| | Blessed End Movin' On CD Blessed End Discography of CDs
One of the few major late-'60s bands who were not often copied (at least well) was the Doors, perhaps because the disparate elements that made up the group were so complex and difficult to assimilate by a group of teenagers, and probably because there weren't too many Jim Morrisons, even in the tumult of the times. No teenager could match Morrison's combination of brilliance and b.s., poetry and pretension, and few bands could match the powerfully-ominous instrumental attack of Ray Manzarek, Robbie Krieger, and John Densmore. One of the best of the Doors understudies was Blessed End. Their only album, Movin' On, may not be as strong as anything the Doors created, but that is an unfair comparison to begin with. What the album is, though, is a solid collection of garage-pop songs with foreboding subject matter, considering the band members' youth. Steve Quinzi's organ lines are not as complex and menacing as Manzarek's, but they are often catchy in their frat-rock (think "96 Tears") way. Mike Petrylak's drumming is not as precise and commanding as Densmore's, but it holds down the music nonetheless. Jim Shugart's guitar work is mostly steady and unobtrusive, and is not really trying to stand up to Krieger's idiosyncratic psychedelic-flamenco-blues. And, of course, Doug Teti is not the Lizard King, but he does possess a booming (in the mold of Bob Mosley or Jack Bruce), tormented baritone that looms over the music. The argument could be made that Teti was more Gary Puckett than Jim Morrison, but Puckett never sounded as threatening, and his music never had the exuberant garage amateurishness that Blessed End's showed. Of course, the music is not completely melancholy. Sustaining that type of atmosphere necessitates a certain degree of physical or emotional destructiveness, as Morrison demonstrated. Movin' On shows elements of blues (Teti's Bruce-like wail on "Escape Train"), but there is ultimately a buoyant rather than somber feeling to their music in spite of its fair share of gloom. The opening one-two punch of "Nightime Rider" and "Someplace To Hide" may be constructed out of minor chords, but the music chugs along enthusiastically instead of broodingly. Throughout the album Teti sings about death, being alone, and hateful women, but repeated listening reveals it to be less sinister and more a manifestation of imaginative angst. ~ Stanton Swihart
Pennsylvania band recorded this album in 1971 while still in high school; the surviving band members brought this out from their vaults, bringing to light their sound w. haunting organs & vocals
Arranger: Blessed End.
Personnel: Steve Quinzi (keyboards); Ken Carson (sabar).
Recording information: 1971.
Blessed End Movin' On Songs | 1. | Nighttime Rider |
| 2. | Someplace to Hide |
| 3. | Is It Time? |
| 4. | Sometime You've Got to Be Strong |
| 5. | Movin' On |
| 6. | Day Before Tomorrow |
| 7. | Dead Man |
| 8. | Can't Be Without Her |
| 9. | One Stop Woman |
| 10. | Escape Train |
| 11. | Can't Be Without Her - (previously unreleased, bonus track) |
| Movin' On Review
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Purchase Movin' On CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Christopher CD (1970)
Movin' On album
$11.29 From the psychedelic tribal blues opener "Dark Road" through to the end of the album, Christopher shows just how strong the second-level psychedelia of the late '60s could be. There was no shortage of great musicians hailing from Texas during the era, and the ones who remained ...
| | Yancy Derringer Openers CD (1975)
Movin' On CD music
$11.59 Yancy Derringer was the sort of faceless hard rock band that bogged down the mid-'70s in banal, redundant musical mediocrity that actually benefited, as impossible as it is to believe, from the excessive glittery onslaught of disco. The Monroe, WI-based band played their brand of straight, no frills, bar-boogie blues at various Midwestern clubs, universities, ...
| | Peeling Of Tangerine CD (1999)
Movin' On music CDs
$11.29 Led by the multi-instrumentalist Ferraro brothers Al and Crash (they mainly played guitar), Tangerine started playing together in the late '60s, but the group's sole album was released in 1971. In many ways, The Peeling of Tangerine ...
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