The Youngbloods 1967 Rar

  

Download Free Real Estate As A Professional Career Pdf Editor. The first song on the album, 'Grizzly Bear' (spelled 'Grizzely Bear' on the album cover), was also released as a single reaching #52 in the pop charts in December 1966. Jerry Corbitt took credit for writing this song, but it had appeared on a 1928 recording by singer/songwriter Jim Jackson. The song featured the 'jug band' style popularized by The Lovin' Spoonful, Jim Kweskin Jug Band and other similar groups of the middle 1960s. The title refers to a popular dance style of the 1910s. Ikaw Na Na Na Na G2b Band Free Mp3 Download. Corbitt also wrote the second song on the LP, the ballad 'All Over the World (La La)'.

Despite releasing seven quality albums between 1967 and 1972 on two huge record labels - RCA Victor and Warner Brothers - New York's 'The Youngbloods' and their principal songwriter Jesse Colin Young never really meant diddlysquat in the UK (where I live). The live albums 'Rock Festival' and 'Ride The Wind' were. Several critically praised albums followed: The Youngbloods (1967, later retitled Get Together); Earth Music (1967); and Elephant Mountain (1969), with its track, 'Darkness, Darkness'. In 1967, when 'Get Together', a paean to universal brotherhood first appeared, it did not sell very well, reaching only #62 on the chart.

Side one also featured Blind Willie McTell's 'Statesboro Blues' and another ballad, 'One Note Man' written by fellow Cambridge folk musician Paul Arnoldi (spelled 'Arnaldi' on the record label). Side Two featured two more songs written by fellow folk singer-songwriters, Fred Neil's 'The Other Side of This Life' and 'Four in the Morning' by George 'Robin' Remailly (who became a member of the Holy Modal Rounders in the 1970s). Jesse Colin Young wrote two ballads on side two, 'Tears Are Falling' and 'Foolin' Around (The Waltz)' which alternates between 4/4 and 3/4 time signatures. Classical cello was added to 'Foolin' Around' by George Ricci. Side two ends with two blues standards, Jimmy Reed's 'Ain't That Lovin' You' and Mississippi John Hurt's 'C.C. The last song featured a hard-rocking guitar jam that was common in the late 1960s, especially for San Francisco, which would soon become the Youngbloods' destination both geographically and musically. The Youngbloods were an American rock band consisting of Jesse Colin Young (vocals, bass), Jerry Corbitt (guitar), Lowell Levinger, nicknamed 'Banana' (guitar and electric piano), and Joe Bauer (drums).

The Youngbloods 1967 BlogspotThe Youngbloods 1967 Rar