well-procured collection of tracks for the TYA fan.
1967's eponymous debut lays out TYA's blues base on four covers, "I Want to Know," Al Cooper's "I Can't Keep From Crying Sometimes," Willie Dixon's "Spoonful," and Sonny Boy Williamson's "Help Me." Even at this early stage Alvin Lee's guitar shows itself to be the incisive instrument that would be showcased in longer jams on later albums.
The 1968 single, "Portable People," is an uncharacteristically genteel A-side for TYA, with a B-side, "The Sounds," that leans heavily towards the psychedelic. Their other non-LP single from the era, "Rock Your Mama" is a straight-ahead blues affair, with a B-side, "Spider in My Web," that takes the sound low and slow. (It's a bit mysterious as to how the seven-plus minute "Spider" was fit onto a 7" 45!).
The live jam "I May Be Wrong, But I Won't Be Wrong Always" from 1968's "Undead" LP gives Lee, keyboardist Chick Churchill, and even bassist Leo Lyons the opportunity to display their chops. The following year's "Stonedhenge" finds the band experimenting with their blues on the psychedelic boogie "Going to Try" and the jazz-tinged organ-and-guitar of "Woman Trouble." Though not their most artistically consistent album, as excerpted here, their experimental directions show some dividends. "Boogie On," recorded during the "Stonedhenge" sessions, was shelved until the 1972 odds 'n' sods release "Alvin Lee and Company," and is featured here in its entire 14-minute glory.
1969's "Ssssh" showed TYA's mastery of the electric twelve bar blues on "I Woke Up This Morning." Recorded shortly before their breakthrough performance at Woodstock (captured on this set by the blistering "I'm Going Home"), "Ssssh" features a seven-minute jam of Sonny Boy Williamson's "Good Morning Little Schoolgirl" (with new, on-the-nose lyrics), and the quieter, down-tempo "If You Should Love Me." Throughout, Lee's intricate guitar playing is a textbook of British electric blues.
The jamming continued on 1970's "Cricklewood Green" with "Love Like a Man" and "50,000 Miles Beneath My Brain." The jazz-based "Me and My Baby" shows the band's improvisational abilities extended outside their signature electric blues-rock. A pair of tracks from 1970's "WATT" finds the band continuing in the same direction with the high-voltage "I'm Coming Home" and the slow-to-boil boogie, "My Baby Left Me."
1971's pop-chart breakthrough, "A Space in Time" featured the band's only major radio hit, "I'd Love to Change the World." True to the single, the album's tracks were shorter, with acoustic playing taking more to the foreground. Still, the band's electric blues roots showed through on the fine "One of These Days," and provided plenty of room for Lee's guitar pyrotechnics.
TYA's blues-soaked rock 'n' roll jams were perfectly attuned to dance halls like the Fillmore, as well as an FM radio industry that was not yet challenged for airtime. Their relentless touring (nine US tours between 1968 and 1979, and twenty-eight by 1975!) made them a popular concert draw and steady record sellers. Hip-O does an superb job of highlighting both their album and live recordings on this double disc set (clocking in at an amazing 156+ minutes!), augmented by a fine essay from Dave Thompson and tightly organized discographical info.
With the length of many of TYA's best tracks, a single-disc anthology (such as "Essential" or "Very Best Ten Years After Album Ever") simply can't cover enough ground to properly explain this band. The only routes deeper than this 2-CD collection are their individual album releases, many of which are now available as remastered imports with bonus cuts. As a starting point, however, you couldn't ask for too much more than these two discs.
Alvin Lee Rides Again.......2002-04-21
The second disk begins around the time of Ten Years After's new found popularity. Highlights of this period include a cover of Sonny Boy Williamson's "Good Morning Little Schoolgirl" the jazzy "Me And My Baby" the progressive "50,000 Miles Beneath My Brain" and the organ/guitar workout "One Of These Days". The disk also contains the band's three best known numbers the singles "Love Like A Man", the anti-war "I'd Love To Change The World" and the band's showstopper "I'm Going Home" recorded live at Woodstock. The band became less reliant on cover material by this point but continued to write blues/jazz boogie based material with the occasional ballad thrown in. I have a few issues with the second disk. First the last three years of the band which encompass three albums are not represented at all. Even if this fact is not taken into account there are a few changes in song selection on the second disk I would make. I would delete "If You Should Love Me" and "Me Baby Left Me" and replace them with "Bad Scene" and "She Lies In The Morning" which came from the same albums and were more often played in concert. I would also replace "Here They Come" with "Working On The Road" another concert favorite which is from their best album "Cricklewood Green".
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