| | Vanilla Fudge Rock & Roll CD Vanilla Fudge Discography of CDs
(2 Customer Reviews)
Reissue of their fourth album with the original cover art intact, plus updated liner notes and 'Break Song' (Previously Unissued Studio Version) added as a bonus track.Eight tracks total. The heavy psychedelic group featured drummer Carmine Appice & bassist Tim Bogert. 1998 Sundazed release.
This CD contains four bonus tracks. Personnel: Vince Martell (guitar); Mark Stein (keyboards); Carmine Appice (drums). Audio Mixer: Bob Irwin. Recording information: Atlantic Recording Studios, New York, NY. Photographer: Jim Cummins. Unknown Contributor Roles: Mark Stein; Tim Bogert; Vince Martell; Carmine Appice. Arranger: Charles Morrow. Vanilla Fudge took a more basic stance with Rock 'n' Roll, bringing in Aerosmith's first and the Velvet Underground's last producer, Adrian Barber, to replace Shadow Morton. Guitarist Vinnie Martell sings lead on "Need Love," and it is a quagmire of rock sounds, offset by Mark Stein's "Lord in the Country." The band then goes after a good but non-hit Carole King/Gerry Goffin number, "I Can't Make It Alone." It has that vibe that made "Take Me for a Little While" so important and so timeless, but there's just something missing. This is Vanilla Fudge's trademark sound looking for a new personality. The band started in 1968 by releasing an album of seven cover tunes done Vanilla Fudge-style. Along with Cream, Jimi Hendrix, and a handful of other bands, their sound helped shape Top 40 radio in the '60s while heavily influencing Deep Purple and what that group would do for the '70s. "Street Walking Woman" is OK, and that's the problem with Rock 'n' Roll, the album is a picture of a band trying to grow and emerge from the shadow of what initially launched them -- a familiar problem in rock & roll. The Sundazed CD contains original mixes of "Sweet Talking Woman" and "The Windmills of Your Mind," the latter adapted from Dusty Springfield's hit theme to the film The Thomas Crown Affair. Covers like "The Windmills of Your Mind" are what the band was all about, and this version is grunge, hard rock, that style you know Ritchie Blackmore and company copped for their ride into fame. A 19-minute-and-57-second unreleased studio track, "Break Song" is attached to what was already a 39-minute-and-44-second vinyl LP. That is one full hour of Vanilla Fudge, and Sundazed must be commended for helping put history in order. Still, Rock & Roll bares the strengths and weaknesses of this great ensemble, the weaknesses fully exposed on the 1984 "reunion" LP which pushes Vinny Martell into the background and redesigned the band's sound. The strengths are found in their ability to pour passions into other people's already established songs. Just listen to the drums pound away six and a half minutes into "The Windmills of Your Mind," while the keyboard slashes like a guitar. It's the Young Rascals meet Moe Tucker of the Velvet Underground, a sublime blend. It's just too bad sampling wasn't in vogue back then; Dusty Springfield's voice would have been the frosting on the cake. The point of "If You Gotta Make a Fool of Somebody," keyboardist Mark Stein dueting with drummer Carmine Appice, cannot be discerned. It's OK, but sounds bare, and cries out for Shadow Morton's direction. They certainly push the band into a harder direction, but that twinkle in the eye that is the first Vanilla Fudge album seems to have evaporated except for the Carole King and Dusty Springfield covers. The cleancut young men who covered Curtis Mayfield's "People Get Ready" in 1968 were not the brash musicians who tracked Mayfield's "I'm So Proud" in 1973 with Jeff Beck. Rock & Roll captures the band as it was disintegrating, and the long bonus track, "Break Song," is noteworthy, not for musical value, but to show the self-indulgence which would overtake what was an earth-shaking concept. It's a delicious slice of nostalgia for hardcore fans and musicologists, but the general public might want to stick with a greatest hits package. ~ Joe Vanilla Fudge Rock & Roll Songs Purchase Rock & Roll CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Vanilla Fudge CD (1991)
Rock & Roll
$9.09
| | Vanilla Fudge Beat Goes On CD (1968)
Rock & Roll
$11.65 Sundazed Music remastered reissue of their 1st album with the original cover art intact, plus updated liner notes and 2 bonus tracks added, 'Come By Day, Come By Night' and a previously unreleased cover of the Lennon/ McCartney ...
| | Vanilla Fudge Renaissance CD (1968)
Rock & Roll
$11.69
| | Vanilla Fudge Near The Beginning CD (1969)
Rock & Roll
$11.59
| | Kinks Ultimate Collection CDs (2002) (Import) Thailand
Rock & Roll
$20.09
| | Cramps Stay Sick CD (2007) (Import)
Rock & Roll
$26.29
| | Lungfish Necrophones CD (2000)
Rock & Roll
$9.55
| | White Lion Hits CD (2003)
Rock & Roll
$6.05
| | Burl Ives CD (2004)
Rock & Roll
$5.45
| | Harry Belafonte Love Songs CD (2005) Remastered
Rock & Roll
$7.69 Personnel: Harry Belafonte (vocals). Arrangers: Hugo Montenegro; Robert Freedman; Marty Manning; William Eaton. Harry Belafonte's influence on pop music is much more far reaching then many realize, as he was one of the first performers to bring worldbeat rhythms to the U.S. charts in the postwar era. His silky smooth mixture of jazz, folk, pop, and art song, often with impossibly infectious West Indies-styled accompaniment, coupled with his charismatic good looks and easy, hip coolness and sharp racial and political sense meant he was never reduced to being a mere commodity, even though he spent his whole career on major labels, most of those with RCA. This collection gathers 14 love songs from his various RCA albums, and the overall feel here is one of intelligent resignation and yearning, as Belafonte brings an elegant, reserved dignity to these melodies. Some of the obvious highlights ...
| | Van Halen CD (1978) (Import) Japan; Australia
Rock & Roll
$31.89 Japanese pressing. Reissue of 1978 original release has been remastered and comes in a standard jewelcase. Warner. 2005.
Van Halen: David Lee Roth (vocals); Eddie Van Halen (guitar, background vocals); Michael Anthony (bass, background vocals); Alex Van Halen (drums, background vocals). Recorded at Sunset Sound Recorders, Hollywood, California in 1978. Among revolutionary rock albums, Van Halen's debut often gets short shrift. Although it altered perceptions of what the guitar could do, it is not spoken of in the same reverential tones as Are You Experienced? and although it set the template for how rock & roll sounded for the next decade or more, it isn't seen as an epochal generational shift, like Led Zeppelin, The Ramones, The Rolling Stones, or Never Mind the Bollocks Here's the Sex Pistols, which was released just the year before. But make no mistake, Van Halen is as monumental, as seismic as those records, but part of the reason it's never given the same due is that there's no pretension, nothing self-conscious about it. In the best sense, it is an artless record, in the sense that it doesn't seem contrived, but it's also a great work of art because it's an effortless, guileless expression of what the band is all about, and what it would continue to be over the years. The band did get better, tighter, ...
| | Bread Make It With You: The Platinum Collection CD (2005) (Import) England; United Kingdom
Rock & Roll
$9.39
| | Edwin Mccain Lost In America CD (2006)
Rock & Roll
$13.79
| | Anti-Mc It's Free, But It's Not Cheap CD (2006)
Rock & Roll
$10.39
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