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The Rubble Collection, Vol. 10 - Professor Jordan's Magic Sound Show

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Download links and information about The Rubble Collection, Vol. 10 - Professor Jordan's Magic Sound Show. This album was released in 1984 and it belongs to Rock genres. It contains 16 tracks with total duration of 47:37 minutes.

Release date: 1984
Genre: Rock
Tracks: 16
Duration: 47:37
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Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Tamaris Khan (Onyx) 2:53
2. Frederick Jordan (The Glass Menagerie) 3:16
3. We Didn't Kiss, Didn't Love, But Now We Do (Clique) 2:34
4. A Step in the Right Direction (The Montanas) 3:15
5. Linda Loves Linda (Floribunda Rose) 3:29
6. Lady Caroline (Velvett Fogg) 2:24
7. Riding On a Wave (Turnstyle) 2:47
8. Frosted Panes (Kytes) 2:13
9. Running Wild (Fresh Air) 3:49
10. Stay a While (The Orange Seaweed) 2:25
11. Hungry (5 AM Event) 2:27
12. Gotta Keep On Moving Baby (The Game) 2:41
13. She's a Rainbow (The Glass Menagerie) 2:20
14. Stay Indoors (New Formula) 4:14
15. Buffalo (Writing On The Wall) 3:14
16. You Can All Join in (Orange Machine) 3:36

Details

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After later volumes inched toward non-linear psychedelia and Dutch freakbeat, the final installment in The Rubble Collection returns to a good grip of obscure '60s British singles steeped in mod-flavored guitar pop and lysergic fuzzbox rockers. Some of the more outstanding selections include The Clique’s 1965 bluesy groover “We Didn't Kiss, Didn't Love, but Now We Do” and The Game’s “Gotta Keep on Moving Baby,” a catchy beat tune that sounds highly influenced by early Who hits like “I Can’t Explain” and “La La-La Lies.” There was a short-lived Swinging London moment in the mid- to late '60s when mod and hippie styles overlapped. The music subsequently mirrored this as The Small Faces grew out their hair, dressed more colorfully, and recorded their heady concept album Ogden’s Nut Gone Flake. This, of course, prompted other bands like 5 AM Event to follow suit. Its trippy jam “Hungry” took more risks by infusing oscillating guitar effects and dreamy vocal harmonies into well-tailored rave-up R&B. Orange Machine’s “You Can All Join In” furthered freakbeat’s foray into kaleidoscopic psych.