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The 100 Greatest Classic Rock Albums of All Time: #1. Sticky Fingers (4 Viewers)

Because I wrote this for a tim draft way back when and like to see it to see what I was like when I was still drinking.

Not live, and apropos of nothing, but just because I got such a gosh darn kick out of listening, drafting, and writing this back during my alcohol days on 2016, here's a review of:

Grateful Dead – American Beauty – (1970)

Social consciousness is difficult to escape these days. Given today's climate, escape seems a desirable alternative to engagement. But figuring out the root cause of how we got here might mean merely chasing the original cause down the rabbit hole, naked and bare-assed for the world, struggling to fit in something not made for humans. That’s unsatisfactory. So how do we address the religiosity and rigidity of our sociopolitical state of mind, or much more importantly, how do we find the way around it -- down and off the beaten paths to La Honda, a little bit further, if you will? Holding hands with Garcia, Mountain Girl simply intones, and the rest follow her lead.

The Warner Brothers promo for this album states: “I’d like to tell you that [so-and-so left to follow the Dead and can be found skinny dipping at your local motel]. But you’re no fool. You’d complain. We'd get in trouble. And Jerry Garcia probably would get busted again.” Oh yes, you would. You’d complain. Or you’d shut the shades and smoke your smoke, secretly hoping she’d Phoebe Cates up in your door and lecture you for wanting her.

Or something.

So it’s a bit sexist and heteronormative for today's times, sure. It’s also paradoxically a bit communal in spirit – if only you saw the world as the Dead, then hell, we’d all be individualist democrats. And at heart, it really is one of the most mellow drink, ####, fight, throw your fists at God and former lovers album that ever could be recorded, guerilla-style but with an alluring gentility, as Americans always have been. Brash, gentle, individualist, contemplative about all three things. Ripple. Box of Rain. Truckin’. Candyman. Brokedown Palace. It tunes in, turns on, attempts to thoughtfully drop out.

So what happens when American Beauty and freedom meet the inevitable realities of politics and of life in general? Well, we deal with it in the way Americans have dealt with it since our original crossing. Water. What? Yes, water, that baptismal rite (this album is full of passages and travel; echoes of the frontiersman and settlers abound on it). There is also perspective and empiricism, and pantheism, of course, but for which we would not have hippie and transcendental movements. For better or worse, this album brims with Americanisms and high Americana, seeing religion through the lens of nature; seeking to address eternal questions through individual perspective and the brief understandings of the tangible and present; and the plain old good fun and heartbreak through the outlaw’s mind when the majority doesn’t suit him. It’s radical individualism, presented with a panache and flair that answers to nobody, and it is a singular achievement of the holdover ‘60s into the ‘70s. They may have made the acid illegal, but the flashbacks of what once could have been are here to stay. There isn’t a song on this album that isn’t memorable, doesn’t have a quote worthy of a passage of rite in life. It was made for yearbooks, if only it hadn't been done so often before. But if you're unafraid to be a bit redundant sometimes, you can leave others a pearl of wisdom of what your uncool self always wanted to be.

And did I mention it has the best album cover possibly ever put forth on a rock album, beautiful rosewood and a powder blue ambigram that also reads "American Reality?" Look closer, you'll see it. Don't dig deeper, just go beyond. Anyway, enough of that, here's the important stuff.

For natural wit and yearbook quotes everywhere (one from each song):

“It’s just a box of rain…wind and water. Believe it if you need it. If you don’t just pass it on…sun and shower, wind and rain, in and out the window like a moth before a flame…it’s just a box of rain, or a ribbon for your hair, such a long, long time to be gone, and short time to be there.” - Box Of Rain

“I ran down to the levee but the devil caught me there, He took my twenty dollar bill and he vanished in the air.” - Friend Of The Devil

“Sweet blossom come on, under the willow, we can have high times if you’ll abide. We can discover the wonders of nature, rolling in the rushes down by the riverside.” - Sugar Magnolia

