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Garion81 View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Topic: Side-Lengths
    Posted: January 07 2005 at 11:46
Originally posted by Dick Heath Dick Heath wrote:

Originally posted by Garion81 Garion81 wrote:

Originally posted by Dick Heath Dick Heath wrote:



And Quicksilver Messenger Service took up a side covering Bo Diddley on Happy Trails - when was that released?

 

1969 and the song was Who do You Love written by Ellsi McDaniel the same song George Thorogood did in the eighties. Bo Diddley stole some of the lyrics when he recorded it and called the song Bo Diddley.

 

 



Bo Diddley aka Elias Bates aka Elias McDaniels - sorry couldn't  resist. I had my Guinness Who's Who Of Blues out to check up on Alexis Korner for another thread, and found a lenghty piece on Bo Diddley which reveals a lot - including bands that covered his Who Do You Love.

 

Wow didn't know that.  Amazing.



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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 07 2005 at 01:27

Love's second album "da Capo" from 1967. contains "the side long psychadelic jam "Revelations"

 

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 07 2005 at 00:30
Jethro Tull - Thick as a Brick is a 44 minute song
broken into 2 parts to accomodate being placed on
two sides of the original vinyl recording.
Making it the first rock album to have one continuous
song on both sides of an album.

Edited by DallasBryan
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 06 2005 at 22:17
You didn't specify rock side-length tracks, classical movements weighing in that long(or much longer) have been in abundance since the beginning of the music being pressed on LP.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 06 2005 at 20:32
Originally posted by Garion81 Garion81 wrote:

Originally posted by Dick Heath Dick Heath wrote:



And Quicksilver Messenger Service took up a side covering Bo Diddley on Happy Trails - when was that released?

 

1969 and the song was Who do You Love written by Ellsi McDaniel the same song George Thorogood did in the eighties. Bo Diddley stole some of the lyrics when he recorded it and called the song Bo Diddley.

 

 



Bo Diddley aka Elias Bates aka Elias McDaniels - sorry couldn't  resist. I had my Guinness Who's Who Of Blues out to check up on Alexis Korner for another thread, and found a lenghty piece on Bo Diddley which reveals a lot - including bands that covered his Who Do You Love.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 06 2005 at 16:46

Originally posted by Dick Heath Dick Heath wrote:



And Quicksilver Messenger Service took up a side covering Bo Diddley on Happy Trails - when was that released?

 

1969 and the song was Who do You Love written by Ellsi McDaniel the same song George Thorogood did in the eighties. Bo Diddley stole some of the lyrics when he recorded it and called the song Bo Diddley.

 

 



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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 06 2005 at 15:02
It's on a soundtrack too, I'm not sure which one (Slayer that is).


edit: Less than Zero


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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 06 2005 at 13:11
Originally posted by mirco mirco wrote:

Originally posted by richardh richardh wrote:

Originally posted by maani maani wrote:

All:

Actually, even prior to the release of PH's album featuring "In Held Twas In I," Iron Butterfly released "In-A-Gadda-Da-Vida," which included the first side-long track.

Peace.

Shouldn't they be in the archive section then?

Good question. I have not heard much of IB, but my general idea is that they were a prgressive-psicodelic band, between the pioneers of the movement.

 

It may be a side long track, but "In-A-Gadda-Da-Vida" is at essence a simple verse/chorus song with a very catchy riff and an extended jam around said catchy riff. The rest of the album (of the same name) is, IMHO, fairly average - you'd do better buying any Doors album.

Slayer did an interesting cover of it - which I think is only available on a compilation called "River's Edge".

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 06 2005 at 12:32

Actually, side 4 of Dylan's Blonde On Blonde was taken up with Sad Eyed Lady Of The Lowlands, and was released just before Zappa's Freak Out in 1966, pipping him at the post for rock's first double album. The song is just under 12 minutes long, about the same as Monster Magnet, but it did occupy a whole side of the original vinyl version.

I can't think of any off the top of my head, but I'm sure that some Jazz musicians had released side long epics well before anything discussed so far - people like Miles Davis, John Coltane and Charles Mingus were recording extended compositions almost as soon as the LP format had been invented.



Edited by Syzygy
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 06 2005 at 10:57
Originally posted by richardh richardh wrote:

Originally posted by maani maani wrote:

All:

Actually, even prior to the release of PH's album featuring "In Held Twas In I," Iron Butterfly released "In-A-Gadda-Da-Vida," which included the first side-long track.

Peace.

Shouldn't they be in the archive section then?

 

 

Good question. I have not heard much of IB, but my general idea is that they were a prgressive-psicodelic band, between the pioneers of the movement.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 25 2004 at 16:16

good call Cert- "That's it for the Other One" by the Grateful Dead filled the first side of "Anthem of the Sun" in 1968. Not simply a jam, it was the first extended piece that was recorded by the band (and therefore more representative of the Dead's live set than the shorter tracks that had appeared on the eponymous debut disc a year before). It was listed as separate tracks/ movements on the album only because their record company couldn't handle putting only one song on a side. For any of you who are disposed to speak ill of the Dead, jazz guitar virtuoso Henry Kaiser thought well enough of the song to do a cover version.

looks like 68 was the year longer songs began to flourish

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 25 2004 at 15:11

It's true that "Goin' Home" was just a jam - but hey, we're talking side-long tracks in general! I guess that any Grateful Dead album would fit nicely... "Revelations" and "In-A-Gadda-Da-Vida" were also jams on the whole.

