Lynne Hughes - Freeway Gypsy (1970)
Artist: Lynne Hughes
Title: Freeway Gypsy
Year Of Release: 1970
Label: Fontana
Genre: Jazzy Blues, Psychedelic Rock
Quality: Flac (image, .cue, log)
Total Time: 37:09
Total Size: 271 Mb (scans)
WebSite: Album Preview
Title: Freeway Gypsy
Year Of Release: 1970
Label: Fontana
Genre: Jazzy Blues, Psychedelic Rock
Quality: Flac (image, .cue, log)
Total Time: 37:09
Total Size: 271 Mb (scans)
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:
1. Bad Dream (L. J. Baron, D. Randell) - 2:22
2. Rose Of The Woe (K. Doyle, R. Olsen) -3:47
3. Night Life (Nelson, Buskirk, Breland) - 3:11
4. Never Stop A Dream (D. Bennett) - 2:47
5. Gypsy Good Time (N. Gravenites) - 4:07
6. Freeway Gypsy (T. Deeps, D. Randell) - 3:32
7. Rags And Old Iron) (O. Brown, Jr., N. Curtis) - 3:55
8. My Man Is Gone (T. Deeps, D. Randell) - 3:22
9. And When I Die (L. Nyro) - 4:56
10. It Didn't Even Bring Me Down (D. Sahm, F. Morin, M. Ferreo) - 3:35
Lynne Hughes - Vocals
Mike Melvoin - Keyboard, Arranger
Mike Dacy - Guitar, Sitar, Dobro
Louis Shelton – 6, 12 String Guitar
Therutius Deeps - Guitar, Backing Vocals
Jerry Scheff, Joe Osbourn - Bass
Hal Blaine - Drums
Gary Coleman - Percussion
Buddy Childers, Tony Terran, Ollie Mitchell, Joe Burnett, Chuck Finley - Trumpets, Flugelhorn
Bob Brookmeyer, Bob Enevoldsen, Dick Leaf - Trombones
Don Menza, Jim Horn, Plaz Johnson, Bob Hardaway, Kim Richmond - Saxophones
Billy Woodruff, Don Bennett, Joe Reed - Backing Vocals
Lynne Hughes was the lead singer of the late-'60s San Francisco Bay Area band Tongue and Groove, mining the field between folk, blues, and rock, in somewhat the same manner as fellow Bay Area female singers Tracy Nelson and Janis Joplin (or, from beyond the Bay Area, Maria Muldaur). Hughes had a more old-timey ragtime tilt to her vocals than any of those other singers did, and was the most prominent presence on Tongue and Groove's fair, self-titled late-'60s album. Prior to that, she had been something of an auxiliary member of the Charlatans, doing some singing and even recording with them without being an official group member.
Hughes had entered music as a folk musician in Seattle in the early '60s before going to the Bay Area. In 1965, she was performing at the Red Dog Saloon in Virginia City, NV, the same venue where the Charlatans had a long-running residency. She would play guitar and sing lead on a few songs with them, such as "Sidetrack" and "Come on in My Kitchen," and taught them the English madrigal "I Saw Her," which was one of their best recordings (though not officially released until 1996). She also played and sang on some demos they did for Kama Sutra in early 1966; two on which she sang, "Sidetrack" and "Devil Got My Man," appear on the 1996 CD compilation The Amazing Charlatans. The Charlatans links carried over to Tongue and Groove, which also featured former Charlatans pianist Mike Ferguson; their Tongue on Groove album had bass by Charlatan Richie Olsen, and a song by ex-Charlatan Dan Hicks. Hughes went on to sing with Stoneground in the early '70s.
Hughes had entered music as a folk musician in Seattle in the early '60s before going to the Bay Area. In 1965, she was performing at the Red Dog Saloon in Virginia City, NV, the same venue where the Charlatans had a long-running residency. She would play guitar and sing lead on a few songs with them, such as "Sidetrack" and "Come on in My Kitchen," and taught them the English madrigal "I Saw Her," which was one of their best recordings (though not officially released until 1996). She also played and sang on some demos they did for Kama Sutra in early 1966; two on which she sang, "Sidetrack" and "Devil Got My Man," appear on the 1996 CD compilation The Amazing Charlatans. The Charlatans links carried over to Tongue and Groove, which also featured former Charlatans pianist Mike Ferguson; their Tongue on Groove album had bass by Charlatan Richie Olsen, and a song by ex-Charlatan Dan Hicks. Hughes went on to sing with Stoneground in the early '70s.