“It’s floodin’ down in Texas, poles are out in Utah. Gotta find a private line.” - Operator

“Come on all you pretty women, with your hair a hanging down, open up your windows cuz the candyman’s in town…if you got a dollar boys, lay it on the line, hand me my old guitar, pass the whiskey round” - Candyman

“Ripple in still water, when there is no pebble tossed, nor wind to blow.” - Ripple

“In a bed, in a bed, by the waterside I will lay my head. Listen to the river sing sweet songs, to rock my soul...sing a lullaby beside the water, lovers come and go, the river roll, roll, roll” - Brokedown Palace

“The shape it takes could be yours to choose…what you may win, what you may lose.” - Till The Morning Comes

“When there was no dream of mine, you dreamed of me.” - Attics Of My Life

“Busted, down on on Bourbon Street, set up, like a bowlin’ pin…what a long, strange trip it’s been!” - Truckin'

"Fare you well my honey/fare you well my only true one/all the birds that were singing have flown except for you alone" - Brokedown Palace
I enjoyed reading that again. You have a commanding style of prose!
 
I enjoyed reading that again. You have a commanding style of prose!

Thanks, tim! i enjoyed that draft (it was yours) and I enjoyed writing the write-ups, but not nearly as much as I dug the album back then. I still like it now, but it's not quite as revelatory as I felt it back then.
 
42. Neil Young & Crazy Horse- Everybody Knows This Is Nowhere (1969)

Classic rock radio hits: Cinnamon Girl, Down By the River, Cowgirl In the Sand


The performance here is so raw it almost sounds like punk rock. There were very few takes and a whole lot of impulsive jamming particularly on the two long classics. The late Danny Whitten is key to the way this record sounds.

Cinnamon Girl
Probably the hardest Neil Young has ever rocked, This tune only deserves to be played loud; it’s not meant for background. Great great rock and roll.

Everybody Knows This Is Nowhere
The title song has always been one of my all time favorites by Young. It almost has a Byrds like groove to it, or the best of Tom Petty. Love this.

Round and Round (It Won’t Be Long)
A soft ballad for this album. It’s perfectly fine but not something I would listen to over and over.

Down By the River
But this tune I WOULD listen to over and over and I do. The Apple Music review calls the Long guitar interlude “murky” but I view it as a free flowing jazz like performance in which every time I hear it there is something new for me. Quite simply outstanding.

The Losing Side (When You’re On)
Country rock; for me this is filler.

Running Dry (Requiem for the Rockets)
Traditional folk that would almost sound like Phil Ochs except for the musicians involved. I enjoy this,

Cowgirl In the Sand
Everything I wrote above for “Down By the River” applies here as well but if anything “Cowgirl” is even better. A monumental rock epic.
 
Just a monster album. Thanks, Pip.

I own a really nice copy of this that was approved by Neil himself for sound quality!

I kid, kind of. He seems really devoted to making sure his releases have the right sound behind them. For this album, it makes a difference. I run a Project Carbon and a Dragonfly DAC with a pair of Grado headphones. It seems highbrow, but it's a computer rig, really. Not perfect analog, but pretty darn unmistakably good sounding.
 
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I kid, kind of. He seems really devoted to making sure his releases have the right sound behind them.
As a testament to this, I actually met Mr. Young at the Pebble Beach Pro-Am (of all places) circa 2002.

He teed off on the first hole at 8am and was dressed head-to-toe in all black. From the black shoes to the sunglasses and black bolero hat. Skinny as a rail and must have gotten a 15 on that hole alone.

I unabashedly stalked him on the uphill path between the first and second holes and sidled up wide-eyed next to him in awe of my musical idol.

"Neil," I asked, "If you could give an aspiring musician just one piece of advice, what would it be?"

After a long contemplative pause either from drugs, lack of sleep or deep existential thought he responded in a gravelly voice, "Buy a Strobo-tuner dude, you gotta play in tune."

