The Amboy Dukes - Journey To The Center of the Mind (Reissue) (1968/1991)

  • 11 Mar, 13:48
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Artist:
Title: Journey To The Center of the Mind
Year Of Release: 1968/1991
Label: Repertoire Records
Genre: Heavy Psychedelic
Quality: Mp3 320 / WavPack (image, .cue, log)
Total Time: 42:01
Total Size: 104/269Mb (scans)
WebSite:

Tracklist:

01. Mississippi Murderer (Nugent, Farmer) – 5:10
02. Surrender To Your Kings (Nugent) – 2:52
03. Flight Of The Byrd (Nugent) – 2:49
04. Scottish Tea (Nugent) – 4:00
05. Dr. Slingshot (Nugent, Farmer) – 3:07
06. Journey To The Center Of The Mind (Nugent, Farmer) – 3:33
07. Ivory Castles (Farmer) – 3:21
08. Why Is A Carrot More Orange Than An Orange (Farmer) – 2:25
09. Missionary Mary (Farmer) – 2:34
10. Death Is Life (Farmer) – 2:08
11. Saint Philips Friend (Farmer) – 3:33
12. I'll Prove I'm Right (Farmer) – 1:38
13. Conclusion (Nugent, Farmer) – 1:56

Bonus Track:
14. You Talk Sunshine, I Breathe Fire (Nugent, Farmer) – 2:44

Line-up::
Ted Nugent – Lead Guitar
Greg Arama – Bass
John Drake – Vocals
Steve Farmer – Rhythm Guitar, Vocals
Dave Palmer – Drums
Andy Solomon – Organ, Piano, Vocals

Long before Ted Nugent made his name as a mighty crossbow hunter, there was this heavy Detroit band in which he was content to play lead guitar, something he does very well and with much less threat to the Midwest's deer population. The Nuge shouldn't try to take all the credit for this band, because the other members such as vocalist John Drake and rhythm guitarist Steve Farmer contributed with great aplomb, the latter writing much of the material on the second side's ambitious suite as well as co-writing the title hit with Nugent. This is some hard-hitting, well-done psychedelic music, recorded with taste by a producer known much more for his work with mainstream jazz artists, Bob Shad. One thing that made the Amboy Dukes special was the amount of power and drive in their playing, something lacking in other psychedelic outfits that take a more airy-fairy approach. The Nuge's guitar sound is recorded as if this was a mainstream jazz album by Harold Land, and it helps.


  • whiskers
  •  11:24
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Many thanks
  • eve10
  •  17:21
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thanks for your work