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The Definitive Teaser (Collector's Edition)

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Download links and information about The Definitive Teaser (Collector's Edition) by Tommy Bolin. This album was released in 1975 and it belongs to Rock, Hard Rock, Rock & Roll, Heavy Metal genres. It contains 36 tracks with total duration of 03:42:41 minutes.

Artist: Tommy Bolin
Release date: 1975
Genre: Rock, Hard Rock, Rock & Roll, Heavy Metal
Tracks: 36
Duration: 03:42:41
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Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. The Grind 3:28
2. Homeward Strut (Instrumental) 3:57
3. Dreamer 5:09
4. Savannah Woman 2:47
5. Teaser 4:26
6. People, People 4:56
7. Marching Powder (Instrumental) 4:14
8. Wild Dogs 4:40
9. Lotus 3:56
10. Teaser (Alternate Recording) 4:44
11. Flying Fingers (Outtakes) 16:03
12. Cookoo (Outtakes) 6:13
13. Wild Dogs (Alternate Recording) 13:50
14. Chameleon (Outtakes) 7:31
15. Crazed Fandango (Outtakes) 5:05
16. People, People (Alternate Recording) 6:08
17. Smooth Fandango (Outtakes) 6:13
18. Marching Power (Alternate Recording) 6:38
19. Homeward Strut (Alternate Recording) 3:56
20. Oriental Sky (Lotus) [Instrumental] 11:24
21. The Grind (feat. Peter Frampton) 4:39
22. Teaser (feat. Warren Haynes) 5:20
23. Dreamer (feat. Myles Kennedy & Nels Cline) 5:25
24. Savannah Woman (feat. John Scofield) 3:37
25. Smooth Fandango (feat. Derek Trucks) 5:44
26. People, People (feat. Big Sugar & Gordie Johnson) 5:59
27. Wild Dogs (feat. Brad Whitford) 5:37
28. Homeward Strut (feat. Steve Lukather) 3:58
29. Sugar Shack (feat. Glen Hughes & Sonny Landreth) 4:58
30. Crazed Fandango (feat. Steve Morse) 4:31
31. Lotus (feat. Joe Bonamassa, Glen Hughes & Nels Cline) 7:47
32. Flying Fingers (feat. Oz Noy & Nels Cline) 15:13
33. Marching Bag (feat. Nels Cline, Greg Hampton, John Scofield & Sonny Landreth) [Movement 1] 3:38
34. Marching Bag (feat. Nels Cline, Steve Lukather, Derek Trucks & Peter Frampton) [Movement 2] 5:44
35. Marching Bag (feat. Gordie Johnson, Nels Cline, Oz Noy, Steve Lukather, Steve Morse & Joe Bonamassa) [Movement 3] 7:05
36. Marching Bag (feat. Nels Cline, Warren Haynes, Joe Bonamassa, Oz Noy, Brad Whitford & Peter Frampton) [Movement 4] 8:08

Details

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Might as well get this out of the way first: the release of the multi-disc The Definitive Teaser isn't going to clear up all the controversies and debates surrounding the various Tommy Bolin Archives recordings issued in the last half decade. But now the good news: finally...finally, there is a solid, officially remastered version of Tommy Bolin's Teaser available. It's the first — and inarguably best — of his two solo albums. Teaser has been remastered with supervision from Greg Hampton and Jeremy Mackenzie. The sound is crisp (not brittle), clean, warm, and largely faithful to the original mix. That said, the only way to own it is with the mandatory purchase of (at least) two extra discs of bonus outtakes and alternates from the recording sessions (see below). The liner notes — which consist of incomplete credits and a brief liner essay by Johnnie Bolin (who was Hampton's co-producer for the comp) — don't specify what has or has not been released before. There are alternates of "Teaser"; a nearly 14-minute rehearsal version of "Wild Dogs" (complete with Bolin's directive dialogue); a stellar "People, People," where the reggae energy takes a back seat to the guitarist's snaky solo; a longer, funkier "Marching Powder," with gorgeous keyboard work by Jan Hammer and call-and-response saxophone by David Sanborn; and a "Homeward Strut" that is rawer and nastier than the album version, though not superior. Disc two's outtakes include the 16-minute "Flying Fingers," which showcases Bolin going through an enormous bag of tricks in his solos; a nasty "Cookoo" that literally defines funk-rock over a decade before the Red Hot Chili Peppers; and the shape-shifting, swinging, electric jazz jam "Chameleon." The third disc's outtakes include "Crazed Fandango" and "Smooth Fandango," wildly different interpretations of the instrumental jam with stellar uncredited tenor saxophone work on the former, and a 13-minute instrumental version of "Lotus" called "Oriental Sky." The latter reveals Bolin at his most melodic and mindbending best, flowing seamlessly between psychedelic rock and reggae and weaving "A Day in the Life" into his solo. The sound on all three discs is excellent. There isn't any discernible tape hiss, and the entire package reveals the very heart of Bolin's Teaser as a restless, expansive process that was honed into a finely shaped album and a must-have. [The five-disc Definitive Teaser Collector's Edition includes these three discs and the double Tommy Bolin & Friends' Great Gypsy Soul tribute collection, which features Bolin's original tracks with additional guitars dubbed in by Warren Haynes, Nels Cline, Joe Bonamassa, Derek Trucks, John Scofield, Steve Lukather, Steve Morse, and more.]