Famous Groupies - The Furry White Album (2020)
BAND/ARTIST: Famous Groupies
- Title: The Furry White Album
- Year Of Release: 2020
- Label: Orange Records
- Genre: Rock, Soft Rock
- Quality: Mp3 320 / Flac (image, .cue, log)
- Total Time: 53:47
- Total Size: 143/354 Mb (scans)
- WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:
01. One Trick Pony 3:59
02. Bombs Away! 5:35
03. Big Bam Wigwam 3:22
04. My Old House 2:54
05. Little Bird 4:01
06. Ghostwriter 3:14
07. Count To 8 2:12
08. Mountain Momma 2:17
09. Meet In The Barn 1:10
10. Maggie's Farm 3:18
11. Autumn Leaves 3:29
12. Thank You 3:40
13. Somewhere My Love 3:29
14. Please Stay 3:15
15. Bonnie Parker 2:04
16. The Harmony of Love 2:14
17. Penny Doesn't Live Here Anymore 3:33
Line-up:
Bass – Faul McKenzie, Mitch Weissman
Drums – Michael Ford McKenzie
Saxophone, Harmonica – Gavin McKenzie
Vocals, Guitar, Piano, Drums – Kirkcaldy McKenzie
Vocals, Keyboards, Percussion – Rosie McKenzie
Written-By – Kirkcaldy McKenzie, Patrick McKenzie
Special guests (The Furry White Album):
Electric Guitar/solo on track 12 - Laurence Juber (Wings)
Piano on track 8 - Dana Countryman
Accordion on track 2 - Anthony Saddic
Bagpipes on track 10 - Richard Ian Jasper
Producer – Kirkcaldy McKenzie
“Famous Groupies creator Kirkcaldy McKenzie, a young Scottish multi-instrumentalist musician, talks about how he got the idea for this album. He is a fan of the Beatles music and Paul McCartney in particular, listening to it since childhood, because his parents were fans of this music.
Already at a conscious age, he fell into the hands of the old things of his grandfather Patrick McKenzie, who was a session musician in Scotland in the 60-70s of the last century. Among this legacy were demos of several songs recorded by his grandfather under the obvious influence of the work of McCartney and Wings on an old tape recorder in the first half of the 70s. The notes were in poor condition, some were just ideas, sketches, and drafts for myself. The younger McKenzie began to work with them, trying to combine them into successive pieces, adding missing notes and lyrics somewhere, trying to preserve the aura and style of the time when they were created. The result was an album titled Rehearsing The Multiverse.
The fact that the author is a fan of McCartney can be seen not only from the name of the group (in honor of one of the most eccentric songs of Sir Paul), but also the design of the cover of the disc, which refers us to the album Red Rose Speedway (and there is an apple instead of a rose for a reason) ... But it would be a mistake to classify the disc as a parody album, like another The Rutles album, or just an obvious imitation of Paul McCartney's style. No, the musical material is original melodies created by someone who was close to Paul McCartney in the 1970s and absorbed these ideas.
This is not the end of the story told by Kirkcaldy McKenzie. Along with the unfinished songs, he discovered several more photographs, where his grandfather Patrick McKenzie was captured together with Paul McCartney, musicians of Wings, and Linda McCartney acted as a photographer. This whole story about grandfather makes you wonder: did Paul help him with any of these songs? Or, even more intriguingly, did Patrick help Paul?
The album was released just in time for the 50th anniversary of Paul McCartney's first release after the Beatles split. It's hard to know who the real creators are - Patrick McKenzie, Kirkeldy McKenzie or Famous Groupies, who ended up together re-creating favorite tunes of the early 1970s so that they are both fresh, melodic, and still modern. Let's hope that the entire archive of MacKenzie Sr. has not been disassembled by his grandson, and an exciting continuation awaits us ... "
Already at a conscious age, he fell into the hands of the old things of his grandfather Patrick McKenzie, who was a session musician in Scotland in the 60-70s of the last century. Among this legacy were demos of several songs recorded by his grandfather under the obvious influence of the work of McCartney and Wings on an old tape recorder in the first half of the 70s. The notes were in poor condition, some were just ideas, sketches, and drafts for myself. The younger McKenzie began to work with them, trying to combine them into successive pieces, adding missing notes and lyrics somewhere, trying to preserve the aura and style of the time when they were created. The result was an album titled Rehearsing The Multiverse.
The fact that the author is a fan of McCartney can be seen not only from the name of the group (in honor of one of the most eccentric songs of Sir Paul), but also the design of the cover of the disc, which refers us to the album Red Rose Speedway (and there is an apple instead of a rose for a reason) ... But it would be a mistake to classify the disc as a parody album, like another The Rutles album, or just an obvious imitation of Paul McCartney's style. No, the musical material is original melodies created by someone who was close to Paul McCartney in the 1970s and absorbed these ideas.
This is not the end of the story told by Kirkcaldy McKenzie. Along with the unfinished songs, he discovered several more photographs, where his grandfather Patrick McKenzie was captured together with Paul McCartney, musicians of Wings, and Linda McCartney acted as a photographer. This whole story about grandfather makes you wonder: did Paul help him with any of these songs? Or, even more intriguingly, did Patrick help Paul?
The album was released just in time for the 50th anniversary of Paul McCartney's first release after the Beatles split. It's hard to know who the real creators are - Patrick McKenzie, Kirkeldy McKenzie or Famous Groupies, who ended up together re-creating favorite tunes of the early 1970s so that they are both fresh, melodic, and still modern. Let's hope that the entire archive of MacKenzie Sr. has not been disassembled by his grandson, and an exciting continuation awaits us ... "
Year 2020 | Rock | FLAC / APE | Mp3
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