And that was it. I faded into the distance not knowing to this day if his words were literal, some metaphorical reference to achieving musical harmony with the cosmos, or just the first thing he could think of to get some groupie guitar wannabe off his back so he could focus on his breathing so as not to pass out walking up the hill.

In the end it doesn't matter. Good times.
 
42. Neil Young & Crazy Horse- Everybody Knows This Is Nowhere (1969)

Classic rock radio hits: Cinnamon Girl, Down By the River, Cowgirl In the Sand


The performance here is so raw it almost sounds like punk rock. There were very few takes and a whole lot of impulsive jamming particularly on the two long classics. The late Danny Whitten is key to the way this record sounds.

Cinnamon Girl
Probably the hardest Neil Young has ever rocked, This tune only deserves to be played loud; it’s not meant for background. Great great rock and roll.

Everybody Knows This Is Nowhere
The title song has always been one of my all time favorites by Young. It almost has a Byrds like groove to it, or the best of Tom Petty. Love this.

Round and Round (It Won’t Be Long)
A soft ballad for this album. It’s perfectly fine but not something I would listen to over and over.

Down By the River
But this tune I WOULD listen to over and over and I do. The Apple Music review calls the Long guitar interlude “murky” but I view it as a free flowing jazz like performance in which every time I hear it there is something new for me. Quite simply outstanding.

The Losing Side (When You’re On)
Country rock; for me this is filler.

Running Dry (Requiem for the Rockets)
Traditional folk that would almost sound like Phil Ochs except for the musicians involved. I enjoy this,

Cowgirl In the Sand
Everything I wrote above for “Down By the River” applies here as well but if anything “Cowgirl” is even better. A monumental rock epic.
This is indeed one of Neil's best albums, though there is a wide gap between the four best songs and the other three. Here's how I ranked them in my Neil countdown: https://forums.footballguys.com/thr...02-204-notable-covers-and-other-stuff.786493/

Down by the River - 3
Cowgirl in the Sand - 9
Cinnamon Girl - 21
Everybody Knows This Is Nowhere - 26
The Losing End (When You're On) - 176 (Tim, note the correct title)
Round and Round (It Won't Be Long) - 184

I don't care for Running Dry (Requiem for the Rockets) and it did not make my top 204.
 
This is indeed one of Neil's best albums, though there is a wide gap between the four best songs and the other three.

I was typing out the same critique this morning and figured I'd just delete it and let the post be about my rig. But those four are much different than the other three, and they're much better.
Depending on which account you believe, Neil wrote all four of the big EKTIN songs while holed up in bed with a fever, or the big three minus the title track. I'm inclined to believe the latter because a version of EKTIN the song was cut for Neil's first solo album.
 
I think Cinnamon Girl is the only song I know from this record. Neil Young has been on my list for a long time as someone I need to listen to more, I just haven't gotten to it yet.
 
I think Cinnamon Girl is the only song I know from this record. Neil Young has been on my list for a long time as someone I need to listen to more, I just haven't gotten to it yet.
I wish I could flash back to when I heard Down by the River and Cowgirl in the Sand for the first time.
I don't want to start a rumble, but I will just say that I checked out both songs this evening and enjoyed both, but neither made me want to hear more.
 
40. Eagles- Hotel California (1976)

Classic rock radio hits: Hotel California, Life In the Fast Lane, New Kid In Town, Victim
Of Love


The addition of guitarist Joe Walsh changed the sound of Eagles from laid back Southern California country rock to laid back Southern California classic rock. I kid, only a little though. Walsh certainly did give them an edge they previously lacked, and this album, their greatest achievement, was the result.

Hotel California
Overplayed to death over the years, but remains in the running with “Stairway to Heaven” as THE definitive classic rock song. The guitar interplay between Walsh and Don Felder still gets me every time I hear it.

