Poobah - U.S. Rock & Let Me In (Reissue) (1972-75/1998)

  • 29 Oct, 17:44
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Artist:
Title: U.S. Rock & Let Me In
Year Of Release: 1972-75/1998
Label: Red Fox Records
Genre: Psychedelic Rock, Prog Rock, Hard Rock
Quality: Flac (image, .cue, log)
Total Time: 01:07:31
Total Size: 515 Mb (scans)
WebSite:

Poobah - U.S. Rock & Let Me In (Reissue) (1972-75/1998)


Tracklist:

U.S. Rock (1975):
1. Flesh Fantasies
2. Pullin' Me Down
3. Watch Me
4. Coast to Coast
5. Let's Rock
6. Thru These Eyes
7. Crazy
8. Keep on Rollin'
9. Right Out of the Night
10. Out of You

Personnel:
Jim Gustafson - Guitar & Vocals
Phil Jones - Bass & Vocals
Gene Procopio - Drums
Ken Smetzer - Vocals, Organ, Piano, String snyth

Let Me In (1972):
1. Mr. Destroyer
2. Enjoy What You Have
3. Live to Work
4. Bowleen
5. Rock n Roll
6. Let Me In

Personnel:
Jim Gustafson- Guitar, Organ & Vocals
Phil Jones- Bass & Vocals
Glen Wiseman - Drums & Vocals

"Poobah displays imagination and freewheeling spirit. Revel in the prehistoric metal of "Mr. Destroyer" and "Walk the Bug", the psychedelic madness of "Bowleen" and "I’m Crazy, You’re Crazy", the gorgeous folk rock of "Enjoy What You Have," the blazing riff-rock of "Smoke" and the proto-punk of" Live to Work". Leader Jim Gustafson has both an acid twinkle in his eye and a bomb in his hip pocket, and he’s just as apt to come on like a mischievous, electrified fairy as he is a grunged-out grizzly bear. On the basis of Let Me In, Poobah is more than just a shaggy curiosity from the Me Decade – it’s a band worth discovering for fans not satisfied with endless Grand Funk retreads on classic rock radio." -- Sleazegrinder

"Of all of the latter day reissues of seventies Psych Rock rarities, the Ripple Music version of the 1972 POOHAB album LET ME IN may well be the most important yet. The fuzz rock of the opening track MR DESTROYER reminded me a lot of BUDGIE and features some moster riffing and Psyched out lead breaks. Other gems include BOWLEEN and LET ME IN, with a true taste of proto-metal genius and some jam band influenced heavy blues craziness. If you are a follower of proto-metal or any sort of seventies psychedelic rock it’s not a matter of whether to buy this or not, the simple answer to that is YES." -- My Global Mind


  • mufty77
  •  20:43
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Many thanks for lossless.
  • whiskers
  •  00:05
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Thanks for share
  • pyxlax
  •  20:09
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Much Obliged!!