view cart menu separator categories menu separator faq
advanced search
categories  > Cellar (2094)
no photo
 

MIGHTY GROUNDHOGS Who Will Save OG '72 LP gimmick COMIC

Price: $42.53 currently not available     
Feedback: 100%, 22 sales Ask us a question
Shipping: USPS calculated click to check
Seller's Country: United States
Condition: Used
Payment with:
*The store has not been updated recently. You may want to contact the merchant to confirm the availability of the product.
[[$VALUE]] / [[$VALUEDATE]] [[$RATING]] asoccHard to find original fold-out Comic Book cover complete with inner lyric sleeveSee Item Specifics section above for details(clickable images enlarge) Tracks:Tracks Title Composer TimeAMG Pick 1 . Earth Is Not Room Enough McPhee, McPhee 4:49AMG Pick 2 . Wages of Peace McPhee, McPhee 4:373 . Body in Mind McPhee, McPhee 3:504 . Music Is the Food of Thought McPhee, McPhee 4:38AMG Pick 5 . Bog Roll Blues McPhee, McPhee 3:096 . Death of the Sun McPhee, McPhee 2:527 . Amazing Grace Newton, Traditional 2:248 . The Grey Maze McPhee, McPhee 10:09 * Blues-Rock * Hard Rock * Prog-Rock * Psychedelic * British Psychedelia * Album Rock * Heavy MetalMoods * Raucous * Theatrical * Freewheeling * Messy * Outrageous * RecklessBiographyby Richie UnterbergerThe Groundhogs were not British blues at their most creative; nor were they British blues at their most generic. They were emblematic of some of the genre's most visible strengths and weaknesses. They were prone to jam too long on basic riffs, they couldn't hold a candle to American blues singers in terms of vocal presence, and their songwriting wasn't so hot. On the other hand, they did sometimes stretch the form in unexpected ways, usually at the hands of their creative force, guitarist/songwriter/vocalist T.S. (Tony) McPhee. For a while they were also extremely popular in Britain, landing three albums in that country's Top Ten in the early '70s.The Groundhogs' roots actually stretch back to the mid-'60s, when McPhee helped form the group, named after a John Lee Hooker song (the band was also known briefly as John Lee's Groundhogs). In fact, the Groundhogs would back Hooker himself on some of the blues singer's mid-'60s British shows, and also back him on record on an obscure LP. They also recorded a few very obscure singles with a much more prominent R&B/soul influence than their later work.In 1966, the Groundhogs evolved into Herbal Mixture, which (as if you couldn't guess from the name) had more of a psychedelic flavor than a blues one. Their sole single, "Machines," would actually appear on psychedelic rarity compilations decades later. The Groundhogs/Herbal Mixture singles, along with some unreleased material, has been compiled on a reissue CD on Distortions.After Herbal Mixture folded, McPhee had a stint with the John Dummer Blues Band before re-forming the Groundhogs in the late '60s at the instigation of United Artists A&R man Andrew Lauder. Initially a quartet (bassist Pete Cruickshank also remained from the original Groundhogs lineup), they'd stripped down to a trio by the time of their commercial breakthrough, Thank Christ for the Bomb, which made the U.K. Top Ten in 1970.The Groundhogs' power-trio setup, as well as McPhee's vaguely Jack Bruce-like vocals, bore a passing resemblance to the sound pioneered by Cream. They were blunter and less inventive than Cream, but often strained against the limitations of conventional 12-bar blues with twisting riffs and unexpected grinding chord changes. McPhee's lyrics, particularly on Thank Christ for the Bomb, were murky, sullen anti-establishment statements that were often difficult to decipher, both in meaning and actual content. They played it straighter on the less sophisticated follow-up, Split, which succumbed to some of the period's blues-hard-rock indulgences, putting riffs and flash over substance.McPhee was always at the very least an impressive guitarist, and a very versatile one, accomplished in electric, acoustic, and slide styles. Who Will Save the World? The Mighty Groundhogs! (1972), their last Top Ten entry, saw McPhee straying further from blues territory into somewhat progressive realms, even adding some Mellotron and harmonium (though the results were not wholly unsuccessful). The Groundhogs never became well-known in the U.S., where somewhat similar groups like Ten Years After were much bigger. Although McPhee and the band have meant little in commercial or critical terms in their native country since the early '70s, they've remained active as a touring and recording unit since then, playing to a small following in the U.K. and Europe.This exquisite slice of retro music history is a vinyl sound recording (not a CD). Please reference Item Specifics above foradditional detail.Strict Goldmine grading -- Over 12 years on eCRATER! Combine Items to Save $$$!©A Sound Deal
Last Updated: 14 Jan 2021 10:46:46 PST home  |  about  |  terms  |  contact
Powered by eCRATER - a free online store builder