New Kid In Town
This is old style Eagles, it would have fit seamlessly on one of the first few albums. Fry wrote and crooned some very pretty ballads.

Life In the Fast Line
In more than one article and book I have read about the rise of punk rock, this song is mentioned as the epitome of mid 70s corporate rock excess which created the need for a simpler, rawer sound. I get that; there is absolutely nothing raw about Eagles. And yet as much of a huge fan of the early years of punk that I am, I’m also a great fan of this. I love the guitar riff, I love Henley’s vocals, love the whole thing. Guilty pleasure? Maybe.

Wasted Time
Henley with an achingly pretty ballad. I think this is gorgeous. The reprise is fine but seems unnecessary.

Victim of Love
Very good mid 70s rock. Again we see Walsh’s strong influence.

Pretty Maids All In A Row
Joe Walsh gets his own song. His vocals are so distinctive but I love them. Always enjoyed this.

Try And Love Again
I always liked the opening to this. I would have almost forgotten Randy Meissner was still in the band, his contribution is so limited on the rest of the record. But this is his baby, and it’s fine like a lot of the Poco stuff.

The Last Resort
This is an OK Henley song. I know he’s trying to make a big statement here but for me it falls short of that. It’s not bad but nothing special either.
 
I actually think Bohemian Rhapsody has passed Hotel California and Stairway to Heaven as being THE biggest classic rock song. Based on what some have told me, younger people nowadays all know BR, but many do not the other two.

As for this record, I think it is inconsistent. The Eagles do not have any albums that I like start to finish, however, so that could be a me thing. I do think The Last Resort is a standout, although the live version from Hell Freezes Over runs over the original. And while overplayed, the title track is still a beast of a song.
 
Going to be really interesting to see what 40 albums more "classic rock" than Hotel California. To steal a line from Wayne's World, I think every white suburban home in the early 80's was just Government required supplied with an vinyl, 8 track and cassette version of this album.
 
Going to be really interesting to see what 40 albums more "classic rock" than Hotel California. To steal a line from Wayne's World, I think every white suburban home in the early 80's was just Government required supplied with a vinyl, 8 track and cassette version of this album.
If this was a list of most popular classic rock albums there is no question that Hotel California would be top 5. But since it’s a list of greatest albums I’m comfortable where I ranked it. #41 is not bad at all.
 
The Last Resort
This is an OK Henley song. I know he’s trying to make a big statement here but for me it falls short of that. It’s not bad but nothing special either.
One of my favorite songs ever. Especially the Hell Freezes Over version. I have it ranked a bit higher than just OK. :)

I also like the live Hotel California version a bit better than this one.

I'm a fairly big Eagles fan so my judgement is skewed but this is a hella great album start to finish.
 
I actually think Bohemian Rhapsody has passed Hotel California and Stairway to Heaven as being THE biggest classic rock song. Based on what some have told me, younger people nowadays all know BR, but many do not the other two.

I find this hard to believe for Stairway. I could definitely see it for Hotel California.
 
The Last Resort
This is an OK Henley song. I know he’s trying to make a big statement here but for me it falls short of that. It’s not bad but nothing special either.
One of my favorite songs ever. Especially the Hell Freezes Over version. I have it ranked a bit higher than just OK. :)

I also like the live Hotel California version a bit better than this one.

I'm a fairly big Eagles fan so my judgement is skewed but this is a hella great album start to finish.
That live version of Hotel is the one that starts with a Latin guitar sound right? I like that a lot too. I saw that tour live.

I seem to be the odd man out on The Last Resort, which is fine. It just never did anything for me.
 
40. Eagles-

Wasted Time

Henley with an achingly pretty ballad. I think this is gorgeous. The reprise is fine but seems unnecessary.

