Stone the Crows - Teenage Licks (Remastered) (2020) [Hi-Res]
BAND/ARTIST: Stone the Crows
- Title: Teenage Licks (Remastered)
- Year Of Release: 1971
- Label: Repertoire Records (UK) Limited
- Genre: Blues Rock
- Quality: FLAC (tracks) / 24bit-44.1kHz FLAC (tracks)
- Total Time: 38:33
- Total Size: 231 / 425 MB
- WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:
01. Big Jim Salter (4:35)
02. Faces (4:42)
03. Mr Wizard (5:29)
04. Don't Think Twice, It's Alright (5:02)
05. Keep on Rollin' (3:50)
06. Ailen Mochree (0:25)
07. One Five Eight (6:28)
08. I May Be Right I May Be Wrong (5:04)
09. Seven Lakes (3:03)
01. Big Jim Salter (4:35)
02. Faces (4:42)
03. Mr Wizard (5:29)
04. Don't Think Twice, It's Alright (5:02)
05. Keep on Rollin' (3:50)
06. Ailen Mochree (0:25)
07. One Five Eight (6:28)
08. I May Be Right I May Be Wrong (5:04)
09. Seven Lakes (3:03)
AllMusic Review by Chris Nickson
This third album from Scotland's Stone the Crows was as close to hitting on all cylinders as they ever came in the studio. With some personnel changes following Ode to John Law (a new bassist and keyboard player), they powered through the disc, with "Big Jim Salter," "I May Be Right I May Be Wrong," and their version of Dylan's "Don't Think Twice" being the absolute standouts. The figureheads of vocalist Maggie Bell and guitarist Les Harvey had never sounded better as they worked in a pure rock vein, abandoning the blues aspect of their sound (Indeed, "Aileen Mochree" took them into Gaelic, a pleasant, brief side track) -- check "Mr. Wizard" to get a good picture of where they were really headed. Of course, it wasn't a one-dimensional sound; the keyboard-dominated "Seven Lakes" was full of pseudo-classical portentousness, almost de rigeur for the period. But it was when they rocked that Stone the Crows were at their best, and with this album they seemed truly poised to move up to the big time.
This third album from Scotland's Stone the Crows was as close to hitting on all cylinders as they ever came in the studio. With some personnel changes following Ode to John Law (a new bassist and keyboard player), they powered through the disc, with "Big Jim Salter," "I May Be Right I May Be Wrong," and their version of Dylan's "Don't Think Twice" being the absolute standouts. The figureheads of vocalist Maggie Bell and guitarist Les Harvey had never sounded better as they worked in a pure rock vein, abandoning the blues aspect of their sound (Indeed, "Aileen Mochree" took them into Gaelic, a pleasant, brief side track) -- check "Mr. Wizard" to get a good picture of where they were really headed. Of course, it wasn't a one-dimensional sound; the keyboard-dominated "Seven Lakes" was full of pseudo-classical portentousness, almost de rigeur for the period. But it was when they rocked that Stone the Crows were at their best, and with this album they seemed truly poised to move up to the big time.
Year 2020 | Blues | Rock | FLAC / APE | HD & Vinyl
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