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London Blues 1964-1969

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Download links and information about London Blues 1964-1969 by John Mayall, Paul Butterfield, The Bluesbreakers, Eric Clapton. This album was released in 1992 and it belongs to Blues, Rock, Blues Rock, Country genres. It contains 40 tracks with total duration of 02:11:34 minutes.

Artist: John Mayall, Paul Butterfield, The Bluesbreakers, Eric Clapton
Release date: 1992
Genre: Blues, Rock, Blues Rock, Country
Tracks: 40
Duration: 02:11:34
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Buy on Songswave €1.65

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Crawling Up a Hill (Live At Klooks Kleek, London/1964) 2:15
2. My Baby Is Sweeter 2:59
3. Crocodile Walk 2:14
4. Blues City Shake Down 2:20
5. I'm Your Witchdoctor 2:09
6. Telephone Blues 3:56
7. Bernard Jenkins (Mono) 3:46
8. All Your Love (Stereo) 3:32
9. Double Crossing Time (Mono) 3:00
10. Key To Love (Mono) 2:05
11. Parchman Farm (Mono) 2:18
12. Looking Back 2:34
13. So Many Roads 4:43
14. Sitting In the Rain 2:56
15. A Hard Road 3:06
16. Dust My Blues 2:44
17. The Super-Natural 2:53
18. Another Kinda Love 3:01
19. Leaping Christine 2:20
20. Burn Out Your Blind Eyes 2:58
21. All My Life 4:22
22. Ridin' On the L and N 2:26
23. Eagle Eye 2:50
24. It Hurts Me Too 2:53
25. Double Trouble 3:18
26. Sonny Boy Blow 3:46
27. Broken Wings 4:11
28. Oh Pretty Woman 3:29
29. The Death of J.B. Lenoir 4:12
30. Man of Stone 2:22
31. Checkin' Up On My Baby 3:55
32. Suspicions (Part One) 2:44
33. Jenny 4:33
34. Picture On the Wall 3:01
35. No Reply 3:05
36. She's Too Young 2:19
37. Sandy 3:44
38. Walking On Sunset 2:56
39. The Bear 4:40
40. Fly Tomorrow 8:59

Details

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This two-hour-plus compilation of the first five years of the history of John Mayall and his band the Bluesbreakers in their many permutations covers all the expected bases and then some. Eric Clapton, Peter Green, and Mick Taylor are all represented, but so are Bernie Watson and Roger Dean, both of whom preceded Clapton in the guitarist's spot in the band. What's more, they're not bad; they may not have been the assertive soloist that Clapton came to embody, but Dean plays a pretty hot solo on "Crocodile Walk," which was good enough to make the A-side of a single in 1965. Moreover, there was more to any of the Mayall bands than their guitarists, and Mayall's blues harmonica is showcased throughout, on tracks such as "Crawling Up a Hill" and "Blues City Shakedown." The familiar Immediate and Decca/London sides featuring Clapton are here, though the lion's share of space on this set is devoted to the Peter Green version of the lineup, spread over two discs. Other highlights include a handful of tracks from 1967 featuring Paul Butterfield, and a handful of cuts featuring Green working in a lineup that includes saxmen John Almond and Nick Newell as well as trumpeter Henry Lowther. The Mick Taylor lineup, which also includes Dick Heckstall-Smith as one of the reedmen, takes up the bulk of the second disc and shows no diminution of the group's authoritative approach to the blues. Indeed, the Clapton sides represented on this collection, being the most familiar and widely circulated, may well prove to be the least interesting; distilling down the best work of everyone else, including Mayall, on the other hand, is a welcome service and makes this package particularly useful, and short of a Mayall box — an unlikely prospect — this is as good an overview as you're likely to see of his early work.