Immensely underrated song on an incredible album. I saw the Eagles several times live, but the best was Hell Freezes Over tour where every person in RFK sang every word to every song. So amazing when your audience knows every word of all 20+ songs you sing. "The Autumn Leaves have got you thinkin..."
 
this song is mentioned as the epitome of mid 70s corporate rock excess which created the need for a simpler, rawer sound.

That's really odd. They might mean the Eagles in general, but this song? This song is at least an Eagles attempt to rock and roll. Maybe it's the fact that this song attempts to sound tough and fails so miserably at it that punks everywhere needed to seethe a little bit more than this? I don't know. I never found anything particularly offensive or something around which to galvanize.

I don't know. I don't get that, either. I don't think punk was a reaction to the Eagles-dominated airwaves as much as it was a thumb in the eye of excess in every musical form.
 
I actually think Bohemian Rhapsody has passed Hotel California and Stairway to Heaven as being THE biggest classic rock song. Based on what some have told me, younger people nowadays all know BR, but many do not the other two.

I find this hard to believe for Stairway. I could definitely see it for Hotel California.
Actually, I think it is the other way around. Hotel California at least has a bit of crossover appeal because the Eagles association with country rock and whatnot. Anecdotal, but my niece and nephew have both at least heard of the Eagles; neither had a clue who Led Zeppelin was when I mentioned them a while back.
 
I actually think Bohemian Rhapsody has passed Hotel California and Stairway to Heaven as being THE biggest classic rock song. Based on what some have told me, younger people nowadays all know BR, but many do not the other two.

I find this hard to believe for Stairway. I could definitely see it for Hotel California.
Actually, I think it is the other way around. Hotel California at least has a bit of crossover appeal because the Eagles association with country rock and whatnot. Anecdotal, but my niece and nephew have both at least heard of the Eagles; neither had a clue who Led Zeppelin was when I mentioned them a while back.
I blame poor parenting
 
Before Tim posts the next album: I'm assuming we're all familiar with this cover?


The lyrics are generally a faithful translation without the word play (e.g. stuff like "Tiffany-twisted" goes away)
 
40. Cream- Disraeli Gears (1967)

Classic rock radio hits: Sunshine of Your Love, Strange Brew, Tales of Brave Ulysses


On their second album, Eric Clapton, Jack Bruce and Ginger Baker merged their blues roots with psychedelic rock and thus, along with Jimi Hendrix who was doing something similar at the exact same time, set the stage for hard rock music for the next decade. This makes Disraeli Gears one of the most important rock albums of all time. But beyond that, it’s a great listen.

Strange Brew
Great blues tune and featuring the pretty falsetto vocals and strong guitar that would make this group so famous during its short run.

Sunshine of Your Love
The lyrics are all about hippie love, but the music is extremely menacing. So menacing in fact that Martin Scorcese brilliantly uses it in that great scene in Goodfellas when Robert De Niro sits at the bar and decides to kill a whole bunch of people. Such a great guitar riff.

World of Pain
Great rock and yet pretentious as well. But Clapton’s playing makes it all good.

Dance the Night Away
Another really good deep cut. Dated but it still sounds really good especially with headphones.

Blue Condition
Ginger Baker’s cockney vocals here almost sound like early punk rock star Ian Dury.

Tales of Brave Ulysses
Basically a one line tune, with awesome guitar. Sounds a lot like “White Room.” Which makes it great,

SWALBR
This is really dated as well, but the guitar and drums are solid.

We’re Going Wrong
Probably the most psychedelic thing on a very psychedelic album. They’re trying very hard to be mysterious here.

Outside Woman Blues
Probably my favorite song on the record because I’m such a sucker for great blues. I could listen to this all day.

Take It Back
More traditional blues of the sort I adore.

Mother’s Lament
Ginger and the band having fun. Reminds me of the Toy Dolls.
 
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For the last 5 albums or so, I thought "I wonder if/where Disraeli Gears will land.". Guess I was in the "Tim ballpark". I agree that the importance of the album (and the power/super group) for what it helped shepherd in is equally as important as the quality of the album itself, which I am not convinced holds up to some its peers.
 
