Posts Tagged ‘Jack Bruce’

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10 x 7” singles from the original rock power trio. Cream blazed an indelible trail through the latter half of the ‘60s with their challenging and exquisite mélange of blues, pop and psychedelia. These tracks offered a window to the wilder, widescreen adventures of their long players and here they are in glorious mono with specially designed picture sleeves; a fitting tribute to the skills of the three players, and especially to Jack Bruce, who left us in October 2014.

• Original mono versions, deleted since 60s. 10 x 7” singles, picked from Reaction, Atco and Polydor labels.

• Each 7” single comes complete with a brand new exclusively designed picture sleeve.

• Housed in a rigid ‘lid-and-tray’ box, full colour and matt lamination.

• Standard weight, classic dinked vinyl.

• Cream collectors dream!

Cream Wrap Up The Charts

Did you know that ‘Wrapping Paper’ was Cream’s very first single? If you didn’t, and you’ve never heard it we think you may be more than a little shocked. The band that became the model for just about every heavy rock band that followed in the immediate wake, sound anything but a rock band. Even allowing for the kind of off the wall reviews that appeared in 1960s pop papers this one is surprisingly accurate. This is the very first review of any Cream release, anywhere in the world.

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Released by Reaction Records in the UK early October 1966 this piece of whimsical jazz influenced pop was written by Jack Bruce and Pete Brown (Pete co-wrote ‘I Feel Free’, ‘White Room’ and ‘SWLABR’ with Jack and ‘Sunshine of Your Love’. With Eric Clapton). ‘Wrapping Paper’ does feature a guitar solo, but it’s far from a trademark blistering blues outing. According to Ginger Baker, “‘Wrapping Paper’ is the most appalling piece of shit I’ve ever heard in my life! I was totally against it, right from the start... Eric and I didn’t like it”

‘Wrapping Paper’ made the UK singles chart on 22 October 1966 and eventually staggered to No.34, but no higher. The b-side is ‘Cat’s Squirrel’, a song made popular by bluesman Doctor Ross, that was also the opening track on side 2 of Fresh Cream the band’s debut album that was released in early December 1966. Unsurprisingly given Ginger’s views it did not include ‘Wrapping Paper’: Fresh Cream did come out in Sweden with ‘Wrapping Paper’ included.

The very first advert for any Cream release…

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Single 1: Reaction 591007
Wrapping Paper 2.24
Cat’s Squirrel 2.59

Single 2: Reaction 591011
I Feel Free 2.48
NSU 2.43

Single 3: Atco 6522
Spoonful – Part I 2.25
Spoonful – Part II 2.28

Single 4: Reaction 591015
Strange Brew 2.45
Tales Of Brave Ulysses 2.50

Single 5: Polydor 56258
Anyone For Tennis 2.37
Pressed Rat And Warthog 3.12

Single 6: Polydor 56286
Sunshine Of Your Love 4.11
SWLABR 2.30

Single 7: Polydor 56300
White Room 4.58
Those Were The Days 2.52

Single 8: Atco 6646
Crossroads 4.16
Passing The Time 4.31

Single 9: Polydor 56315
Badge 2.43
What A Bringdown 3.56

Single 10: Atco 6708
Lawdy Mama 2.47
Sweet Wine 3.16

Arguably the supergroup to beat them all, Cream were formed during that incredible summer of 1966 amidst a period of huge artistic upheaval in British rock, with psychedelia beginning to infiltrate the mainstream. Eric Clapton, Jack Bruce and the estimable Ginger Baker pooled their talents, bringing skills perfected in the Yardbirds, John Mayall & The Bluesbreakers and the Graham Bond Organisation. It’s impossible to overstate the goodwill and praise heaped upon them by press and public alike and from the outset their studio music and live performances became a byword for excellence, enabling them to rival the The Who and The Rolling Stones as one of the most fruitful periods in British rock history started to make England swing.

Their albums and singles successes include – well everything. Consider that their third disc, Wheels of Fire, was Britain’s first Platinum selling double album. So they had impeccable progressive integrity. Yet they also knocked out wah-wah driven hits  ‘Sunshine of Your Love’, ‘I Feel Free’, ‘White Room’ and the sublime ‘Badge’, that featured George Harrison and kick-started another new chapter in the music business. They were also fashion icons, post-mod dandies of the underground. They were all over the scene.

Cream’s musical dexterity Eric Clapton’s epic guitar playing, Bruce’s jazz sculpted bass and impeccable vocals, and Ginger Baker’s virtuosity around his drum kit foreshadow the arrival of Led Zeppelin, The Jeff Beck Group and the whole second British Invasion of the late 1960s in America. Cream pioneered that. Considering they were only really together for just over two years they were incredibly prolific and became such a legend that their reunion dates in 2005 were as eagerly anticipated as those of Led Zep.

Rock and Roll Hall of Famers, individually and collectively, creators of seven Top 40 UK hits, holders of six consecutive Gold selling albums  Cream’s achievements are many and their legacy is to be a lasting influence on power trios, the beginnings of heavy metal and classic British blues rock – modern music full stop.

Eric Clapton’s presence as the pre-eminent British guitar player of his day meant that when he quit the Yardbirds there were already signs of the graffiti ‘Clapton is God’ adorning London walls. His friendship with Jack Bruce and Ginger Baker stemmed back to nights sitting in with the Graham Bond Organisation and at Baker’s instigation the trio was formed and readily named as a semi-jocular reference to their ‘cream of the crop’ reputations. In reality Cream also endured a long period of internal friction. Baker’s view that Cream might become a jazz-rock hybrid wasn’t really shared by the others who preferred to wander into psych or white blues and soul. That tension only made them sound better. After playing a club date and headlining the Windsor Jazz and Blues Festival, Cream were joined for an on-stage jam by Jimi Hendrix and suitably energised by his endorsement, the band began to get down to serious song writing.

