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Something Good For Your Head

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Download links and information about Something Good For Your Head by Snow, Blackburn. This album was released in 1999 and it belongs to Rock, Folk Rock, Songwriter/Lyricist, Psychedelic genres. It contains 20 tracks with total duration of 52:02 minutes.

Artist: Snow, Blackburn
Release date: 1999
Genre: Rock, Folk Rock, Songwriter/Lyricist, Psychedelic
Tracks: 20
Duration: 52:02
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Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Stranger In a Strange Land 2:27
2. Yes Today 3:24
3. Takin' It Easy 3:23
4. Time 2:56
5. It's So Hard 3:07
6. Do You Realize 3:35
7. Sure Or Sorry 2:27
8. Unchain My Heart 1:48
9. Uptown-Downtown 2:12
10. Some Days I Feel Your Lovin' 3:09
11. Post-War Baby 1:49
12. Think 2:17
13. No Kidding 1:57
14. I Recall the Day 2:50
15. Everyday Brings Better Things 3:18
16. Stand Here 2:40
17. I Don't Want You Back Babe 1:31
18. Stop Leanin' On Me 2:15
19. Post-War Baby (Alternate Version) 1:45
20. Pass This Way (Backing Track) 3:12

Details

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Although Blackburn & Snow were probably not allowed to reach their full potential due to various problems (not the least of them being a lack of record releases), this collection of 20 1966-67 recordings is only a little below the first tier of mid-1960s American folk-rock in quality. "Stranger in a Strange Land" is a highlight and probably could have been a big hit. Almost on the same level are melodic Blackburn originals that could be ebullient ("Yes Today," "It's So Hard," "Every Day Brings Better Things"), spookily sad and folky ("Takin' It Easy," "Some Days I Feel You Lovin'"), or both high-spirited and hard-edged at once ("Do You Realize"). About a dozen of these songs have circulated on muffled lo-fi collector's tapes in the past, but the fidelity here is pristine. It's recommended to fans of early California folk-rock, the early Jefferson Airplane being the closest reference point (though it's more like the 1966 Airplane than the 1967 model). It's also unusual for such a collector-oriented release in how it is both almost guaranteed to satisfy fans of classic folk-rock groups like the early Airplane, Byrds, and Buffalo Springfield, but quite distinctive in approach and not explicitly derivative of any of the big names in the genre.