Screaming Lord Sutch - This Is Screaming Lord Sutch (2013)
BAND/ARTIST: Screaming Lord Sutch
- Title: This Is Screaming Lord Sutch
- Year Of Release: 2013
- Label: Carter Lane - OMiP
- Genre: Blues Rock
- Quality: flac lossless (tracks)
- Total Time: 00:58:06
- Total Size: 366 mb
- WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist
01. Jenny Jenny
02. L-O-n-D-O-N
03. Scream and Scream
04. Monster Rock
05. Would You Believe (feat. Jeff Beck)
06. I'm a Hog for You Baby
07. London Rocker
08. Rock and Shock
09. 'Cause I Love You (feat. Jimmy Page)
10. Smoke and Fire
11. Brightest Light (feat. Jeff Beck)
12. Jack the Ripper
13. Thumping Beat (feat. Jimmy Page)
14. Rockabilly Madman
15. Murder in the Graveyard
16. Gutty Guitar (feat. Jeff Beck)
17. One for You, Baby
18. Union Jack Car (feat. Jimmy Page)
19. Penny Penny
20. Baby, Come Back (feat. Jimmy Page)
He couldn't properly be considered part of the British Invasion -- he never had a hit in the U.S. or the U.K. -- but Screaming Lord Sutch laid some unheralded groundwork for the phenomenon. With a rock & horror act based to a large degree on Screamin' Jay Hawkins, David "Lord" Sutch was one of the first genuine rock & roll longhairs, and his bands employed such sterling instrumentalists as Jimmy Page, Jeff Beck, Ritchie Blackmore, Nicky Hopkins, and Mitch Mitchell before they became famous. His early-'60s singles -- mostly over-the-top Halloween novelties or covers of early rock and R&B standards -- are genuinely energetic and fun performances that rank among the few out-and-out raunchy rock & roll records waxed in Britain before the ascension of the Beatles. Twiddling the knobs on his first five singles was the legendarily eccentric Joe Meek, who embellished Sutch's modest talents with his usual grab bag of treated instruments, compression, and odd effects. While he holds a position of undeniable importance in the history of British rock, Sutch was not a talented singer or musician, and the records he made after the mid-'60s were pretty lame despite the presence of some stars who remembered him fondly (and had even sometimes played in his band in the old days). A well-known public figure in Britain, he ran for Parliament several times in the '60s, representing the National Teenage Party, and he founded the pirate radio station Radio Sutch in 1964. He published his autobiography in the early '90s.
01. Jenny Jenny
02. L-O-n-D-O-N
03. Scream and Scream
04. Monster Rock
05. Would You Believe (feat. Jeff Beck)
06. I'm a Hog for You Baby
07. London Rocker
08. Rock and Shock
09. 'Cause I Love You (feat. Jimmy Page)
10. Smoke and Fire
11. Brightest Light (feat. Jeff Beck)
12. Jack the Ripper
13. Thumping Beat (feat. Jimmy Page)
14. Rockabilly Madman
15. Murder in the Graveyard
16. Gutty Guitar (feat. Jeff Beck)
17. One for You, Baby
18. Union Jack Car (feat. Jimmy Page)
19. Penny Penny
20. Baby, Come Back (feat. Jimmy Page)
He couldn't properly be considered part of the British Invasion -- he never had a hit in the U.S. or the U.K. -- but Screaming Lord Sutch laid some unheralded groundwork for the phenomenon. With a rock & horror act based to a large degree on Screamin' Jay Hawkins, David "Lord" Sutch was one of the first genuine rock & roll longhairs, and his bands employed such sterling instrumentalists as Jimmy Page, Jeff Beck, Ritchie Blackmore, Nicky Hopkins, and Mitch Mitchell before they became famous. His early-'60s singles -- mostly over-the-top Halloween novelties or covers of early rock and R&B standards -- are genuinely energetic and fun performances that rank among the few out-and-out raunchy rock & roll records waxed in Britain before the ascension of the Beatles. Twiddling the knobs on his first five singles was the legendarily eccentric Joe Meek, who embellished Sutch's modest talents with his usual grab bag of treated instruments, compression, and odd effects. While he holds a position of undeniable importance in the history of British rock, Sutch was not a talented singer or musician, and the records he made after the mid-'60s were pretty lame despite the presence of some stars who remembered him fondly (and had even sometimes played in his band in the old days). A well-known public figure in Britain, he ran for Parliament several times in the '60s, representing the National Teenage Party, and he founded the pirate radio station Radio Sutch in 1964. He published his autobiography in the early '90s.
Blues | Rock | FLAC / APE
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