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The debut Fresh Cream was recorded in London in the late summer of ’66 during a period of intense national euphoria following the England team’s victory at the World Cup Final and released at Christmas. Musically, Fresh Cream is a pointer to things to come. It combines elastic pop tunes like ‘N.S.U.’ with exploratory blues affairs: you can hear the participants sizing each other up on ‘Spoonful’ and ‘Toad’.That sense of boundaries being pushed is significant, since most other records of the time were based around some kind of democratic structure. Cream sounded like they were about to break out and go nuts.

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This they did on Disraeli Gears (1967), a fully-fledged psychedelic and hard rock masterpiece knocked out in short order in New York’s Atlantic Studio during May ’67. Pulsating tracks ‘Sunshine of Your Love’ and ‘Strange Brew’ were epic enough when heard on the radio, but takes of ‘Tales of Brave Ulysses’, Baker’s ‘Blue Condition’ and ‘Outside Woman Blues’ continued to break down barriers. Bruce had brought the lyricist Peter Brown into the fold so while they continued to mine traditional material and give it a fresh Cream slant they also had a poetic slant to contemplate now. ‘Strange Brew’ was actually a co-write between Eric and the American husband and wife team of Felix Pappalardi and Gail Collins (they also penned ‘World of Pain’). While the trio combined to grand effect on the harmonised ‘Mother’s Lament’. A calm before the storm?

Disraeli Gears would go Platinum, as would their third album Wheels of Fire. This double is half-studio (London, August ‘67) and half-live from the West Coast (March ’68), where the San Francisco elite (the Dead and Airplane included) feted Cream. Pappalardi was now brought in to produce and he extracted marvellous performances. The first part of the pact includes such revered neo-metal items as ‘White Room’ and ‘Politician’ (Bruce and Brown in tandem) while the second album allows listeners to hear Cream in their expanded pomp, jamming around ‘Crossroads’, ‘Spoonful’, ‘Traintime’ and ‘Toad’. Each band member gets ample room to shine and this is generally considered to be one of the most inspired and vital recordings of this or any other epoch. It is totally recommended.

Wouldn’t you know it; just as their star burns brightest, Cream decided to disband. But that was the spirit of the era. Musicians were restless and keen to explore new ground. Even so they left behind a generous farewell gift, the album Goodbye (1969). Having given their notice of a slightly protracted farewell tour, Cream played at the Royal Albert Hall and the Forum in Los Angeles, amongst other venues. Three of the songs on the disc are taken from a show at the Forum, making a seamless transition from the previous set.

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The luscious ‘Badge’ which features some of Clapton’s most thrilling guitar work also has a rhythm guitar and vocal cameo from George Harrison, and the poignantly titled ‘What a Bringdown’ bring this chapter to a close. Goodbye is a very esoteric set indeed.

But that’s by no means the end . Live Cream Volume 1 and Live Cream Volume 2 compile their Fillmore West, Winterland and Oakland Coliseum shows from the American 1968 tour, but with some subtle differences that make them both hugely worthwhile. The first disc features ‘Hey Lawdy Mama’ done after the style of Buddy Guy and Junior Wells, and a precursor to ‘Strange Brew’, while the re-mastered editions allow one to explore ‘Deserted Cities of the Heart’ and the strung out version of James Bracken’s ‘Steppin’ Out’.
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just as invaluable is the superb BBC Cream Sessions (recorded between 1966-1968) since this captures them in a neutral environment, often showcasing their material for the first time to fans. The first five tracks are taken from a November ’66 performance at the Playhouse on Lower Regent Street, and were aired on radio even before the debut album Fresh Cream became available. There are also pieces from Top Gear, the rare Guitar Club take on ‘Crossroads’ (done for the Home Service) and three live in the studio recordings made for the World Service. A most unusual and desirable artifact – this 26-track disc is a valuable historical document.

The Very Best of Cream and Those Were The Days are a classic compilation and a classic compilation plus. The second collection is a 4-CD marvel stuffed full of rarities, demos, unreleased material and single B-sides. We’re digging on the long form ‘Toad’, freaking out to the version of ‘Sunshine of Your Love’ they cut for the Glen Campbell Show in 1968, the demo on ‘Weird of Hermiston’ and the flipside track ‘Anyone for Tennis’. There’s so much to discover here. As a supplementary, we also have The Cream of Clapton, a more than nifty run through Eric’s work as a solo artist, founder of Derek and the Dominos and axe man incarnate with the Cream boys.

the Former bass guitar player and a great harmonica player Jack Bruce who formed the influential  band  Cream along with Eric Clapton and Ginger Baker, Bruce who wrote some of the band biggest songs “Sunshine Of your Love ” and “I Feel Free” the band split up after only two years together in 1968.After Cream Bruce played jazz with artists like John Mclaughlin and drummer Tony Williams and rock musicians Lou Reed and Frank Zappa.Cream reformed for brief concerts in 1995 and 2003,   Bruce born in Glasgow started playing bass as a teenager and dropped out of music school because he was not allowed to play jazz. Bruce also recorded many solo albums  with the last one released last March. there are report he was suffering from a liver disease.