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The Original Caste - One Tin Soldier (Reissue, Expanded Edition) (1969/2012)

The Original Caste - One Tin Soldier (Reissue, Expanded Edition) (1969/2012)

BAND/ARTIST: The Original Caste

  • Title: One Tin Soldier
  • Year Of Release: 1969/2012
  • Label: Fuel 2000 Records
  • Genre: Psychedelic Rock, Folk Rock
  • Quality: Mp3 320 / Flac (image, .cue, log)
  • Total Time: 47:37
  • Total Size: 128/338 Mb (scans)
  • WebSite:
The Original Caste - One Tin Soldier (Reissue, Expanded Edition) (1969/2012)


Tracklist:

1. One Tin Soldier (Brian Potter, Dennis Lambert) - 3:38
2. Mr. Monday (Brian Potter, Dennis Lambert) - 3:08
3. Country Song (Bruce Innes) - 3:16
4. A Picture of Bob Dylan (Brian Potter, Dennis Lambert) - 3:00
5. Nothing Can Touch Me (Brian Potter, Dennis Lambert) - 2:59
6. Leaving It All Behind (Brian Potter, Dennis Lambert) - 2:47
7. Watch the Children (Brian Potter, Dennis Lambert) - 2:59
8. Highway (Bruce Innes) - 3:34
9. Sweet Chicago (Bruce Innes) - 4:38
10. Live For Tomorrow (Brian Potter, Dennis Lambert) - 3:26

Bonus Tracks:
11. Come Together (Artie Butler) - 2:22
12. Ain't That Tellin' You People (Artie Butler) - 2:40
13. When Love Is Near (Artie Butler) - 3:03
14. Come Together (Live) (Artie Butler) - 3:02
15. Sault Ste. Marie (Artie Butler, Bruce Innes) - 3:04

Line-up:
Dixie Lee Innes - Vocals
Bruce Innes - Lead Guitar
Bliss Mackie - Rhythm Guitar, Vocals
Graham Bruce - Bass
Peter Brown - Drums
Joseph Cavender - Drums (1970)

The Original Caste is a Canadian folk group. The band formed in Calgary, Alberta, Canada in 1966 under the name The North Country Singers. Because the name sounded too much like a folk group, it was changed in 1968. Instrumentally, the group consists of guitar, keyboard and bass.

Songwriter and guitarist Bruce Innes formed the group in Calgary, Alberta in 1966. Initially, Bruce Innes, Graham Bruce and Bliss Mackie worked as a trio and Dixie Lee (Stone) Innes joined the group in 1967, contributing rich vocals. At that time, Dixie Lee Stone was a secretary at Pacific Petroleum in Calgary and she sang on the weekly television programme Calgary Safety Roundup on CFCN-TV. Bruce Innes sang and played by himself while Graham Bruce worked as an accounts executive at Royal Trust. Bliss Mackie had worked as a Coca-Cola truck driver and a manager of a department store. In early 1968 Peter Brown (Seattle) became the first drummer in the group. Joe Cavender played with an acid rock group.

In 1968, the band moved to Los Angeles and recorded the single “I Can’t Make It Anymore” for Dot Records with limited success. In 1969, the band signed with TA Records, a label distributed by Bell Records. The band did write many of their pieces but the writing and production team of Dennis Lambert and Brian Potter wrote and produced The Original Caste’s two hit singles: “One Tin Soldier” and then “Mr. Monday”; both songs were from the 1969 LP The Original Caste. The songs employ the use of strings, horns, and organ which adds a swinging, pop-friendly sound. “One Tin Soldier” was a hit in Canada and reached No. 34 on the U.S. Billboard Hot 100 chart in 1970.The follow-up single, "Mr. Monday", was a big hit in Japan and Canada but not in the United States. The two singles combined, worldwide, sold over three million copies and were certified gold in both Canada and Japan. The band toured extensively in Canada, the United States and Japan and made many television appearances. The band’s success allowed them the opportunity to open for both B. B. King and Glen Campbell. Having amassed a large following in Japan, they toured there and recorded live albums, in addition to releasing several further Japanese singles.

The initial members of The Original Caste separated in 1972 with Graham Bruce and Bliss Mackie parting. Married couple Bruce and Dixie Innes continued to perform as The Original Caste and released songs with an increased country influence, including the full-length album Back Home. The Original Caste finally split in 1980 as Bruce and Dixie divorced. Innes continues to perform as a solo artist and later revived the band name in the new millennium.

"One Tin Soldier" was revived in 1971 when the song was featured on the Billy Jack movie soundtrack; this version was performed by Jinx Dawson of the rock band Coven along with the studio's orchestra. This recording was released to radio, then retracted; Coven later released a version on an album. Both versions billed as being by Coven were based on substantially the original arrangement, though some cover versions diverged widely. The popularity of the song has endured as very diverse covers have been recorded by punk rock group Me First and the Gimme Gimmes and by Sonny and Cher; Roseanne Barr also recorded a parody of the song.

A strophic ballad, “One Tin Soldier” tells the tale of the materialistic “valley-people” who kill and cheat in search of a rumoured treasure on a mountain. The only treasure, though, is a stone inscribed with “Peace on earth”; ironically, the valley-people, a metaphor for mankind, destroyed this treasure whilst in the pursuit of it. The song ends with a repetition of the chorus which is a common arrangement technique used to engrain a song in the listener’s memory.




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  • User offline
  • mufty77
  •  wrote in 19:02
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Many thanks for lossless.
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  • dhann
  •  wrote in 17:32
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    • 1
Much thanks! (We didn't even know about this album or the original One Tin Soldier before your post)
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  • tommy554
  •  wrote in 10:40
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thanks for lossless.