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The Chelsea Sessions 1967

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Download links and information about The Chelsea Sessions 1967 by The Incredible String Band. This album was released in 1997 and it belongs to Rock, World Music, Songwriter/Lyricist, Psychedelic, Folk genres. It contains 13 tracks with total duration of 49:02 minutes.

Artist: The Incredible String Band
Release date: 1997
Genre: Rock, World Music, Songwriter/Lyricist, Psychedelic, Folk
Tracks: 13
Duration: 49:02
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Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Lover Man (The Chelsea Demo Sessions, 1967) 2:55
2. Born In Your Town (The Chelsea Demo Sessions, 1967) 4:27
3. First Girl I Loved (The Chelsea Demo Sessions, 1967) 4:56
4. Gently Tender (The Chelsea Demo Sessions, 1967) 4:44
5. Little Cloud (The Chelsea Demo Sessions, 1967) 3:59
6. Blues for the Muse (The Chelsea Demo Sessions, 1967) 3:46
7. The Eyes of Hate (The Chelsea Demo Sessions, 1967) 3:56
8. The Mad Hatter's Song (The Chelsea Demo Sessions, 1967) 4:55
9. Alice Is a Long Time Gone (The Chelsea Demo Sessions, 1967) 2:52
10. See Your Face and Know You 2:34
11. Frutch (The Chelsea Demo Sessions, 1967) 3:52
12. The Iron Stone (The Chelsea Demo Sessions, 1967) 3:24
13. God Dog (The Chelsea Demo Sessions, 1967) 2:42

Details

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These 13 demos were recorded in early 1967 shortly before the making of the ISB's second album, The 5000 Spirits or the Layers of the Onion (though the liner notes speculate that "God Dog" might date from later than the other tracks). Only six of these actually showed up on 5000 Spirits, albeit in different, more produced versions; in fact, most of Robin Williamson's compositions on this release are performed solo by the writer. This gives fans a chance to hear the tracks (including their most famous song, "The First Girl I Loved") in acoustic, folkier incarnations, with slightly different lyrics on a couple of tunes. Of the remaining songs, "Lover Man" was recorded by Al Stewart on his debut album, "God Dog" by Shirley Collins in 1969, and "The Iron Stone" by ISB themselves on 1968's Wee Tam and the Big Huge album, while the others are unique to this disc. This unused material (the fidelity throughout is good, by the way) is both stylistically consistent and aesthetically up to par with what the ISB were recording on their early albums, and thus recommended to fans of the group. [The 2000 Pig's Whisker reissue features one bonus track.]