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The Lewis And Clarke Expedition - The Lewis And Clarke Expedition (Reissue) (1967/2016)

The Lewis And Clarke Expedition - The Lewis And Clarke Expedition (Reissue) (1967/2016)
The Lewis And Clarke Expedition - The Lewis And Clarke Expedition (Reissue) (1967/2016)


Tracklist:

01. Windy Day
02. Freedom Bird
03. Spirit Of Argyle High
04. This Town Ain't The Same Anymore
05. Everybody Loves A Fire
06. House Of My Sorrow
07. I Feel Good (I Feel Bad)
08. (I Call Them) Lies
09. Destination Unknown
10. Chain Around The Flowers
11. Blue Revelations
12. Memorial To The American Indian

Bonus Tracks:
13. Daddy's Plastic Child
14. Gypsy Song Man
15. Why Need They Pretend
16. Slave Medley

Arranged By – Don McGinnis (tracks: 2, 9), Gary Paxton (tracks: 13, 14), Jack Keller (tracks: 7, 10), Ken Bloom (tracks: 6, 11, 12), Shorty Rogers (tracks: 1, 3 to 5, 8, 15)
Drums, Percussion – Johnny Raines
Guitar, Bass, Percussion – John London
Guitar, Harmonica – Travis Lewis
Guitar, Percussion – Boomer Clarke
Lead Guitar, Autoharp, Clarinet, Saxophone, Flute, Organ, Veena, Tambora, Bouzouki, Chalumeau, Esraj, Tuba – Ken Bloom

The country-rock group known as the Lewis & Clarke Expedition evolved out of several folk bands operating around Los Angeles during the mid-'60s. Formed by Dallas songwriter Michael Martin Murphey (under the guise of Travis Lewis) with Owen Castleman (performing as Boomer Clarke), the band recorded one LP in late 1967 for the Colgems label then making pots of money off sales of the first two Monkees albums. Not quite a coincidence then, that Lewis, Clarke, and bassist John London were all old friends of country-minded Monkee Michael Nesmith (London even worked as Nesmith's stand-in on the television show).

Well before Nesmith was hired to the Monkees, though, London performed with him in San Antonio as a folk duo, and after moving to California, all four native Texans appeared in a large folk group called the Survivors. Nesmith dropped out because of a commitment to the Air Force, and the remaining trio added guitarist Ken Bloom and drummer John Raines, coming together in 1966 as the Lewis & Clarke Expedition. Since Lewis and Clarke both worked at Monkees corporate Screen Gems as writers, a recording contract with Colgems was a natural. The band was hyped not only to young girls as another version of the Monkees, but also to older rock fans as a cutting-edge country-rock band that played up their association with Native American elements. Colgems released The Lewis & Clarke Expedition in November 1967, and the single "I Feel Good (I Feel Bad)" was a local hit, though nothing from the band ever charted and they were soon dropped. Michael Martin Murphey, soon to leave Los Angeles to concentrate on his songwriting at a home in the San Gabriel Mountains, wrote a song ("What Am I Doing Hangin' 'Round?") recorded by Nesmith for the 1968 Monkees LP Pisces, Aquarius, Capricorn & Jones Ltd. Owen Castleman played on an album with Earl Scruggs, and later played on several of Murphey's solo LPs, while London played with Michael Nesmith's First National Band, Bloom performed on several folk records, and Raines went on to play with the Dillards.


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