Talking of John Mayall, his "Bare Wires" suite of 1968 also fits quite nicely into the side-length "track" category - twice .

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 25 2004 at 13:39
Originally posted by Certif1ed Certif1ed wrote:

Darn it, Dick Heath - you beat me to the Pretty Things "SF Sorrow"!

Hey the old man can still do it -- whatever "it" is.

Love's "Da Capo" (1967) also contains the side-long "Revelations",

Of course - good spot.


and the Stones actually came quite close in 1966 on "Aftermath" with the track "Goin' Home".

An old favourite but hindsight tells me it was really just  a long jam, which I think they ran out of ideas before the track finished............... I remember I had to wait 4 weeks after the album's official release date (mono only) to get the stereo version - DECCA were really strange  in the 1966 to 1969 period, in that  stereo and mono releases dates were rarely the same.  If I remember correctly there were approx 9 months delay before the stereo version of John Mayall & The Bluesbreakers (Clapton reading the Beano) got released following the mono version.

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 25 2004 at 13:30
Originally posted by Easy Livin Easy Livin wrote:

Originally posted by Dick Heath Dick Heath wrote:

Todd Rundgren clocks in with the all time longest single track covering an LP side on his Initiation album.

"A treatise on cosmic fire" I think? "The Ikon" on his Todd Rindgren's Utopia album was also over 30 minutes. I seem to remember the album had instructions on it to record the track onto tape an listen to it that way, as the bass responses would be improved!

Yes -  I was too idle to walk down the hall (cue for the DOORS..........) and pull the album off the rack and check out the full title. My long-gone vinyl version recommended taping asap - I think because the micro-grooving was fine that there was a big risk rapid abrasive wear from the styllus and the usually crap associated with turntables etc. In passing anybody been brave enough to fork out 3000 quid or more (what that's 10000 US at current exchange rates -LOL - only joking) for one of those so called non-contact laser-for-styllus turntables?

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 25 2004 at 04:45

Darn it, Dick Heath - you beat me to the Pretty Things "SF Sorrow"!

Love's "Da Capo" (1967) also contains the side-long "Revelations", and the Stones actually came quite close in 1966 on "Aftermath" with the track "Goin' Home".

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 24 2004 at 17:05

Originally posted by Dick Heath Dick Heath wrote:

Todd Rundgren clocks in with the all time longest single track covering an LP side on his Initiation album.

"A treatise on cosmic fire" I think? "The Ikon" on his Todd Rindgren's Utopia album was also over 30 minutes. I seem to remember the album had instructions on it to record the track onto tape an listen to it that way, as the bass responses would be improved!

Have you come across a band called Continuum from the early 70's. They did an album called "Autumn Grass" the title track of which was over 26 minutes. It was a sort of jazz prog album, featuring a guy called Tim Rice (no relation). They are probably worthy of inclusion on this site.

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 24 2004 at 16:47

The first Mothers Of Invention album 'Freak Out!' has a side-long track called 'The Return Of The Son Of Monster Magnet' it is about 12 minutes long and the lp was released in 1966.

 

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 24 2004 at 16:33
Reading the Soft Machine biography and you'll discover both sides of Volume 2 were intended as two continuous pieces - back in 1969, the record company ABC Probe couldn't cope with that and Machine obligued by titling all the segments. But then thinking hard:

Cream's Wheels Of Fire, have Spoonful and Toad taking up a side each released the same year as that  Iron Butterfly album - and I know who I prefer. And Quicksilver Messenger Service took up a side covering Bo Diddley on Happy Trails - when was that released? And I'm sure Canned Heat covered two sides with one amazingly over-extended boogie around the same time

BTW in the mid 60's and before, you were lucky if a whole album clocked in at 30 minutes (some Beach Boys albums are less than 25 minutes long) - so any track going beyond the 10 minute length would have been considered mighty long!

I suggest Renaissance or Touch produced the first 10 minute  plus progressive tracks on record back in 1969 (Bullet and Aleisha & Others/75 respectively) that is if you don't count the loosely connected songs on the Moody Blues Days Of Future Passed or even the Beatles' Sgt Pepper or the Pretty Things SF Sorrow.

Todd Rundgren clocks in with the all time longest single track covering an LP side on his Initiation album.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 24 2004 at 16:03
looks like you lot have been doing your homework. good work!
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 01 2004 at 09:34

Other great early side-lengths:

Out of Germany we for instance have:

Can - Halleluhwah (Tago Mago, 1971)

Organisation - Tone Float (Tone Float, 1970)  



Edited by ummagumma08
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