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01 |
Intro/Lazy Poker Blues |
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03:48 |
02 |
My Baby's Sweeter |
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03:53 |
03 |
Love That Burns |
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04:15 |
04 |
Talk To Me Baby |
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03:37 |
05 |
Everyday I Have The Blues - 1 |
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04:13 |
06 |
Jeremy's Contribution to Doo Wop |
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03:34 |
07 |
Everyday I Have The Blues - 2 |
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04:23 |
08 |
Death Bells |
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05:05 |
09 |
(Watch Out For Yourself) Mr Jones |
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03:35 |
10 |
Man Of Action |
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05:21 |
11 |
Do You Give A Damn For Me |
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03:45 |
12 |
Man Of The World |
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03:28 |
13 |
Like It This Way |
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03:17 |
14 |
Blues in B Flat Minor |
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04:16 |
15 |
Someone's Gonna Get Their Head Kicked In Tonight |
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02:58 |
16 |
Although The Sun is Shining |
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02:24 |
17 |
Showbiz Blues |
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06:51 |
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01 |
Underway |
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16:15 |
02 |
The Madge Sessions - 1 |
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17:21 |
03 |
The Madge Sessions - 2 |
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02:42 |
04 |
(That's What) I Want To Know |
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03:54 |
05 |
Oh Well |
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02:47 |
06 |
Love It Seems |
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02:39 |
07 |
Mighty Cold |
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02:28 |
08 |
Fast Talking Woman Blues |
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04:02 |
09 |
Tell Me From The Start |
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02:02 |
10 |
October Jam - 1 |
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05:01 |
11 |
October Jam - 2 |
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01:57 |
12 |
The Green Manalishi (with The Two Prong Crown) |
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04:43 |
13 |
World In Harmony |
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03:28 |
14 |
Farewell |
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02:18 |
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Country |
United Kingdom |
Original Release Date |
1998 |
Cat. Number |
RDPCD 14 |
Spars |
DDD |
Sound |
Stereo |
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Date of Release Oct 13, 1998 inprint
AMG EXPERT REVIEW: Two long CDs' worth of outtakes, alternate versions and full-length versions from the Peter Green era, most in exemplary sound quality. Although much of this is interesting, and it's occasionally very good, it resembles Peter Green's Fleetwood Mac Live at the BBC in its unevenness, both in aesthetic quality and in stylistic tone. One is struck by how much the numbers featuring Green's singing and songwriting surpass those in which the other guitarists come to the fore. When Jeremy Spencer's in charge, it means you get 1950s rock pastiches and blues satires (though he does an okay Elmore James schtick with "Talk to Me Baby" and "My Baby Is Sweeter"). These aren't without their amusing points - there's the entire session of songs that would have made a bonus EP with Then Play On, on which Spencer does fairly humorous impressions of Alexis Korner and John Mayall - but deathless art it's not. Green shines on a live version of "Oh Well" (everything else here, incidentally, is from the studio) and alternates of "Showbiz Blues" and "Love that Burns." There are also alternates of "Man of the World" and "The Green Manalishi," though frankly these aren't so different from the familiar renditions that they'll jar you into taking notice. Some of the cuts are nothing more than shapeless jams or instrumental tracks with ideas that sometimes got pumped up into full tunes on official albums. So it's kind of like having a high-quality, easily available bootleg of the Green-era Mac, accent on the Then Play On era. But those who like that period of Fleetwood Mac a lot will want to hear this, its luster enhanced by a 48-page booklet with an essay by Green biographer Martin Celmins. - Richie Unterberger
1. Intro/Lazy Poker Blues [Unissued Version] (Adams/Green)
2. My Baby's Sweet [Unissued Version] (Dixon)
3. Love That Burns [Unissued Version] (Adams/Green)
4. Talk to Me Baby [Unissued Version] (James)
5. Every Day I Have the Blues, Pt. 1 [Unissued Version] (Chatman)
6. Jeremy's Contribution to Doo Wop [#] (Spencer)
7. Every Day I Have the Blues, Pt. 2 [Unissued Version] (Chatman)
8. Death Bells [#] (Hopkins)
9. (Watch Out for Yourself) Mr. Jones [#] (Spencer)
10. Man of Action [#] (Spencer)
11. Do You Give a Damn for Me [Unissued Version] (Green)
12. Man of the World [Unissued Version] (Green)
13. Like It This Way [Unissued Version] (Kirwan)
14. Blues in B Flat Minor [Unissued Instrumental] (Green)
15. Someone's Gonna Get Their Head [Full Length Version] (Spencer)
16. Although the Sun Is Shining [Unissued Version] (Kirwan)
17. Showbiz Blues [Unissued Version] (Green)
18. Underway [Full Length Version] (Green)
19. The Madge Sessions (Pt. 1) [Full Length Version] (Fleetwood/McVie)
20. The Madge Sessions (Pt. 2) [Unissued Instrumental] (Fleetwood/McVie)
21. (That's What) I Want to Know [#] (Spencer)
22. Oh Well [Alternate Version] (Green)
23. Love It Seems [#] (Kirwan)
24. Mighty Cold [#] (Pomas/Shuman)
25. Fast Talking Woman Blues [Unissued Instrumental] (Green)
26. Tell Me from the Start [#] (Kirwin)
