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The Best of the Flock - Flock Rock

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Download links and information about The Best of the Flock - Flock Rock by The Flock. This album was released in 1993 and it belongs to Rock, Pop genres. It contains 15 tracks with total duration of 01:16:33 minutes.

Artist: The Flock
Release date: 1993
Genre: Rock, Pop
Tracks: 15
Duration: 01:16:33
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Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Introduction 4:51
2. Clown 7:43
3. I Am the Tall Tree 5:36
4. Tired of Waiting for You 4:37
5. What Would You Do If the Sun Died? 2:46
6. Lollipops and Rainbows 4:04
7. Green Slice 2:02
8. Big Bird 5:50
9. Hornschmeyer's Island 7:25
10. Crabfoot 8:14
11. Mermaid 4:53
12. Chanja 2:36
13. Atlantians Truckin Home 4:49
14. Afrika 4:33
15. Just Do It 6:34

Details

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Over the past few decades, the Flock's late-'60s and early-'70s legacy has been all but forgotten, and yet their highly idiosyncratic twist on progressive rock — one which used both classical music and jazz fusion as touchstones for truly mind-altering flights of fancy — remains as original as anything heard in the rock era. Cross-town heroes Chicago (or Chicago Transit Authority, as they were known at the time) were stealing headlines as the first rock & roll band with a fully integrated horn section, but this adventurous septet not only challenged this distinction with their own three-saxophone front, but went a step further by adding violinist Jerry Goodman to their ranks. Fueled by his dazzling virtuosity, the mostly classically trained ensemble's unprecedented combination of chorused vocals, horns, and strings within a rock context ultimately proved too challenging and oblique for commercial tastes, but would nevertheless lay the foundation for future, more commercially savvy prog rockers such as Kansas and Dixie Dregs. Revisiting the key moments from the Flock's two original albums, 1969's inspired eponymous debut and its disappointing successor of a couple years later, Dinosaur Swamps, Flock Rock: The Best of the Flock also unearths a few never-released cuts left on the cutting-room floor along with the band's botched third album. And even if Chicago's more consistent songwriting rightfully led to them notching all the chart hits and raking in all the dough, the Flock deserve credit for having carved a more unique, if significantly less successful, style which remains largely without equal.