Sold Date:
December 31, 2015
Start Date:
April 22, 2015
Final Price:
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(EUR)
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2LP QUATERMASS
Quatermass
Country of release: Italy, 2001
Original released: 1970
Label: Akarma
Catalogue number: AK 175/2
Barcode: 8026575175112
Klappcover/Gatefold Sleeve: Ja/Yes
Condition Record: MINT
Condition Cover: MINT
LP ist noch verschweißt / LP IS STILL SEALED !!!
(Photo von meiner eigenen LP / Photo taken from my own copy)
Tracks Side 1:
1. Entropy (1:10)
2. Black Sheep Of The Family (3:35)
3. Post War Saturday Echo (9:39)
Tracks Side 2:
1. Good Lord Knows (2:51)
2. Up On The Ground (7:05)
3. Gemini (5:51)
Tracks Side 3:
1. Make Up Your Mind (8:41)
2. Laughin' Tackle (10:32)
3. Entropy (Reprise) (0:40)
Tracks Side 4:
1. One Blind Mice (3:15) (Bonustrack)
2. Punting (7:18) (Bonustrack)
Listen At YouTube:
When the British Blues movement morphed into the riff-rock
wing of progressive music, the focus of most groups remained the heroic lead
guitarist. It was a brave outfit that elected to do without the fretboard god
altogether. Having been persuaded by the success of Keith Emerson’s guitarless
latterday Nice that it could work, a select few elected to structure themselves
as a trio comprising a showboating keyboard player, a punchy drummer and a
bassist who could handle lead vocals. Emerson recruited Greg Lake and Carl
Palmer into his eponymous ensemble; Dave Stewart salvaged Egg from the remains
of his school band Uriel, sans Steve Hillage; and three veterans from the
British Beat Boom came together as Quatermass. One of these three acts would go
forward to worldwide acclaim and the sickly smell of excess, the other two to a
brief second-division career and oblivion.
Quatermass could have been as
big as ELP; they had the chops, the experience and the contacts.
Bassist/vocalist John Gustafson had been in the Big Three, the Liverpool guitar
trio that all the other Cavern/Hamburg bands looked up to for their
musicianship. Drummer Mick Underwood had served time with Joe Meek’s legendary
house band, the Outlaws, alongside Richie Blackmore. Keyboardist Peter Robinson
had backed hugely popular R’n’B shouter Chris Farlowe. All three were also
in-demand studio sessioneers. They came together in a late lineup of Episode
Six, the band that had provided a further two-fifths of Deep Purple, and decided
to stay together when the Six finally folded. Taking their name from the classic
sci-fi TV show, and rapidly signing to premier UK prog-rock label Harvest, their
first album appeared in May 1970 . . . and despite strong reviews, undeniable
quality and a splendid gatefold sleeve by Hipgnosis (of Pink Floyd fame),
disappeared just as rapidly from the shelves. Its poor sales, an unsuccessful US
tour and demand for their services from other nascent bands ensured that there
wouldn’t be another. Quatermass broke up in April ’71.
Forty years later
the reissued, extended album still exudes quality. Gus was a funky, syncopative
Fender bassist with a strong cock-rock voice in the Rodgers/Gillan mould.
Robinson combined fruity blues and soul licks with a sly jazzy atonality and
just enough classical nous not to become overbearing like the ELP mainman,
whilst freely overdubbing Hammond organ, electric and acoustic piano, Mellotron
and Moog. Underwood provided the solid, John Bonham-style groove that held the
three musicians tightly together. The whole had a no-nonsense rocky edge
distinctly uncommon in keyboard-centric prog. The album mixes short, precise
three-minute songs like the soulful single “Black Sheep Of The Family” and the
gently psychedelic, harpsichord-led “Good Lord Knows” with eight-minute keyboard
workouts typical of the live act, notably the ferocious bluesy soloing on the
riff-based “Up On The Ground”, the jazzy, fully-orchestrated block chording on
“Laughin’ Tackle” and the ring-modulated funk of the instrumental outtake
“Punting”. Robinson’s genuinely exciting yet tasteful keyboard skills,
especially on the B-3, ensure that none of these outstay their welcome. Keith
Emerson might usefully have taken note.
(Len/therisingstorm.net)
John Gustafson - Vocals, Bass
Guitar
Pete Robinson - Keyboards
Mick Underwood - Drums
Versand innerhalb Deutschland (versichert mit GLS - generell innerhalb von 24 Stunden) 5,00 Euro
Egal wieviele LPs gekauft werden, Versand immer 5,00 Euro. Keine weiteren Versandkosten ab der zweiten LP!!
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