LP WATERLOO First Battle (Re) Absinthe Records ARLP 509 MINT/MINT
Sold Date:
March 13, 2021
Start Date:
November 3, 2020
Final Price:
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LP WATERLOO
First
Battle
Country of release: France, 2017
Original
released: 1970
Label:
Absinthe
Catalogue
number: ARLP 509
Barcode:
-
Klappcover/Gatefold Sleeve:
Nein/No
Condition Record: MINT
(Unplayed)
Condition Cover: MINT
Tracks
Side 1:
1. Meet Again (3:02)
2. Why May I
Not Know (3:07)
3. Tumblin' (2:34)
4. Black Born Children
(3:42)
5. Life (2:45)
6. Problems (2:59)
7. The Youngest Day (7:33) (Bonustrack)
Tracks Side 2:
1. Why Don't You Follow
Me (3:30)
2. Guy In The Neighbourhood (2:54)
3. Lonesome Road
(2:49)
4. Diary Of An Old Man (10:55)
5. Plastic Mind (4:26)
(Bonustrack)
Listen At
YouTube:
Regarded as one of the best European progressive rock
albums from the 70's, the sole release by Belgian group Waterloo was originally
released on the Vogue label and is a highly collectable item being paid obscene
sums in the collector's market.
Released in 1970 and entirely sung in
English, this brilliant album is a blend of progressive rock and heavy prog,
with obvious Jethro Tull influence but with something else really of their own,
making of it a very special album.
We're very pleased to present the
first ever official vinyl reissue of such a classic of the European progressive
rock history, in high quality reissue standards including an insert with
extensive liners and photos (guerssen.com)
One of the rarest early progressive rock
records came out in Belgium back in 1970. It was titled First Battle and was
recorded by a band who called themselves Waterloo. Original copies of their one
and only album now sell for over $2,000 on some auction sites.
This five-piece band had obviously been playing
together for a while before the album was recorded.
There are a variety of
styles on display here, suggesting that the ten songs that make up First Battle
were written over the course of a few years.
Take “Meet Again,” the opening
track. This organ-heavy slice of psychedelia feels like vintage 1968, and could
have slotted in nicely on the Small Faces’ Ogden’s Nut Gone Flake. Waterloo then
immediately dive into the bombastic territory of King Crimson’s “21st Century
Schizoid Man” on the very next cut, “Why May I Not Know.”
From there the band
cruise into some of the more laid-back, flute-driven sounds of psych-folkies
like the Incredible String Band, with “Tumblin’ Jack.” Diversity is definitely a
quality this group embraced, and the rest of the record continues in this
disparate vein.
The original LP version of First Battle closed with the ten
minute “Diary Of An Old Man,” which is a big departure. This is clearly the
“love it or hate it,” song in their repertoire. It is a basic blues, with
lengthy guitar, organ, and flute solos dominating.
Fans of the aforementioned
bands, plus contemporaries such as Jethro Tull, Uriah Heep, and Genesis should
enjoy Waterloo.(blogcritics.org)
Jean-Paul Janssens - Bass
Jacky
Mauer - Drums
Gus Roan - Guitar
Marc Malyster - Organ
Dirk Bogaert -
Vocals, Flute
Versand innerhalb Deutschland (versichert mit GLS - generell innerhalb von
24 Stunden) 6,00 Euro
Egal wieviele LPs
gekauft werden, Versand immer 6,00 Euro. Keine weiteren Versandkosten ab der
zweiten LP!!
International
Shipping With Tracking 8,50 Euro
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