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Unicorn - Too Many Crooks (Japan Remastered) (1976/2006)

Unicorn - Too Many Crooks (Japan Remastered) (1976/2006)

BAND/ARTIST: Unicorn

  • Title: Too Many Crooks
  • Year Of Release: 1976/2006
  • Label: Air Mail Archive
  • Genre: Folk Rock, Country Rock
  • Quality: Mp3 320 / Flac (tracks, .cue, log)
  • Total Time: 47:12
  • Total Size: 132/320 Mb (scans)
  • WebSite:
Unicorn - Too Many Crooks (Japan Remastered) (1976/2006)


Tracklist:

01. Weekend - 3:22
02. Ferry Boat - 5:07
03. He's Got Pride - 4:10
04. Keep On Going - 4:36
05. Too Many Crooks - 4:26
06. Bullseye Bill - 5:24
07. Disco Dancer - 3::25
08. Easy (Smith, Waters, St. John) - 3:34
09. No Way Out Of Here - 5:20
10. In The Mood - 4:25
11. So Far Away (Bonus Track) - 3:23

Line-up::
Ken Baker - Guitar, Keyboards, Vocals
Pat Martin - Bass, Mandolin, Vocals
Peter Perrier - Drums, Percussion, Vocals
Kevin Smith - Guitar, Slide Guitar
Chris Pidgeon - Keyboards
David Gilmour - Pedal Steel Guitar

Incredibly, Unicorn were on the road with Hawkwind when their third album hit the streets -- incredibly, because it is difficult to think of two bands that existed at more extreme ends of the period rock spectrum. But the blending worked, as Unicorn's subtly countrified, folky-edged mantras fed the heads of the Hawkwind faithful with many of the same acoustic energies that fired the headliner's most evocative dreams. And, besides, who wouldn't admire a band like Unicorn, a quintessentially English folk-rock act that just happened to have collided with a love for American country rock, and wound up creating a hybrid that still sounds remarkable today? Widely regarded as Unicorn's finest album (a horrible disservice to Blue Pine Trees, but no matter), Too Many Crooks opens with the near-frenetic energy of "Weekend," and continues on through a greater number of rockers than either of its predecessors. It's a double-edged sword; the power of the band's earlier albums was their ability to turn up the heat without increasing the volume. But moments like the semi-protracted fade of "Ferry Boat," and the almost-funky flirting of "Disco Dancer" are certainly audience-pleasers in waiting, while "No Way Out of Here" impressed producer David Gilmour so much that he covered it for inclusion on his first solo album. Remastered in 2009, with a bonus B-side added to the fun, Too Many Crooks is a great album. But really, you could say that for everything Unicorn ever did.


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  • User offline
  • mufty77
  •  wrote in 00:57
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Many thanks for lossless.
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  • whiskers
  •  wrote in 12:53
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Many Thanks