I have never been much of a fan of Clapton; I just never got the hype. The Cream material is probably his best material, but I still just like songs rather than full albums.
I'm pretty much in the same boat as far as Clapton goes. imo Disraeli Gears was the best album he was a part of, and a Cream compilation might be even better if it has the right songs.
 
The Last Resort
This is an OK Henley song. I know he’s trying to make a big statement here but for me it falls short of that. It’s not bad but nothing special either.
One of my favorite songs ever. Especially the Hell Freezes Over version. I have it ranked a bit higher than just OK. :)

I also like the live Hotel California version a bit better than this one.

I'm a fairly big Eagles fan so my judgement is skewed but this is a hella great album start to finish.
That live version of Hotel is the one that starts with a Latin guitar sound right? I like that a lot too. I saw that tour live.

I seem to be the odd man out on The Last Resort, which is fine. It just never did anything for me.
It doesn’t do anything for me either. I find it and most of the rest of the album boring. Oddly, the one song from it I still enjoy hearing is its most overplayed one, the title track,
 
40. Cream- Disraeli Gears (1967)

Classic rock radio hits: Sunshine of Your Love, Strange Brew, Tales of Brave Ulysses


On their second album, Eric Clapton, Jack Bruce and Ginger Baker merged their blues roots with psychedelic rock and thus, along with Jimi Hendrix who was doing something similar at the exact same time, set the stage for hard rock music for the next decade. This makes Disraeli Gears one of the most important rock albums of all time. But beyond that, it’s a great listen.

Strange Brew
Great blues tune and featuring the pretty falsetto vocals and strong guitar that would make this group so famous during its short run.

Sunshine of Your Love
The lyrics are all about hippie love, but the music is extremely menacing. So menacing in fact that Martin Scorcese brilliantly uses it in that great scene in Goodfellas when Robert De Niro sits at the bar and decides to kill a whole bunch of people. Such a great guitar riff.

World of Pain
Great rock and yet pretentious as well. But Clapton’s playing makes it all good.

Dance the Night Away
Another really good deep cut. Dated but it still sounds really good especially with headphones.

Blue Condition
Ginger Baker’s cockney vocals here almost sound like early punk rock star Ian Dury.

Tales of Brave Ulysses
Basically a one line tune, with awesome guitar. Sounds a lot like “White Room.” Which makes it great,

SWALBR
This is really dated as well, but the guitar and drums are solid.

We’re Going Wrong
Probably the most psychedelic thing on a very psychedelic album. They’re trying very hard to be mysterious here.

Outside Woman Blues
Probably my favorite song on the record because I’m such a sucker for great blues. I could listen to this all day.

Take It Back
More traditional blues of the sort I adore.

Mother’s Lament
Ginger and the band having fun. Reminds me of the Toy Dolls.
Dated and inconsistent in spots, but still a very good record. It brought us Clapton in the form that would make him a rock legend.

My stations played SWLABR in addition to the three you listed.
 
40. Cream- Disraeli Gears (1967)

Classic rock radio hits: Sunshine of Your Love, Strange Brew, Tales of Brave Ulysses


On their second album, Eric Clapton, Jack Bruce and Ginger Baker merged their blues roots with psychedelic rock and thus, along with Jimi Hendrix who was doing something similar at the exact same time, set the stage for hard rock music for the next decade. This makes Disraeli Gears one of the most important rock albums of all time. But beyond that, it’s a great listen.

Strange Brew
Great blues tune and featuring the pretty falsetto vocals and strong guitar that would make this group so famous during its short run.

Sunshine of Your Love
The lyrics are all about hippie love, but the music is extremely menacing. So menacing in fact that Martin Scorcese brilliantly uses it in that great scene in Goodfellas when Robert De Niro sits at the bar and decides to kill a whole bunch of people. Such a great guitar riff.

