Track list:
00:00 - Uriah Heep (David Byron) - July Morning (1971)
10:32 - Yes - Yours Is No Disgrace (1971)
20:13 - Yes - Starship Trooper (1971)
29:38 - Arzachel - Garden Of Earthly Delights (1969)
32:20 - Atomic Rooster - The Devil's Answer (1970)
35:49 - Blind Faith - Can't Find My Way Home (1969)
39:05 - Camel - Never Let Go (1973)
42:42 - Caravan - Where But For Caravan Would I (1968)
51:43 - Colosseum - The Kettle (1969)
56:08 - Cream - White Room (1968)
1:01:07 - Crosby, Stills, Nash - Suite Judy Blue Eyes (1969)
1:08:33 - Deep Purple - Child In Time (1970)
1:18:54 - Emerson, Lake & Palmer - Lucky Man (1970)
1:23:32 - Genesis (Peter Gabriel) - Firth Of Fifth (1973)
1:33:05 - Hawkwind - We Like To Be Frightened (1979)
1:35:50 - King Crimson - I Talk to the Wind (1969)
1:41:56 - Pink Floyd - Money (1973)
1:48:20 - Procol Harum - A Whiter Shade of Pale (1967)
1:54:12 - Renaissance - Ocean Gypsy (1975)
2:01:18 - The Band - A Change Is Gonna Come (1973)
2:05:37 - The Doors - Riders On The Storm (1971)
2:12:33 - The Moody Blues - Nights in White Satin (1967)
2:16:57 - The Strawbs - Lay Down (1973)
2:21:30 - The Velvet Underground - All Tomorrow's Parties (1967)
2:27:27 - Traffic - Dear Mr. Fantasy (1967)
Very good playlist!
ReplyDeleteI think it's time to revisit creating these for our own use, and for the pleasure of anyone with similar tastes. I've tried the Spotify, Pandora, Amazon, etc. streaming and those are very good for digging in the vault, finding otherwise never heard items (Charlie Parr, HIss Golden Messenger of Independent American Folk style for example). But good LORD! at the advertisement assault.
Any good ideas for capturing CD, streams, etc. on to a drive?
Lots of memories here. These tunes were from the sex, drugs, and rock and roll years. Seems like another lifetime now.
ReplyDeleteCould have left Crosby, Stills and Nash off.
ReplyDeleteHmmmm....,no Tull?!
ReplyDeleteShame!
A fine way to spend 2-1/2 hours crusing the Interwebbies, bringing back memories of the first time I heard each tune and where I was. A delicious journey in my Old Age - although 72 ain't old if you're a tree......
ReplyDeleteGonna have to rip this "album" to my MP3 player and experience it again and again. I'm a Certified Old Fogey, and today's music is mostly crap IMHO. Although that's what my folks said about what I listened to When I Was A Young Warthog!
Nice. I would have made only one tweak. The very first one should have been Stealin. That is all. Carry on.
ReplyDeleteBefore they joined BuckinghamNicks, Fleetwood Mac was just a rhythm section for Peter Green...his live versions of Black Magic Woman and Green Manalishi from that era need to be on the list. incredibly good stuff.
ReplyDeleteThere's a bunch of that track list that just ain't "prog-rock".
ReplyDelete