Details

Track Listing DISC 1: 1. Hard Road, A 2. It's Over 3. You Don't Love Me 4. Stumble, The 5. Another Kinda Love 6. Hit the Highway 7. Leaping Christine 8. Dust My Blues 9. There's Always Work 10. Same Way, The 11. Super Natural, The 12. Top of the Hill 13. Someday After a While (You'll Be Sorry) 14. Living Alone 15. Evil Woman Blues 16. All of My Life 17. Ridin' on the L & N 18. Little by Little 19. Eagle Eye
DISC 2: 1. Looking Back - (single A-Side) 2. So Many Roads - (single B-side) 3. Sitting in the Rain - (single A-side) 4. Out of Reach - (single B-side) 5. Mama, Talk to Your Daughter - (A HARD ROAD out-take) 6. Alabama Blues - (A HARD ROAD out-take) 7. Curly - (single A-side) 8. Rubber Duck - (single B-side) 9. Greeny - (session out-take) 10. Missing You - (session out-take) 11. Please Don't Tell - (session out-take) 12. Your Funeral and My Trial - (session out-take) 13. Double Trouble - (single A-side) 14. It Hurts Me Too - (single b-side) 15. Jenny - (single b-side) 16. Picture on the Wall - (single A-side) 17. First Time Alone - (from "BLUES FROM LAUREL CANYON")
Album Notes Personnel: John Mayall (vocals, guitar, harmonica, piano, organ); Peter Green (vocals, guitar, harmonica); John McVie (bass); Mick Fleetwood, Aynsley Dunbar (drums); Paul Butterfield. Producers: Mike Vernon, John Mayall. Compilation producer: Bill Levenson. Recorded between 1966 & 1968. Includes liner notes by John Mayall, Scott Schinder. This is part of Universal's "Blues Classics" series. Following Eric Clapton's departure after the magnificent Bluesbreakers album, Mayall plugged the gap with Peter Green. Little did anyone know (except Green) that he would almost equal Clapton in the minds of fans and the cogniscenti. Two instrumentals on this collection, Freddie King's "The Stumble" and Green's "The Super-Natural", clearly demonstrate the clean sound of his Gibson Les Paul. The line-up is completed by bassist John McVie and Aynsley Dunbar on drums. Ex-commercial artist Mayall also designed and painted the cover, which itself is a fine piece of art-work and is probably rotting in some printer's basement, long forgotten. The remastered CD reissue is quite superb.
Industry Reviews ...the best album ever put out by a white blues band....[Mayall's] singing is excellent....If there is a quality that really distinguishes this record, it's the presence of piano...it adds a rustic, very country blues-ish flavor to the songs... Rolling Stone (12/07/1968)
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