Messageboard For Love Fans
Messageboard For Love Fans
Home | Profile | Register | Active Topics | Members | Search | FAQ
Username:
Password:
Save Password
Forgot your Password?

 All Forums
 All The Rest
 General discussions about music
 The Youngbloods "Ride The Wind" live NY '69-EPIC
 New Topic  Reply to Topic
 Printer Friendly
Author Previous Topic Topic Next Topic  

lemonade kid
Old Love

USA
9873 Posts

Posted - 06/05/2016 :  14:39:48  Show Profile  Reply with Quote


Ride The Wind-track one
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dDRtDyHa6pg&index=1&list=PLS5i0SfKxaVl4oOhYX_q6etlh-p5jByKf



AllMusic Review by Lindsay Planer

This live disc followed up Rock Festival (1970), another batch of live recordings. However, Ride the Wind (1971, recorded live in New York 1969) is far from simply a stop-gap effort between studio discs. The trio of Jesse Colin Young (bass/kazoo/rhythm guitar), Banana (guitar/piano), and Joe Bauer (drums) are definitely in their element on these half-dozen sides. In much the same way as their Marin County contemporaries, the Grateful Dead, the Youngbloods' live experience allowed the band to stretch out and take their improvisational interplay to a level that is merely hinted at on their studio sides.

The disc begins with a nearly ten-minute version of the title track, which was initially issued on Elephant Mountain (1970). Banana really shines, as his laid-back electric piano runs are ably complemented by some interesting contributions from both Young and Bauer. The centerpiece is the extended instrumental interplay that ebbs and flows as the groove builds incrementally.

The happy-go-lucky "Sugar Babe" sticks closely to the up-tempo ragtime version featured on Earth Music (1967). The band returns to Elephant Mountain for an easygoing and pastoral rendering of "Sunlight" that again allows for some well-tempered improvisation. The cover of Fred Neil's "The Dolphin" is another not-to-be-missed epic, as the Youngbloods never issued a studio version and once again a strong jazz influence dictates the performance's overall vibe.

"Get Together" was the band's best-known side and still holds up in what is a spirited reading with just enough alteration to make it a worthwhile inclusion. Ride the Wind concludes with a final track from Elephant Mountain, as the optimistic "Beautiful" is given a lengthy and funky workout.

When paired with the harder-edged Rock Festival, this live volume gives listeners another aural vantage point from which to rediscover the Youngbloods' unique country-rock leanings.



Sugar Babe
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=skxz1pcxMWo&index=2&list=PLS5i0SfKxaVl4oOhYX_q6etlh-p5jByKf

Sunlight
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eJbQyaNKxNo&index=3&list=PLS5i0SfKxaVl4oOhYX_q6etlh-p5jByKf

The Dolphin
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Xq41rtcN7aA&index=4&list=PLS5i0SfKxaVl4oOhYX_q6etlh-p5jByKf

Get Together
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y8GklVqeTDE&index=5&list=PLS5i0SfKxaVl4oOhYX_q6etlh-p5jByKf

Beautiful
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-dfiWjursS4&index=6&list=PLS5i0SfKxaVl4oOhYX_q6etlh-p5jByKf



________________________________________________

The actual writing of a song usually comes in the form of a realisation.
I can't contrive a song. Ð GENE CLARK

Edited by - lemonade kid on 06/05/2016 14:49:54
  Previous Topic Topic Next Topic  
 New Topic  Reply to Topic
 Printer Friendly
Jump To:
Messageboard For Love Fans © 2004 Torben Skott Go To Top Of Page
Powered By: Snitz Forums 2000 Version 3.4.06