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Taking Some Time On: Underground Sounds of 1970 ()

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Taking Some Time On: Underground Sounds of 1970 - Various Artists
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Track Listing
  1. Taking Some Time On
  2. The Green Manalishi (With the Two Prong Crown)
  3. If I Could Do It All Over Again, I?d Do It All Over You
  4. Black Night
  5. Refugees
Show All Tracks
  1. Taking Some Time On
  2. The Green Manalishi (With the Two Prong Crown)
  3. If I Could Do It All Over Again, I?d Do It All Over You
  4. Black Night
  5. Refugees
  6. Lady Eleanor
  7. Winter
  8. Hurry on Sundown
  9. The Witch?s Promise
  10. Nothing at All
  11. See My Way
  12. Small Fruit Song
  13. No More White Horses
  14. The Song of Mcguillicudie the Pusillanimous (Or Don?t Worry James, Your Soc
  15. Apache Dropout
  16. Sittin? Back Easy
  17. Singing a Song in the Morning
  18. Empty Pages
  19. Alan in the River With Flowers
  20. Sympathy
  21. Gerdundula
  22. Rain
  23. Can?t Be Long Now/Francoise/For Richard/Warlock
  24. Around the World in Eighty Days
  25. A Song for Me
  26. Grass
  27. Whaling Stories
  28. Funny Ways
  29. Phoenix
  30. No Opportunity Necessary, No Experience Needed
  31. Black Sheep of the Family
  32. In the Land of the Few
  33. Jig-A-Jig]
  34. Things May Come and Things May Go, But the Art School Dance Goes on For
  35. Tomorrow?s People-The Children of Today
  36. Lucky Man
  37. Mirror of Illusion
  38. My Heaven
  39. All in Time
  40. Down, Down
  41. The Sun Will Never Shine
  42. Lunatic?s Lament
  43. Three Sisters
  44. Momma?s Reward (Keep Them Freak?s a Rollin?)
  45. Why? (How-Now)
  46. Blankman Cries Again
  47. All in Your Mind
  48. Soulful Lady
  49. Situations
  50. Heaven
  51. Good News, Bad News
  52. October 26
  53. Love Like a Man
  54. Electric Los Angeles Sunset
  55. What?
  56. Thousands on a Raft
  57. Astral Traveller
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In 1960, the vast majority of British rock primarily consisted of either bands attempting to mimic the sounds of American groups with inconsistent degrees of success, or novelty acts whose music was intended to be charming teen fodder and little more. While that would soon change as more U.K. bands embraced rhythm & blues and the example of the Beatles led to more acts upping their game, it's mind boggling to consider how far the British rock scene would travel in a mere ten years. By 1970, R&B, beat music, and psychedelia ...

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