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Take a Look Inside

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Download links and information about Take a Look Inside by Mickey Baker. This album was released in 1975 and it belongs to Hip Hop/R&B, Soul, Blues, Jazz, Rock, Blues Rock, Rock & Roll genres. It contains 11 tracks with total duration of 39:27 minutes.

Artist: Mickey Baker
Release date: 1975
Genre: Hip Hop/R&B, Soul, Blues, Jazz, Rock, Blues Rock, Rock & Roll
Tracks: 11
Duration: 39:27
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Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Make Your Bed Up Mama 3:52
2. Don't Doubt Me 2:28
3. Take a Look Inside 2:31
4. Blues Fell This Morning 3:57
5. Diggin' In My Potatoes 3:51
6. Playing With Danger 3:19
7. I'll Always Be In Love With You 3:29
8. She Brings Out the Animal 3:02
9. New York, New York 4:20
10. Tight Ropes & Bumpy Roads 5:18
11. Bewildered 3:20

Details

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Take a Look Inside was recorded in 1971 in London — while the semi-obscure guitarist and songwriter Mickey Baker was living in Paris — and wasn't released until 1975. The session players include Chris Spedding, Conrad (Reg) Isidore (later of Robin Trower fame), Fuzzy Samuels, and a host of others on percussion and backing vocals. One of the he most startling tracks here is the medley of Spirit's "Fresh Garbage" and "Water Woman." The segue is seamless, the music is raw and immediate, and the loose feel of the musicians in the studio is utterly warm and inviting. Baker then slips into the R&B classic "I'll Be Doggone," and then his own "Checking Out My Garden." Everything here is utterly present and loose — its closest comparison is a feeling like that inspired by Delaney & Bonnie's Motel Shot album. Other standouts here included "How Come My Dog Don't Bark," "Watch Out Baby," and Leadbelly's "Whoa! Back Buck." The CD issue in the Barclay classics series includes three bonus cuts from the same session which was left off the original: "Potato Blues," "Walkin' and Talkin' the Blues," and "New York, New York (The People's Paradise)," all of them fine originals Baker was obscure but influential and Take a Look Inside reveals not only his diversity but his willingness to let musicians be themselves on his record. More important than the London Sessions series that Chess released because it truly bridges the gaps between rock, soul, blues, R&B, and folk forms. The sheer spontaneity of these sessions is a guidebook for how roots records should be made. The only problem for most would be finding a lightning-rod figure like Baker to keep it all together. Brilliant.