Genre question - Country Joe and the Fish
gambit
906 Posts
I see listings on ebay for C.J. and the Fish as psych, but I have one of their LPs from 1970 that doesn't have much psych elements to it. Then again, in '75, on the Together[/b] LP, psych elements come into play. Are they considered a psych rock band?I don't know much about the band and have been doing research on them. I just wanted to prod and see if anyone could clarify this for me. I only have 3 of their LPs. I dig them a lot though.Oh, here's a clip of the Together[/b] LP to jog your memory:Click here doggy.
Comments
Classic psych:
Check out the title.
I like this even more:
After these two albums
I have them filed under rock braeks near Savoy Brown. Def not psych, but maybe I haven't heard the right LPs.
Aka PSYCH[/b]
well, let's just say, I wouldn't waste a tab listening to Country Joe...
Together[/b] is one of my favorite albums by them, even though apparently a lot of Country Joe fans have said otherwise. But you have the studio version of "Rock & Soul Music" on there, the "Good Guy/Bad Guy Cheer", "The Harlem Song", "The Streets Of Your Town".
I think Country Joe McDonald's political side slightly moves them out of what is considered "psych rock", because while they did songs like "Marijuana", they also mixed things up, as a lot of bands of that era did, like a heavier Turtles.
Loosely, they would be called "psych rock", just as much as Jefferson Airplane I guess.
- J
Maybe not, but if I was on a long trip I would certainly put on "Eastern Jam" and let it spiral into "Colors For Susan."
"and, I will work you, son!"
You supply the acid.
I consider the line between hippie rock and psych to usually be a solid and easily definable one
"Gimme a 'F'...Gimme a 'U'...Gimme a 'C'...Gimme a 'K'...What's that spell?!?...What's that spell?!?"
Well, let's hear it then...
its a lot better than that rambling instrumental they did in MONTEREY POP
That was so-so. I had been a Woodstock fan for years before I ever saw Monterey Pop[/b]. However, the 3DVD Criterion box set for Monterey Pop[/b] is hard to top. They'd have to come out with a 10DVD Woodstock[/b] box set, which I would buy. I would like to see the original 8 hour edit of the film.
CJ had a song on his solo lp about hitchhicking and getting high that I really liked back when I was 16. I remember it being pretty sikeadelic, but who knows what it would sound like today.
Dan
I thought Monterey Pop was hipper than Woodstock, hands down. Monterey had more diversity. Never again would you be able to see the Grateful Dead and Lou Rawls on the same program.
you know what-I'm actually feeling that! I recently saw some deleted performances from the montery pop film. they are so clearly on acid!
the deleted mike bloomfield clip is insane too.
So was this a performance with the Electric Flag? I'd like to see that.
In the movie, the only time you see Bloomfield is during Ravi Shankar's set, when the camera zooms in on Bloomfield's face, obviously impressed.
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