Well, I have to rely on streaming this time I love this album. If it weren't for this damn quarantine, I would go out to buy it.
Listening to "Eight Miles High" right now. Really cool jam to start the song-or does the song ever materialize, still jamming almost 4 minutes in (not that there is anything wrong with that!)
Past member (1973–1975) Paul Nichols (seen in the bottom photo of your post) went on to play drums on Widowmaker [UK] two albums, 'Widowmaker', Jet 2310 432 (1976), and 'Too Late to Cry', (1977) alongside Hawkwind founding guitarist the late Huw Lloyd-Langton, and former Spooky Tooth axeman Luther Grosvenor a.k.a. Ariel Bender.
Merle Haggard – Down Every Road (1962-1994) Might be my favorite collection. I never skip a track and I always have it on shuffle. 32 years of recorded music and it blends incredible well.
Fantastic box set, I bought it close to the time it was released. Sometime around 1996? I put it right up there with biograph and Decade.
Rick Danko (1977) This must have seemed out of place in 1977. Not really soft rock, and certainly not punk. It just sounds like another album by The Band, but with Rick singing on all the cuts. Some famous friends like Eric Clapton, Ron Wood, Blondie Chaplin, and Doug Sahm make appearances, and occasionally an old Bandmate helps out, too. While you're on a Band kick, don't forget this one.
The band is cool but the "island" of Lindisfarne is even better. You have to watch the clock and the tides, other wise you'll get stuck there until the next low tide. The road gets flooded everyday I bought some viking mead there while visiting. Interesting taste. On a blue sky day you can see the amazing Bamburgh castle from Lindisfarne (which we also visited).
From Wolves to Whales Strandwal disc 1 Dave Rempis on alto & tenor saxophones Nate Wooley on trumpet Pascal Niggenkemper on double bass Chris Corsano on drums best free jazz band in the world?? Maybe this 2 CD set is simply incredible recorded live on 11/14/2017 @ De Pletterij Haarlem, Netherlands 4 pieces totaling a bit over 80 minutes On Aerophonic Records should convince any open minded listener to re-think what they think they know about jazz/improv