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Edgar Broughton Band - Edgar Broughton Band (Reissue, Bonus Tracks Remastered) (1971/1994)

Edgar Broughton Band - Edgar Broughton Band (Reissue, Bonus Tracks Remastered) (1971/1994)
Edgar Broughton Band - Edgar Broughton Band (Reissue, Bonus Tracks Remastered) (1971/1994)


Tracklist:

01. Even Over Rooftops
02. The Birth
03. Piece Of My Own
04. a) Poppy b) Don't Even Know Which Day It Is
05. House Of Tournabout
06. Madhatter
07. a) Getting Hard b) What Is A Women For?
08. Thinking Of You
09. a) For Dr. Spock (Part One) b) For Dr. Spock (Part Two)

Bonus Tracks:
10. Out Demons Out
11. Apache Drop Out
12. Freedom
13. Up Yours!

Line-up:
Edgar Broughton – vocals, guitar
Arthur Grant – bass guitar, vocals
Steve Broughton – drums, vocals
Victor Unitt – guitar, harmonica, piano, organ, vocals
Additional musicians:
The Ladybirds – vocals (track 1)
Johnny van Derek – violin (track 3)
P. Harold Fatt – vocals (track 5)
Mike Oldfield – mandolin (track 8)
David Bedford – piano (track 8)
Roy Harper – backing vocals (CD track 12)

The London ‘underground’ scene welcomed the anarchic, revolutionary and irreverent Broughtons into an active fraternity during the early days of 1969. The band comprised Edgar Broughton (b. 24 October 1947, Warwick, Warwickshire, England; guitar/vocals), Steve Broughton (b. 20 May 1950, Warwick, Warwickshire, England; drums/vocals) and Arthur Grant (bass, guitar, vocals). Edgar’s growling voice was similar to that of Captain Beefheart and they regularly featured his ‘Dropout Boogie’ in their act. Following their arrival in London they played at a number of small club gigs arranged by Blackhill Enterprises. They were given a wider audience by playing at the famous Blind Faith free concert in Hyde Park in June 1969, where the Broughtons incited the crowd to a frenzy with an exhaustive rendition of the favourite, ‘Out Demons Out’.

The band expanded to a four piece for their self-titled third album, employing ex-Pretty Things guitarist Victor Unitt. Despite the exposure that BBC disc jockey John Peel gave the band on his pioneering UK radio show Top Gear, the political and sexual themes of their songs had dated by the early 70s, although the band soldiered on for a number of years, maintaining a defiant political stance that gained acceptance with a loyal core of British and German rock fans. Unitt had left by the time the band recorded Bandages for the NEMS label in 1975. Prevented from recording by managerial problems, the band made a low-key return in 1979 now billed simply as the Broughtons. During subsequent decades, the Broughtons could still be found performing as part of late 60s revival shows and on the London pub circuit.


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  • mufty77
  •  wrote in 23:05
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Many thanks for lossless.
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  • whiskers
  •  wrote in 12:14
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thanks for share