Peter Green - The Anthology [4CD Remastered Box Set] (2008)
BAND/ARTIST: Peter Green
- Title: The Anthology
- Year Of Release: 2008
- Label: Salvo [SALVOBX404]
- Genre: Blues, Blues Rock
- Quality: 320 kbps / FLAC (tracks+cue,log,scans)
- Total Time: 4:31:39
- Total Size: 1.04 gb / 1.92 gb
- WebSite: Album Preview
2008 four CD set, the most extensive retrospective look at Peter Green's truly legendary career. The set contains essential Peter Green music drawn from all stages of his career. From his first tentative recordings with the likes of Peter Barden's and John Mayall, it moves through the genesis of Fleetwood Mac and the band's many classic blues recordings including 'Ramblin' Pony' and 'Black Magic Woman'. Fleetwood Mac's subsequent blues and rock fusion chart hits - titles like the utterly unique 'Albatross', 'Oh Well' and the haunting 'Man of the World' - are all included, as is the best of his later solo work and Splinter Group recordings. The set is stylishly packaged in a hardback digicase with 64-page booklet containing enlightening liner notes, rare photographs, memorabilia, plus commentary and artwork from Peter himself. Quite simply, this is the ultimate Peter Green collection - a special release befitting a special musician and songwriter who is rightly one of the most revered blues guitarists of all time. Salvo.
Green, a man with a marvellously heartfelt voice as well as guitar, was born to sing the blues. Growing up a jew in post-war London's East End certainly taught him all about disenfranchisement and prejudice. This box set represents every aspect of the guitarist's rise and fall (and rise again). From his earliest days as guitarist with Peter B's Looner's (led by organist Pete Bardens) through his spell as Eric Clapton's replacement in John Mayall's Bluesbreakers, honing his signature smooth Les Paul sound, and then joining forces with fellow bandmates, John McVie and Mick Fleetwood to form Fleetwood Mac.
Between 1968 and 1970 Green and the Mac outsold the Beatles. From the basic Chicago blues of the first eponymous album Green's writing talents made sure that the band quickly developed into something far more than a twelve bar outfit, adding two more guitarists (Jeremy Spencer and Danny Kirwan) which allowed him to come up with a singing dual lead sound gave the world the gently throbbing number one hit, Albatross. Other hits like the latino-flavoured rock of Black Magic Woman influencing other guitarists as significant as Carlos Santana.
All the while, at the heart of Green's work was an indefinable sadness. This is why maybe his rejection of fame (he wanted to give away all his money at one point) was inevitable with or without LSD's debilitating effects. Just listen to how he sings laments such as Little Willie John's Need Your Love So Bad, or the weary Show-Biz Blues from Then Play On, the last album he recorded with the band. By this time nearly all his material was drenched with cynicism (Oh Well) or loneliness (Man Of The World; possibly the most despairing top ten hit of all time). Yet it also showed him rapidly becoming a brilliant writer and arranger. Oh Well's second part - a spaghetti western epic of strings and spanish guitar is exquisite. His final single with Fleetwood Mac, The Green Manalishi - inspired by a vision glimpsed while on the very substance that made his psyche disintegrate - displays a man wracked with Robert Johnson-style fear and loathing yet blossoming into a something far more than just a top notch blues maestro.
And that's why any kind of compilation of Green will be frustrating and never entirely satisfying. Despite his return from the wilderness, his path as an innovative artist really does seem to just vanish in 1970, just when it was getting really interesting. The 70s and 80s were largely lost years. The handful of cuts from this period are pale or just ill-judged. Still, few could complain about the renaissance years, where he finally returned to active service with tthe Splinter Group. The final disc shows Green still able to coax that tone out of a Les Paul, but ultimately too fragile to really engage with the demons that made his early work so compelling. In truth it's a return to the safety zone of the Chicago blues that was his first love.
Like Hendrix living beyond 27, Nick Drake overcoming crippling shyness, Syd Barrett keeping his marbles in a safe place or Lee Perry not burning his studio to the ground, Green remains one of music's great 'what if?'s. --Chris Jones
Green, a man with a marvellously heartfelt voice as well as guitar, was born to sing the blues. Growing up a jew in post-war London's East End certainly taught him all about disenfranchisement and prejudice. This box set represents every aspect of the guitarist's rise and fall (and rise again). From his earliest days as guitarist with Peter B's Looner's (led by organist Pete Bardens) through his spell as Eric Clapton's replacement in John Mayall's Bluesbreakers, honing his signature smooth Les Paul sound, and then joining forces with fellow bandmates, John McVie and Mick Fleetwood to form Fleetwood Mac.
Between 1968 and 1970 Green and the Mac outsold the Beatles. From the basic Chicago blues of the first eponymous album Green's writing talents made sure that the band quickly developed into something far more than a twelve bar outfit, adding two more guitarists (Jeremy Spencer and Danny Kirwan) which allowed him to come up with a singing dual lead sound gave the world the gently throbbing number one hit, Albatross. Other hits like the latino-flavoured rock of Black Magic Woman influencing other guitarists as significant as Carlos Santana.
All the while, at the heart of Green's work was an indefinable sadness. This is why maybe his rejection of fame (he wanted to give away all his money at one point) was inevitable with or without LSD's debilitating effects. Just listen to how he sings laments such as Little Willie John's Need Your Love So Bad, or the weary Show-Biz Blues from Then Play On, the last album he recorded with the band. By this time nearly all his material was drenched with cynicism (Oh Well) or loneliness (Man Of The World; possibly the most despairing top ten hit of all time). Yet it also showed him rapidly becoming a brilliant writer and arranger. Oh Well's second part - a spaghetti western epic of strings and spanish guitar is exquisite. His final single with Fleetwood Mac, The Green Manalishi - inspired by a vision glimpsed while on the very substance that made his psyche disintegrate - displays a man wracked with Robert Johnson-style fear and loathing yet blossoming into a something far more than just a top notch blues maestro.
