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Oxfords - Flying Up Through The Sky (Remastered) (1970/2001)

Oxfords - Flying Up Through The Sky (Remastered) (1970/2001)

BAND/ARTIST: Oxfords

  • Title: Flying Up Through The Sky
  • Year Of Release: 1970/2001
  • Label: Gear Fab Records
  • Genre: Garage Rock, Psychedelic Rock
  • Quality: Mp3 320 / Flac (image, .cue, log)
  • Total Time: 01:04:38
  • Total Size: 172/466 Mb (scans)
  • WebSite:
Oxfords - Flying Up Through The Sky (Remastered) (1970/2001)


Tracklist:

01. My World (Jay Petach, Jill DeMarco) - 3:18
02. Lighter Than Air (Jay Petach, Jill DeMarco) - 2:50
03. Sung At Harvest Time (Quechua Indian Song P. D.) - 3:47
04. Two Poems by e.e. Cummings (Music by Keith Spring) - 4:37
05. Flying Up Through The Sky (Jay Petach, Jill DeMarco) - 3:00
06. Come On 'Round (Jay Petach, Jill DeMarco) - 5:00
07. Young Girl's Lament (Traditional P.D.) - 2:38
08. Trix Rabbit (Jay Petach) - 3:10
09. (There's) Always Something There To Remind Me (Hal David, Burt Bacharach) - 2:58
10. Time and Place (Bill Tullis, Jim Guest, Jay Petach) - 2:20
11. Sun Flower Sun (Jim Guest, Jay Petach) - 2:08
12. Chicago Woman (Jim Guest, Jay Petach) - 2:48
13. Come On Back To Beer (Jay Petach, Jill DeMarco) - 2:37
14. Your Own Way (Algie, S. Jones) - 2:43
15. The City (Jill DeMarco) - 2:45
16. Flute Thing (Jay Petach) - 2:08
17. Cuttin You Loose (Tony Williamson) - 3:12
18. Sweet Lover Man (Jill DeMarco) - 2:38
19. Those Winds (Jill DeMarco) - 3:09
20. Tornado Baby (Jill DeMarco) - 5:59

Line-up::
Jill DeMarco - Vocals, Guitars, Kalimba, Clavinet
Jay Petach - Vocals, Guitars, Piano, Flute, Vibes, Timbales, Organ
Dill Asher - Bass
Donnie Hale - Drums
Paul Hoerni - Drums
Larry Holt - Bass
Keith Spring - Piano, Flute, Kalimba, Other Percussion
Ken Albrecht - French Horn
Ronnie Brooks - Guitars, Vocals
Jim Guest- Drums, Vocals
Ray Barrickman - Bass, Vocals
Bill Tullis - Vocals
Buzz Cason - Vocals
Jerry Canter - Guitar
Quentin Sharpenstein - Bass
Bobby Jones - Drums
Tony Williamson - Vocals, Guitars

This compilation is a lovely surprise. The fourth installment in Gear Fab's Louisville music series is the absolute last word on the Oxfords. Starting off with all but one cut from the sole 1970 LP and filling out the story with the two pre-Jill DeMarco 45s, the band's one post-album single, and five previously unreleased cuts from its final incarnation, Flying Up Through the Sky constitutes the Oxfords' entire recorded legacy. The material from the original LP tends toward the lighter side of the '60s pop spectrum. The melodies are largely Technicolor bright and the sentiments have a paisley-eyed optimism that seems endemic to the late '60s alone. The harmonies of leader Jay Petach and DeMarco approach the sort of oxygenated buoyancy of the 5th Dimension or the Free Design, but with an earthier charm along the lines of Spanky & Our Gang. The music may strike some as a tad naïve, but it fits the insouciant mood of the period perfectly and 30 years after the fact still sounds fresh. At times ("Come on 'Round," the wah-wah laced "Young Girl's Lament") the band flashes more substantive hints, sounding something like the Jefferson Airplane's tough but yet deflowered younger sister, unsettled but still unspoiled. The rearrangement of the Quechua Indian song, "Sung at Harvest Time," is beautifully, eerily psychedelic, and the avant-orchestral experiment of "Two Poems by e.e. cummings," while not really successful as a pure listening experience, is bizarrely appealing. The tracks from the initial unit are much more derivative (specifically of the Beatles, Kinks, and Monkees) but they are a great window into Petach's developing sense of songcraft, especially the Bandstand-thumbed "Sun Flower Sun," which sounds terribly quaint but is still infectious. It is the last version of the band, circa 1972, that most impresses. The band had obviously found a quite exciting -- perhaps even forward-looking -- niche, very much enthralled with sophisticated jazz and blues. On songs like the whirlwind "Those Winds" and "Tornado Baby," it is consistently in the pocket, while "Sweet Lover Man" even predicts the loose, laid-back, and country-funky songs that Essra Mohawk sang for Bob Dorough's Schoolhouse Rock series several years later. The album includes CD-ROM content (additional band photos and lyrics, a song-by-song commentary from Petach himself) for the ultimate band package. Flying Up Through the Sky is a time capsule, to be sure, but it is a superb one that transcends its era on sheer exuberance alone.



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  • User offline
  • tommy554
  •  wrote in 19:21
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thanks for lossless
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  • mufty77
  •  wrote in 22:09
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Many thanks for lossless.