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Tomorrow Today

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Download links and information about Tomorrow Today by Tim Hardin, York. This album was released in 1970 and it belongs to Rock, Blues Rock, Progressive Rock, Pop genres. It contains 15 tracks with total duration of 01:06:10 minutes.

Artist: Tim Hardin, York
Release date: 1970
Genre: Rock, Blues Rock, Progressive Rock, Pop
Tracks: 15
Duration: 01:06:10
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Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Tomorrow Today 3:36
2. 100 Years from Now 2:44
3. I'm Lost 8:23
4. Drinking My Wine 4:45
5. Candlelight 4:37
6. Beautiful Day 2:32
7. Mountains of Sand 6:45
8. Can't Keep a Good Man Down 6:23
9. Listen Everyone 4:06
10. All I See Is You 3:23
11. Mullberry Place 4:30
12. Sunday Morning 3:35
13. Rock 'N' Roll Music 3:52
14. Can't Find My Way Home 2:37
15. Just a Case of Time 4:22

Details

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Hardin & York's debut album was quite competent yet derivative early progressive rock, and derivative of Traffic in particular. At least, however, it came by its influences quite honestly, Pete York having drummed behind Steve Winwood in the Spencer Davis Group, and Eddie Hardin having joined the Spencer Davis Group after Winwood left. And the duo does get quite a lot of sound out of their keyboards and drums, although they had plenty of backup from some session musicians. Hardin sings and writes uncannily like Winwood circa Traffic's "Forty Thousand Headmen" period, but while that's a good standard to shoot for, therein also lies the problem: it's not quite as good as the Winwood-paced Traffic, and certainly not as original. All that noted, if you're looking for something in the mold of Traffic-lite and keeping your expectations realistically modest, this is pretty decent stuff. It might be a tad more rooted in soul-pop than Traffic, but it doesn't suffer for that. Hardin's vocals are impressively rich and gritty, and his piano and organ quite skillful. [The 2005 CD reissue on RPM adds historical liner notes and four bonus cuts from the same sessions. These are of the same respectable level of the rest of the album, if a little more sparsely produced and gospel-rock-oriented, with the exception of an unnecessary cover of Chuck Berry's "Rock and Roll Music."]