Label: |
ORG - Original Recordings Group |
Genre: |
Pop/Rock |
Product No.: |
AORG 133-45
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UPC: | 858492002336 |
Availability: |
Back Ordered
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Category: |
45 RPM Vinyl Record |
No. of Discs: | 2 |
Note: | 180 Gram |
Also available on:
• Preowned Vinyl Record
1969 Japanese pressing Michigan Collection
Blood, Sweat & Tears stormed the charts in 1969 with their own brand of jazz-rock fusion!
One of the BEST albums they ever made!!!
Mastered by Bernie Grundman from the original analog master tapes and pressed at RTI!
Numbered deluxe laminated gatefold jackets!
Double limited edition 180-gram 45 RPM LP set
Winner of a Gruvy Award, chosen by AnalogPlanet's editor, Michael Fremer, for vinyl records that are musically and sonically outstanding and are also well mastered and pressed. http://www.analogplanet.com/content/gruvy-awards
Winner of three Grammy Awards in 1970, this absolutely mind-blowing album peaked at No. 1 on the U.S. charts, staying there for seven weeks, going double platinum by the end of 1969 and stayed on the Top 40 for 66 weeks.
For a brief period at the end of the '60s and the start of the '70s, Blood, Sweat & Tears, which fused a rock & roll rhythm section to a horn section, held out the promise of a jazz-rock fusion that could storm the pop charts. The band was organized in New York in 1967 out of the remnants of the Blues Project by keyboard player/singer Al Kooper and guitarist Steve Katz of that group, and saxophonist Fred Lipsius. The rhythm section consisted of bassist Jim Fielder and drummer Bobby Colomby, and the horn section was filled out by trumpeters Randy Brecker and Jerry Weiss and trombonist Dick Halligan.
This eight-piece band signed to Columbia Records and recorded Blood, Sweat &Tear's debut album, Child Is Father to the Man, which was released in February 1968. Cofounder Kooper then departed, and the group was reorganized. Singer David Clayton-Thomas was added, Halligan moved to the keyboards, and trumpeters Chuck Winfield and Lew Soloff replaced Brecker and Weiss, with Jerry Hyman being added on trombone. This nine-piece unit, working with producer James William Guercio, made Blood, Sweat & Tears' self-titled second album, released in January 1969.
Blood, Sweat & Tears was a runaway hit, spawning three gold-selling Top 10 singles, "You've Made Me So Very Happy," "Spinning Wheel," and "And When I Die," selling three million copies and winning the Grammy Award for Album of the Year. It was also Blood, Sweat & Tears' highwater mark. Guercio left to work on a similar concept with Chicago Transit Authority, and Blood, Sweat & Tears increasingly became a backup group for Clayton-Thomas. Nevertheless, the third album, Blood, Sweat & Tears 3 (1970), and the fourth, Blood, Sweat & Tears 4 (1971), were substantial hits.
Side 1 | 1. Variations On A Theme By Erik Satie | 2. Smiling Phases | 3. Sometimes in Winter | Side 2 |
1. More and More | 2. And When I Die | 3. God Bless The Child | Side 3 |
1. Spinning Wheel | 2. You've Made Me So Very Happy | Side 4 |
1. Blues - Part II | 2. Variations On A Theme By Erik Satie |
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