01. I Forget How It's Been 2:23
02. I've Been Loving You Too Long 2:53
03. I Want Her 2:41
04. Neighbour, Neighbour 2:30
05. I'm Your Witchdoctor 2:05
06. Mystic Eyes 2:56
07. Come See Me 2:31
08. Early in the Morning 1:53
09. One Two Brown Eyes 2:38
10. My Girl 3:35
11. Smokestack Lightning 6:00
12. Little Girl 2:19
13. I'll Go Crazy 2:10
14. When I Find Out 2:12
15. Dimples 2:09
16. Don't Bring Me Down 2:02
17. Key to Love 1:02
18. Land of a 1000 Dances 2:28
19. Hoochie Coochie Man 4:47
20. Train Time 2:46
21. Slowdown 3:21
22. Murray Forgie Interview (bonus) 5:04
23. Jim's Interview (bonus) 9:48
Mike Rudd:
b New Zealand. Rudd relocated to Australia with the Chants R‘N’B in 1966. In 1968 he joined another similar combo, Party Machine, containing future members of Daddy Cool. This band evolved into an ‘underground’ experimental band - the short-lived Sons Of The Vegetal Mother in 1969. Forming his own band Spectrum that same year, Rudd teamed up with long-term collaborator, bass player Bill Putt, and wrote most of the material. Rudd led the band (and their alter-ego, Murtceps), through the blues orientated heavy rock music period in Australia during 1971-73. Next came Ariel (1973-74), a band which was a more exotic spectacle comprising weird and wonderful costumes, exotic light shows and smoke bombs. Instant Reply followed (1978-79), who later changed their name to the Heaters. As trends changed, the Heaters become Rudd’s post punk, new wave band, touring frequently during 1979-1982 but not achieving any commercial success with Unrealist. Rudd briefly returned to his roots with the Living Legend Blues Band, subsequently forming W.H.Y. in 1983, which toured and recorded in Germany, and was a more experimental outfit, as was the similar Mike Rudd’s No. 9. He now performs in the Suburban Blues Band, a good-time cover band. He later briefly re-formed Spectrum in early 1990. His song, ‘I’ll Be Gone’, recorded by Spectrum, remains one of the most recognizable Australian hits of the early 70s.
Chants R&B:
In the relative isolation of Christchurch, New Zealand, in the mid-1960s, Chants R&B developed a sound heavily indebted to the raunchiest and most R&B-influenced bands of the British Invasion, such as the Rolling Stones, Them, and the Yardbirds. Only two singles were released during the band's lifetime, and like numerous American garage bands, they weren't as skilled or original as the British groups that inspired them. However, they were pretty good as such bands went, and certainly among the best acts of this sort in Australasia.
Chants R&B's two singles were "I've Been Loving You Too Long"/"I Want Her" and "I'm Your Witchdoctor"/"Neighbour Neighbour," both issued on Action!, the Christchurch-based independent label. Only one of those songs, "I Want Her," was an original, and it was pretty explicitly derivative of Them, particularly the Them song "Little Girl." Still, it was an exciting effort and definitely their best moment on record, with a careening punk/R&B energy and a weird, snaky Asiatic guitar line.
Chants R&B's lineup changed several times, and in mid-1966 the lead guitarist role was taken by Max Kelly, a deserter from the Australian Air Force. When Kelly had to return to Melbourne to face desertion charges, the rest of the band (by this time including a bassist named Neil Young, although he wasn't the Neil Young) followed. They recorded an unreleased single before breaking up in 1967. Both sides of their two official singles, as well as five additional studio tracks from 1964-1967 and four live songs from 1966, were issued as the Stage Door Witchdoctors CD on Bacchus Archives.