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This tune comes from Scottish rock singer Frankie Miller's third album, and bears such an uncanny resemblance to a later Bob Seger song one wonders whether there was a copyright infringement action:
Pianist Leon Russell and guitarist Marc Benno were studio musicians in California when they formed the band Asylum Choir in 1967. This song comes from their second album, recorded in 1969, but not released until 1971, when Russell had already become famous as a solo performer:
Eclectic folk and rock band from California, this is a live version of the lead number from their third and probably best album (here's the album version); I love this tune!
California band, made up of former members of Deep Purple and Iron Butterfly, among others, they are sometimes described as a proto-"stoner rock" band. This is from their debut album:
Jimmy Page, John Paul Jones, Nicky Hopkins (on piano) and other lesser-known friends recorded an album in 1967 (released in 1968 as No Introduction Necessary), from which this bluesy number comes:
(Thanks to Ken Brown for correcting the information about the year and origin of this track.)
This was a #1 hit in Australia, and still remains a bit controversial there although how that juvenile practice arose from this song I can't really figure!
Elektra Records created this band through auditions in 1967, but it never achieved much success, despite releasing a number of singles and albums. This instrumental, released as a single, isn't bad:
Black Sabbath's first album was released 50 years ago today. I still think it's their best, and one of the best albums in a year full of excellent ones.
After Mick Abrahams, the original guitarist for Jethro Tull, left the band after a dispute with Ian Anderson about the musical direction of the band (This Was, Tull's debut, was a much more British blues-style album than later work), Abrahams formed a new band Blodwyn Pig. This tune comes from their debut album (and doesn't sound at all like Jethro Tull!):
Another forgotten British psychedelic band (some of whose members later migrated to The Strawbs), this was their most successful release (at least in the UK):
Another forgotten British psychedelic band that released a few singles in the late 1960s; this tune, which wasn't released at the time, is better than the singles in my opinion:
British psychedelic band that released two singles and enjoyed no recognition at the time; this is the B-side of one of the two singles (which I rather prefer to the A-side, "Path Through the Forest"):
Before Uriah Heep and Ken Hensley, vocalist David Bryon and guitarist Mick Box played with a band called Spice, which recorded more material than it released, including this quirky tune that grows on you:
...in my opinion, anyway. Glad to hear yours in the comments (click on the category, "Great Moments in Obscure Rock 'n' Roll" to see this year's selections). Here's mine (with apologies to Warpig, Toad and U.F.O. who almost made it):
Another late 60s Michigan band, the psychedelic/blues rock Frijid Pink had one national hit with their cover of "House of the Rising Sun," but this was an earlier single the same year:
Michigan in the late 1960s was a fertile ground for rock music, producing, among others, Iggy Pop and the Stooges, the MC5, Grand Funk, Ted Nugent, Bob Seger, and, the least successful of them all (but arguably more talented than some of the others), The Frost, a band we've not featured since last year. Here's another number from their debut album:
Late 1960s British blues rock/spacce rock band that became much better known for a hard rock and then heavy metal style in the mid-1970s and after; but this number is closer to the beginning, with original guitarist Mick Bolton, when they were only moderately successful in some European countries:
Early movers in the British blues explosion, this band was well-known in the mid-1960s (mainly in Britain), but hasn't fared well in the collective rock 'n' roll memory. That's Bond on vocals and organ, Jack Bruce on bass and harmonica, and Ginger Baker on drums. This version of their best-known song comes from a 1965 movie:
For my rock 'n' roll fans, Baker, the drummer for Cream, and before that, the Graham Bond Organization, has died. He was a very good drummer and a complete maniac! That he lived so long is, like Keith Richards, a case of: how could he have survived his lifestyle? This documentary isn't bad, although a bit tedious at points, but it certainly brings out what a dysfunctional human being he was in addition to his skill as a drummer.
Psychedelic and progressive influences are apparent in the work of this Icelandic rock band that performed from the late 1960s into the 1970s; I thought this one of their better numbers:
This is one of the very first obscure numbers I posted several years ago, but it's such a great tune by a forgotten British band that I'm putting it up front again (a mix of Blind Faith and Traffic, as it were):
Canadian hard rock band of the early 1970s, that enjoyed some local success in Ontario, but not really elsewhere. This is from their one and only album (with echoes of Deep Purple):
Britsh hard rock band, that toured widely as an opening act for major hard rock acts in the early 1970s, this is the b-side of the one single from their one and only album:
After leaving Uriah Heep, Ken Hensley went to Germany and recorded one album with a group of German rock musicians; this is the title song, an instrumental very much in the Uriah Heep style:
Western Massachussetts band that never made it nationally; this is from their debut album (UPDATE: Shaun Nichols, John Fischer, Dean Rowan and others tell me they aren't getting the video, so I'm reposting with anew video, which I hope works):
They don't get much more obscure than this Japanese pscyhedelic/progressive/hard rock band of the late 1960s and early 1970s, that enjoyed no commercial success even in Japan, but has long had a small cult following. They began by doing covers of various British blues rock numbers, of which this is one--a rather distinctive version of the song Led Zeppelin ripped off from Howlin' Wolf and Albert King and made famous:
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