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The Youngbloods - Elephant Mountain (Japan Remastered) (1969/2014)

The Youngbloods - Elephant Mountain (Japan Remastered) (1969/2014)

BAND/ARTIST: The Youngbloods

  • Title: Elephant Mountain (Japan Remastered)
  • Year Of Release: 1969/2014
  • Label: RCA
  • Genre: Folk Rock, Acid Rock, Psychedelic Rock
  • Quality: Mp3 320 / Flac (tracks, .cue, log)
  • Total Time: 01:00:34
  • Total Size: 195/394 Mb (scans)
  • WebSite:
The Youngbloods - Elephant Mountain (Japan Remastered) (1969/2014)


Tracklist:

01. Darkness, Darkness
02. Smug
03. On Sir Frances Drake
04. Sunlight
05. Double Sunlight
06. Beautiful
07. Turn It Over
08. Rain Song (Don't Let The Rain Bring You Down)
09. Trillium
10. Quicksand
11. Black Mountain Breakdown
12. Sham
13. Ride The Wind

Bonus Tracks:
14. Pool Hall Song
15. On Sir Francis Drake (Alternate Mono Version)
16. Beautiful (Alternate Mono Version)
17. Smug (Alternate Mono Version)
18. Sham (Alternate Mono Version)
19. Radio Spot for Elephant Mountain

Line-up::
Jesse Colin Young - Bass, Acoustic Guitar , Vocals
Lowell "Banana" Levinger - Guitar, Electric Piano, Backing Vocals
Joe Bauer - Drums
With:
David Lindley - Fiddle
Plas Johnson - Tenor Saxophone
Joe Clayton - Trumpet
Victor Feldman - Vibraphone

The Youngbloods were more than one hit wonders from the '60s. In fact, the band experienced its commercial breakthrough when the flower power anthem "Get Together" became a hit some two years after originally released. Which was, ultimately, an unfortunate coincidence as the belated emergence of the former tune distracted focus from "Darkness, Darkness" the ever-so-haunting song that keynotes Elephant Mountain.

What might've been an ideal follow-up in mainstream terms (and possibly, in a different sequence of events, a mark of consolidation following the minor splash of the band's initial single as a quartet in the form of "Grizzly Bear") nevertheless remains a dramatic intro to this expanded remaster. Like so many bands situated in the Bay Area, The Youngbloods had roots in the folk movement, but with the exit of Jerry Corbitt, the prominence of Lowell "Banana" Levinger, arose within the group as did its eclectic grasp.

The producer of Elephant Mountain, Charlie Daniels (a longtime Nashville sessioneer before he become famous leading his own Dixie rock outfit) nurtured the group on both those fronts. For instance, David Lindley's fiddle adds to the haunting fragility of Jesse Colin Young's vocal, a quality that would stand him in good stead during a solo career where he mined the same rich ore of folksy R&B that Van Morrison tilled when he, too, lived in Woodstock. "Sunlight" and "Beautiful" foreshadow that period of Young's career, in a decidedly simpler format—the former acoustic arrangement accented with soft harmony vocals, the latter a good-time track enriched with electric piano and percussion.

The three-man Youngbloods' penchant for loose improvisation on the likes of "On Sir Francis Drake" and "Double Sunlight," documented on future albums Ride the Wind (Warner Bros, 1971) and Rock Festival (Warner Bros., 1970), was rooted in the jazz leanings of drummer Joe Bauer as well Levinger's informal approach, never overstepping his bounds as either guitarist or keyboardist.

While neither "Trillium" nor "Ride the Wind" is genre-bending, Elephant Mountain is far greater than the sum of its parts. In sum it functions much like the individual cut "Quicksand," where Daniels and The Youngbloods add horns and strings in just the right proportion. Levinger's matter-of-fact recounting of the sessions in the liner notes put the band's work in perspective.


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  • User offline
  • mufty77
  •  wrote in 19:17
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Many thanks for lossless.
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  • whiskers
  •  wrote in 20:04
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Many Thanks
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  • tommy554
  •  wrote in 15:20
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thanks for lossless.
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  • mldekker
  •  wrote in 19:27
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Veel Dank !!