And that's why any kind of compilation of Green will be frustrating and never entirely satisfying. Despite his return from the wilderness, his path as an innovative artist really does seem to just vanish in 1970, just when it was getting really interesting. The 70s and 80s were largely lost years. The handful of cuts from this period are pale or just ill-judged. Still, few could complain about the renaissance years, where he finally returned to active service with tthe Splinter Group. The final disc shows Green still able to coax that tone out of a Les Paul, but ultimately too fragile to really engage with the demons that made his early work so compelling. In truth it's a return to the safety zone of the Chicago blues that was his first love.
Like Hendrix living beyond 27, Nick Drake overcoming crippling shyness, Syd Barrett keeping his marbles in a safe place or Lee Perry not burning his studio to the ground, Green remains one of music's great 'what if?'s. --Chris Jones
:: TRACKLIST ::
CD 1
01. Evil Woman Blues (with John Mayall)
02. The Stumble (with John Mayall's Bluesbreakers)
03. Sitting In The Rain (with John Mayall's Bluesbreakers)
04. The World Keep On Turning (with Fleetwood Mac)
05. The Supernatural (with John Mayall's Bluesbreakers)
06. Looking For Somebody (with Fleetwood Mac)
07. Long Grey Mare (feat. Bob Brunning with Fleetwood Mac)
08. Stop Messin' Around (with Fleetwood Mac)
09. Train Is Coming (with Eddie Boyd & His Blues Band)
10. Greeny (with John Mayall's Bluesbreakers)
11. Soul Dressing (with Peter B's Looners)
12. I Loved Another Woman (with Fleetwood Mac)
13. No Place To Go (with Fleetwood Mac)
14. You Don't Love Me (with John Mayall's Bluesbreakers)
15. Lazy Poker Blues (with Fleetwood Mac)
16. Merry Go Round (with Fleetwood Mac)
17. Trying So Hard To Forget (with Duster Bennett)
18. Ramblin' Pony (with Fleetwood Mac)
19. Drifting (with Fleetwood Mac)
CD 2
01. Black Magic Woman (with Fleetwood Mac)
02. Albatross (with Fleetwood Mac)
03. Ain't Nobody's Business (with Otis Spann)
04. Someday Baby (with Fleetwood Mac at Blues Jam At Chess)
05. Watch Out (with Fleetwood Mac at Blues Jam At Chess)
06. Ooh Baby (with Fleetwood Mac at Blues Jam At Chess)
07. Horton's Boogie Woogie - Take One (with Walter Horton , Otis Spann & S.P.Leary at Blues Jam At Chess)
08. Love That Burns (with Fleetwood Mac)
09. First Train Home (with Fleetwood Mac)
10. Need Your Love So Bad (with Fleetwood Mac)
11. Don't Goof With The Spook (with Peter Bardens)
12. The Answer (with Peter Bardens)
13. Homage To The God Of Light (with Peter Bardens)
14. Oh Well Part 1 and Part 2 (with Fleetwood Mac)
CD 3
01. Man Of The World (with Fleetwood Mac)
02. Before The Bginning (with Fleetwood Mac)
03. Momma Don'tcha Cry (Peter Green, solo)
04. Underway (with Fleetwood Mac)
05. Rattlesnake Shake (with Fleetwood Mac)
06. It's Gonna Be Me (Peter Green, solo)
07. White Sky (love that evil woman) (with Fleetwood Mac)
08. The Green Manalishi (with The Two Prong Crown & Fleetwod Mac)
09. Show-biz Blues (with Fleetwood Mac)
10. In The Skies (Peter Green, solo)
11. Like A Hot Tornado (Peter Green, solo)
12. Whatcha Gonna Do? (Peter Green, solo)
13. Carry My Love (Peter Green, solo)
14. Corners Of My Mind (Peter Green, solo)
15. Hidden Depth (Peter Green feat. Zoot Money)
CD 4
01. Big Chance Is Gonna Come (with Splinter Group)
02. I'm A Steady Rollin' Man (with Nigel Watson & Splinter Group feat. Otis Rush)
03. It Takes Time (with Splinter Group)
04. Don't Walk Away (with Splinter Group)
05. Heart Of Stone (with Splinter Group)
06. Love in Vain Blues (with Nigel Watson & Splinter Group)
07. From Four Until Late (with Nigel Watson & Splinter Group feat. Dr.John)
08. I'm Ready For You (with Splinter Group)
09. Cruel Contradictions (with Dick Heckstall-Smith)
10. Me And The Devil Blues (with Nigel Watson & Splinter Group)
11. Cross Road Blues (with Nigel Watson & Splinter Group feat. Buddy Guy)
12. Dead Shrimp Blues (with Nigel Watson & Splinter Group feat. Hubert Sumlin)
13. Travelling Reverside Blues (with Nigel Watson & Splinter Group feat. Joe Louis Walker & Honey Boy Edwards)
14. Time Keeps Slipping Away (with Splinter Group)
15. Look Out For Yourself (with Splinter Group)
16. Albatross (with Chris Coco)
Blues | Rock | FLAC / APE | Mp3 | CD-Rip
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