Wool - Wool (Reissue) (1969/2006)
Artist: Wool
Title: Wool
Year Of Release: 1969/2006
Label: Delay 68 Records
Genre: Acid Folk Rock, Funky Rock, Psychedelic
Quality: Flac (image, .cue, log)
Total Time: 35:03
Total Size: 259 Mb (scans)
WebSite: Album Preview
Title: Wool
Year Of Release: 1969/2006
Label: Delay 68 Records
Genre: Acid Folk Rock, Funky Rock, Psychedelic
Quality: Flac (image, .cue, log)
Total Time: 35:03
Total Size: 259 Mb (scans)
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:
1. Love, Love, Love, Love, Love (John Hill, Don Cochrane) -3:14
2. Combination Of The Two (Sam Andrew) - 3:05
3. If They Left Us Alone Now (Ed Wool) - 3:36
4. To Kingdom Come (J. R. Robertson) - 2:28
5. I Don't Like You Anymore (Ed Wool) - 2:55
6. Any Way That You Want Me (Chip Taylor) - 4:07
7. It Was Such A Lovely Night (Loving You Tonight) (Ed Wool) - 2:20
8. The Boy With The Green Eyes (Neil Diamond) - 3:35
9. Funky Walk (Lester Christian) - 9:40
Line-up::
Ed Wool - Lead Guitar, Vocals
Claudia Wool - Vocals, Percussion
Ed Barrella - Bass
Tom Haskell - Rhythm Guitar, Vocals
Peter Lulls - Drums
Wool's sole, self-titled LP has kernels of a promising pop-psychedelic band, but is too derivative and ordinary for even the collector's world to make much of a fuss about. Part of the problem is an over-reliance on cover material; only three of the nine tracks are originals. All of those are from the pen of lead guitarist Ed Wool, but other than the haunting psychedelic folk-rock tune "If They Left Us Alone" (easily the album's standout track), they're forgettable. The covers of Big Brother & the Holding Company's "Combination of the Two," the Band's "To Kingdom Come," and Chip Taylor's "Any Way That You Want Me" (a British hit for the Troggs) are competent, at times likable (if unimaginatively) done, but a little pointless in view of the superior originals. At least Neil Diamond's "The Boy With the Green Eyes" (given a treatment rather like a funky Mamas & the Papas here) was an obscure tune, having been previously done on a non-hit single by the Angels, but the ten-minute version of Dyke & the Blazers' "Funky Walk" is indulgently overlong. Gifting this group with an album may have been premature; they sound as if they might have come over well in a live setting (not many bands of the time could have simulated "Combination of the Two," down to Claudia Wool's Janis Joplin-like vocal, as convincingly), but needed more time to both develop both an identity and more original material. The 2006 CD reissue adds historical liner notes and vintage photos.