Sugarloaf - Sugarloaf & Spaceship Earth (A Golden Classics Edition) (1970-71/1997)

  • 27 Sep, 08:16
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Artist:
Title: Sugarloaf & Spaceship Earth (A Golden Classics Edition)
Year Of Release: 1970-71/1997
Label: Collectables Records
Genre: Prog Rock, Art Rock, Psychedelic Rock
Quality: Mp3 320 / Flac (image, .cue, log) / Flac (image, .cue, 24/192)
Total Time: 01:17:56
Total Size: 191 Mb / 494 Mb / 3 Gb (scans)
WebSite:

Sugarloaf - Sugarloaf & Spaceship Earth (A Golden Classics Edition) (1970-71/1997)


Tracklist:

01. Greeneyed Lady
02. The Train Kept-A-Rollin'
03. Medley: Bach Doors Man-Chest Fever
04. West Of Tomorrow
05. Gold and the Blues
06. Things Gonna Change Some
07. Spaceship Earth
08. Rusty Cloud
09. I Don't Need You Baby
10. Rollin' Hills
11. Mother Nature's Wine
12. Country Dawg
13. Woman
14. Music Box
15. Tongue In Cheek
16. Don't Call Us, We'll Call You

Best known for their 1970 AM pop classic "Green-Eyed Lady," Sugarloaf was formed in 1969 in Denver out of the ashes of the Moonrakers, which had released an album in 1968. Singer/keyboardist Jerry Corbetta and guitarist Bob Webber founded the group, adding Moonraker mates Bob MacVittie on drums and Veeder Van Dorn on rhythm guitar, plus bassist Bob Raymond. Originally dubbed Chocolate Hair, the band lost Van Dorn after just a few months when he joined Mescalero Space Kit. On the strength of their demos, the band was signed to Liberty, and changed their name to Sugarloaf, after a Colorado mountain popular with skiers (the record company was concerned about the possible racial overtones of Chocolate Hair). Sugarloaf recorded their self-titled debut album in 1970, and the single "Green-Eyed Lady" -- co-written by Corbetta and based on a piece of a scale exercise in a practice book -- slowly became a nationwide hit, catching on in more and more markets until it finally peaked at number three on the pop charts. For the follow-up album, 1971's Spaceship Earth, Sugarloaf added guitarist/songwriter Bob Yeazel, who had previously played on two albums as part of a Denver band called the Beast. Spaceship Earth didn't produce any hits, and disagreements over the band's choice of producers followed. Yeazel wound up leaving prior to the release of 1973's I Got a Song, which appeared on the smaller Brut label and featured former Beast drummer Larry Ferris. Resurfacing on Claridge in 1975, Sugarloaf finally scored that elusive follow-up hit with the title track from their fourth and final album, Don't Call Us -- We'll Call You. However, they subsequently disbanded. Corbetta went on to release a solo album on Warner Bros., and later worked with Frankie Valli & the Four Seasons as a writer, producer, and backing musician.


  • mufty77
  •  22:01
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Many thanks for lossless.
  • tommy554
  •  23:37
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thanks a lot for flac
  • wolfplayer
  •  13:31
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thank you for the music
  • whiskers
  •  10:28
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Many thanks
  • mldekker
  •  10:49
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Veel Dank !!