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The Youngbloods - Elephant Mountain (CD)

Elephant Mountain
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Album Details: Elephant Mountain

Release Date:10/09/2001
Label:Demon Records
UPC:027726027623

Track List: Elephant Mountain

  1. Darkness, Darkness
  2. Smug
  3. On Sir Francis Drake
  4. Sunlight
  5. Double Sunlight
  6. Beautiful
  7. Turn It Over
  8. Rain Song (Don't Let The Rain Br...
  1. Trillium
  2. Quicksand
  3. Black Mountain Breakdown
  4. Sham
  5. Ride The Wind
  6. Pool Hall Song
  7. Beautiful

Other Available Formats: Elephant Mountain

Pro Reviews: Elephant Mountain

  • All Music Guide

    Elephant Mountain (1969) is the Youngbloods' third long player and marks their debut as a trio -- featuring Jesse Colin Young (bass/guitar/vocals), Joe Bauer (drums) and Lowell “Banana" Levinger(keyboards) -- after the departure of co-founder Jerry Corbitt (guitar/vocals). Although the band initially formed out of the early 1960s Northeast folk scene, by the time this set was issued they had relocated to the pastoral Northern California county of Marin. Blending affective pop rock melodies and lyrics with their good time jug band roots, the Youngbloods became instantly embraced by the already blossoming Bay Area music community. This effort contains some of the band's strongest material to date building on the considerable momentum of their 1967 self-titled release and further enhanced by their remarkable instrumental capabilities. Young's contributions are particularly notable as he vacillates between the edgy and electric “Darkness Darkness", to the light and earthy “Sunlight" and “R...ide The Wind", or the bouncy tales “Smug" and “Beautiful". Banana honours his new surroundings with the gorgeous and catchy instrumental “On Sir Francis Drake" -- named after a heavily-travelled Bay Area motorway. On this cut the textural combination of electric piano and harpsichord provide a jazzy counterbalance to Young's propulsive bass lines and Bauer's nimble drumming. The “Rain Song (Don't Let The Rain Bring You Down)" is left over from Corbitt's tenure and recalls the earlier Youngbloods' sound which was more akin to the Sopwith Camel or the Lovin' Spoonful than the trio's current folk-rock leanings. “Trillium" is a hidden gem of a jam that examines the band's remarkably strong improvisational interaction. “Sham" is perhaps the most straight-forward rocker on the album and recalls Bay Area acts like the Sal Valentino-led Stoneground. The disc concludes with the sublime “Ride The Wind" which sports a very sophisticated and slightly Latin flavoured melody. A nearly ten minute live rendering is the title track to the group's second live offering Ride The Wind' (1971). - Lindsay Planer, All Music Guide Read more Less

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Biography

The Youngbloods

The Youngbloods could not be considered a major '60s band, but they were capable of offering some mighty pleasurable folk-rock in the late '60s, and produced a few great tunes along the way. One of the better groups to emerge from the East Coast in the mid-'60s, they would temper their blues and jug band influences with gentle California psychedelia, particularly after ... Read more