World of Pain
Great rock and yet pretentious as well. But Clapton’s playing makes it all good.

Dance the Night Away
Another really good deep cut. Dated but it still sounds really good especially with headphones.

Blue Condition
Ginger Baker’s cockney vocals here almost sound like early punk rock star Ian Dury.

Tales of Brave Ulysses
Basically a one line tune, with awesome guitar. Sounds a lot like “White Room.” Which makes it great,

SWALBR
This is really dated as well, but the guitar and drums are solid.

We’re Going Wrong
Probably the most psychedelic thing on a very psychedelic album. They’re trying very hard to be mysterious here.

Outside Woman Blues
Probably my favorite song on the record because I’m such a sucker for great blues. I could listen to this all day.

Take It Back
More traditional blues of the sort I adore.

Mother’s Lament
Ginger and the band having fun. Reminds me of the Toy Dolls.
Dated and inconsistent in spots, but still a very good record. It brought us Clapton in the form that would make him a rock legend.

My stations played SWLABR in addition to the three you listed.
I am going to gently push back on this...why do so many considering something sounding "dated" a bad thing? All that means to me is, it sounds of its time. Not every song or album is going to sound timeless. Shoot, if we are going by music that sounds of its time, then the entire Beatles history up until their breakup sounds dated due to the 60's mixes/sounds.
 
I don't think I knew that Neil played golf. :eek:

Played? More like super obsessed.

One of us, one of us


Ya gotta admit it’s kind of ironic / hilarious how establishment some of the old rebels became.

Jack Weinberg should have added “especially us, when we get older”.

(IKIK several years before Tim’s oddly specific time period of this thread)
 
40. Cream- Disraeli Gears (1967)

Classic rock radio hits: Sunshine of Your Love, Strange Brew, Tales of Brave Ulysses


On their second album, Eric Clapton, Jack Bruce and Ginger Baker merged their blues roots with psychedelic rock and thus, along with Jimi Hendrix who was doing something similar at the exact same time, set the stage for hard rock music for the next decade. This makes Disraeli Gears one of the most important rock albums of all time. But beyond that, it’s a great listen.

Strange Brew
Great blues tune and featuring the pretty falsetto vocals and strong guitar that would make this group so famous during its short run.

Sunshine of Your Love
The lyrics are all about hippie love, but the music is extremely menacing. So menacing in fact that Martin Scorcese brilliantly uses it in that great scene in Goodfellas when Robert De Niro sits at the bar and decides to kill a whole bunch of people. Such a great guitar riff.

World of Pain
Great rock and yet pretentious as well. But Clapton’s playing makes it all good.

Dance the Night Away
Another really good deep cut. Dated but it still sounds really good especially with headphones.

Blue Condition
Ginger Baker’s cockney vocals here almost sound like early punk rock star Ian Dury.

Tales of Brave Ulysses
Basically a one line tune, with awesome guitar. Sounds a lot like “White Room.” Which makes it great,

SWALBR
This is really dated as well, but the guitar and drums are solid.

We’re Going Wrong
Probably the most psychedelic thing on a very psychedelic album. They’re trying very hard to be mysterious here.

Outside Woman Blues
Probably my favorite song on the record because I’m such a sucker for great blues. I could listen to this all day.

Take It Back
More traditional blues of the sort I adore.

Mother’s Lament
Ginger and the band having fun. Reminds me of the Toy Dolls.
Dated and inconsistent in spots, but still a very good record. It brought us Clapton in the form that would make him a rock legend.

My stations played SWLABR in addition to the three you listed.
I am going to gently push back on this...why do so many considering something sounding "dated" a bad thing? All that means to me is, it sounds of its time. Not every song or album is going to sound timeless. Shoot, if we are going by music that sounds of its time, then the entire Beatles history up until their breakup sounds dated due to the 60's mixes/sounds.
I didn't say it was a bad thing.
 

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