Sold Date:
August 20, 2017
Start Date:
November 3, 2015
Final Price:
£16.99
(GBP)
Seller Feedback:
9008
Buyer Feedback:
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You are bidding on a New VINYL Soul / Funk / Compilation called:
STRANGE THINGS - 1970-1974 - NOWAGAIN RECORDS - CAT NUMBER - NA 5124-LP-ST1
U.S. RELEASE / STILL SEALED IN IT'S FACTORY SHRINKWRAP
Eccentric soul and funk recordings from an unlikely crew of Los Angeles
musical misfits including psych-rock cult figure John Greek (Reachin
Arcesia, Beautiful Daze) and members of the Watts 103rd St. Rhythm Band.
They had a catchy, but inappropriate name: there is nothing
forthcoming about Los Angeles 4th Coming, unless one counts a copious
amount of releases on rare 7" singles that didn't sell farther than
vocalist/principal Henry "Hank" Porter's Datsun 1200 could take him.
When 4th Coming records surfaced in the '90s, they were often
disregarded as novelty. And some of their records were so rare that it
took until the late '00s for them to reemerge, after the sinking of
their initial pressing runs. Assembling a full set of 4th Coming
recordings was nearly impossible, until the issue of this, the lost 4th
Coming album. At its core, the 4th Coming was a songwriting duo Porter
and Jechonias "Jack" S. Williams and a rotating cast of musicians
including members of lauded LA funk ensemble the Watts 103rd St. Rhythm
Band - that Williams assembled at Artist Recording Studio to realize the
pair's ideas. They existed only from the latter half of 1969 until
1974; during that time they issued eight singles as 4th Coming and one
as Impact! on Al Firth's Alpha imprint. And now, Strange Things, a
thrilling listen, a mysterious trove of recordings made possible by an
open minded and well-funded indie impresario, which document a very real
and very weird Los Angeles of the past. It's a city we'll never know
again, and one that might never again produce an ensemble like the 4th
Coming. If Firth's faith only rolled snake-eyes in terms of commercial
success, in terms of documenting Los Angeles' vibrant soul and funk
underground, he rolled boxcars. This, the album Williams and Firth
always hoped would bring them real success, now sees its complete
release and allows us to ponder the might-have and the would-have beens
had a 4th Coming album come together in the mid- 70s
TRACK LISTING IS AS FOLLOWS:
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