27. October Jam (Pt. 1) [Unissued Instrumental] (Green/Kirwan/McVie)
28. October Jam (Pt. 2) [Unissued Instrumental] (Green/Kirwan/McVie)
29. The Green Manalishi [Unissued Version] (Green)
30. World in Harmony [Unissued Version] (Green/Kirwan)
31. Farewell [Unissued Demo] (Kirwan)
Mick Fleetwood
Danny Kirwan
Jeremy Spencer
John McVie
Peter Green
1998 CD Receiver 14
The Vaudeville Years Of Fleetwood Mac: 1968 - 1970
Format : Import 2 CD Set
Released : 13 October 1998
Label : Receiver Records RDPCD 14
Michael Leonard, The Guitar Magazine, 11-98
Two CDs of cast-offs, rehearsals and muck-abouts from the Peter Green era. This was the period when Fleetwood Mac was shuffling off its purist's blues incarnation in favour of Peter Green's sophisticated and eerie pop compositions. Included are tentative stabs at Drifting (here named Fast Talking Woman Blues) and much of the sessions for the wonderful Then Play On - the Working For Madge jam, Underway, Coming Your Way, Oh Well and so on. There's also an unembellished, unfinished take of that apogee of British blues-psych, Green Manalishi; the very first attempts at Man Of The World and several mirth breaks for Jeremy Spencer's rock'n'roll pastiches. These include a posh-blues piss-take of Alexis Korner and the always amusing B-side, Somebody's Gonna Get Their Head Kicked In Tonight, featuring Elvis as a malevolent Hell's Angel. It's a rag-bag selection to be sure, but Mac die-hards will find it fascinating. (Jim Irvin, MOJO Magazine, October 1998)
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Fascinating 2CD of offcuts from Peter Green's brief creative peak. Forget the misleading title: blues-boom Fleetwood Mac enjoyed a laugh but this set of outtakes casts valuable light on Peter Green's troubled transition from sensitive guitarist to acid-led visionary. Mostly from the time of Then Play On (the first - and last - flowering of that creative leap), here are lengthy instrumental explorations with some great band playing, previously unissued songs, demos (complete with false starts and larking about), alternate versions (Man Of The World, the disturbing The Green Manalishi) and a live cut of the hugely innovative Oh Well. Truer to the title are some Jeremy Spencer send-ups, including a shelved EP of a club revue which includes some vicious parodies. A bit of a hotchpotch but engrossing listening, especially in the light of the brutally detailed booklet. (Ian Cranna, Q Magazine, November 1998)
Fascinating Mac legends are filled in
Reviewer: John Fitzgerald, Human resources staff database assistant July 19, 2001
The first four recordings heard here are "liveish" BBC style recordings that although they sound like they are in mono, are good listening especially "Love that burns" as it's stripped free of it's horn section which was included on the "Mr. wonderful" version and tended to be slightly intrusive but one can now appreciate the song even more here. However, a minor complaint is that the "Intro" part of "Intro/Lazy poker blues" is nothing more than a snippet from "Oh well (part 2)" which is rather redundant. I would've preferred it just to have started with "Lazy poker blues" without that tagged onto the beginning. The studio recordings start with a bang. Just when we seemed to be lead to believe that the infamous EP of Jeremy's that was to accompany "Then play on" to compensate for his lack of an appearance on that album was nothing more than a rumor and that it was in fact his solo album that was to be the accompanying item, here's the lost EP, in all it's glory. Without giving away too much of the surprise, Jeremy starts each song with a funny introduction and he mocks flower power rock and John Mayall among others. It works just as well as those songs recorded for his debut solo album. Fans of that album will love this. Later, you get to hear the unedited "Someone's gonna get their head kicked in tonight" which doesn't fade and has a few bodily noises and four letter words that were not considered acceptable for a single at the time and that would probably apply these days too. Peter has got two great versions of "Show biz blues" albeit with different titles as well as an early instrumental workout of "Before the beginning" billed here as "Blues in B flat minor" which is most haunting. Danny is not to be forgotten either as on disc two, he's featured on "Farewell" which sounds like an early demo of "Earl Grey", "Love it seems" which has a "When you say" feel, "Tell me from the start" is a big band style whimsical tune and two exciting jams billed as "October jam (1 & 2)" the latter is a short but rocking straightforward number while the former is a lot looser and has a news bulletin jingle rhythm style but that's some news I wouldn't mind hearing! There's alot of Green greatness on disc two as well. "The Madge sessions - 1" is an uncut tape which includes most of what ended up as "Searching for Madge" & "Fighting for Madge" but at least half of which has not been heard previously. Intriguing that at approximately the 1249 mark, when one of the familiar "Searching for Madge" sections ends, one can hear what is known in the taping world as a "punch out" in the tapes. One easily imagines that this was the tape Peter used to decide what would make the final cut for "Then play on" from these jams and the tape was probably stopped and left there for many years causing the deterioration in the tape. Maybe not, but it's fascinating to ponder such legends. This is just as exciting to hear in it's entirety after all these years as is the complete 16 minute "Underway". This tape shows how hard it must have been to decide which portions of it to use originally. Surprisingly, "The Madge sessions - 2" is a quiet two minute instrumental doodle which is not what one would expect from the title especially after hearing the white noise of number 1 but still keeps you on the edge of your seat throughout. There are many other great recordings available on here, I've just tried to highlight a few wonderful moments. This is great classic early Mac that never "was", but now can "be" in your collection. An essential purchase for those who want the early Mac
to play on. They do here in style.