Climax Blues Band A Lot Of Bottle Full Album Free Mp3 Download UPDATED

Climax Blues Band A Lot Of Bottle Full Album Free Mp3 Download

British blues rock band

Climax Dejection Band

The band in 1974

The band in 1974

Groundwork information
Also known as The Climax Chicago Dejection Band (1968–1970), Climax Chicago (1971-1972)
Origin Stafford, England
Genres Blues rock, soft rock
Years agile 1967–nowadays
Labels Harvest/EMI
Sire/Warner Bros. Records
Virgin Records
Major League Productions
Website climaxbluesband.com
Members George Glover
Roy Adams
Lester Hunt
Neil Simpson
Chris Aldridge
Graham Dee
By members Colin Cooper
Pete Haycock
Derek Holt
George Newsome
Arthur Wood
Richard Jones
Anton Farmer
Peter Filleul
John Cuffley
Nicky Hopkins
Dave Marquee
Henry Spinetti
John "Rhinoceros" Edwards
Jeff Rich
Roger Inniss
Johnny Pugh

Climax Blues Band (originally known as The Climax Chicago Blues Band) is a British blues rock band. The band was formed in Stafford, England, in 1967 by vocalist and harmonica histrion Colin Cooper (1939–2008), guitarist and vocaliser Pete Haycock (1951–2013), guitarist Derek Holt (b. 1949), bassist and keyboardist Richard Jones (b. 1949), drummer George Newsome (b. 1947), and keyboardist Arthur Wood (1929–2005).[one]

History [edit]

In 1972 the grouping shortened its name to Climax Dejection Band.[2] The band has released at least 19 albums and had a Acme x hit in the U.k. with "Couldn't Become It Right".[3] That song and "I Dear You" were also hits in the U.s.; "Couldn't Get It Right" reached No. iii on the Billboard Hot 100 in 1977, and "I Dear Yous" peaked at No. 12 in 1981.

Jones left the group in 1969 and Holt began playing bass.[2] The ring switched labels to Harvest Records in 1970 and subsequent records had a more rock-oriented feel.[iv] John Cuffley replaced Newsome in 1971.

Albums issued in the 1970s include FM/Alive (1973), a double gear up recorded at a concert in New York,[5] and the studio albums Postage Anthology (1975) and Aureate Plated (1976), featuring the unmarried "Couldn't Get It Right".[two] In the 1970s, the band's concerts in the US were attended by up to 20,000 people.[6] By 1981 the band was moving towards a popular-rock sound.[6] Holt and Cuffley left in 1983.

A previously unknown recording of a live operation was released as Climax Blues Ring/World Tour 1976 by the Major League Productions (MLP) tape characterization.

The album Sample and Hold was recorded for Virgin Records in 1983 by Haycock, Cooper, and Glover, with a rhythm section composed of the session musicians Dave Marquee and Henry Spinetti.[7] A follow-upwardly album was in the works, only Cooper bowed out, citing personal reasons. Haycock went on to record several solo projects, the beginning of which was the anthology Total Climax, with his band, Pete Haycock's Climax; this ring toured extensively in Europe, including Communist East Frg, and conducted a well-received tour in Australia. After that, Haycock was asked past his former Climax Blues Band manager, Miles Copeland, to record an instrumental album, Guitar and Son, and the alive album Night of the Guitars (from the tour of the same name) for the I.R.S. No Speak label. After that tour, Haycock teamed upward with the guitarist Steve Hunter and erstwhile Climax Blues bandmate Derek Holt to tape the album H Factor. He was after recruited by Bev Bevan to become a member of Electric Lite Orchestra Office Ii and recorded and toured with that group from 1990 onwards. He also started his moving-picture show score career at this time, playing the lead on Hans Zimmer's score to Thelma and Louise. He also performed on the Night of the Guitars tours, which included Holt on bass, keyboards and occasional vocals.

Holt wrote "I Love Y'all", ane of the Climax Blues Band'southward biggest hits. It is included on the Climax Dejection Band double album, 25 Years 1968–1993, released by the German label Repertoire in 1993. "I Love You" still gets over twenty,000 radio hits a year in the U.s.a. and was used in Finn Taylor's 2002 film Cherish and in Kevin Smith'southward 2008 film Zach and Miri make a Porno. In 1983 Holt joined drummer Brendan Day and Nektar guitarist Roye Albrighton to record a self-titled album for the A&Thou characterization.

In 1985, Cooper and Glover recruited guitarist Lester Hunt, drummer Roy Adams, and original member Derek Holt to record the Climax Blues Ring album Desperate Steps, and this line-up toured in support of the album in the UK, Europe, and America.[viii] [six] The new line-up presently became established with Cooper, Glover, Hunt, Adams and Neil Simpson in the early 1990s, releasing the live album Blues from the Attic in 1993 and Large Blues in 2004.[one] [9]

Colin Cooper (born 7 October 1939) died of cancer on three July 2008, at age 68. He is survived past his wife and two children.[half-dozen] [ten] He wanted the band to go on, as the other musicians had all been long-serving (Glover since 1980, Adams and Chase since 1985, and Simpson since 1991). Cooper was replaced by vocaliser and saxophone and harmonica histrion Johnny Pugh, who retired in 2012, and was replaced in turn past vocalist Graham Dee and saxophone thespian Chris Aldridge. Pete Haycock died on 30 October 2013, at age 62.[v]

Currently, the band continues to tour without any remaining original members.[11]

Lineups [edit]

1968–1969 1969–1970 1970–1973 1973–1975
  • Colin Cooper – vocals, saxophone, harmonica, guitar
  • Pete Haycock – guitar, vocals, bass
  • Derek Holt – guitar, bass, keyboards
  • Richard Jones – bass, keyboards
  • George Newsome – drums
  • Arthur Forest – keyboards
  • Colin Cooper – vocals, saxophone, harmonica, guitar
  • Pete Haycock – guitar, vocals, bass
  • Derek Holt – bass, guitar, keyboards
  • George Newsome – drums
  • Arthur Wood – keyboards
  • Anton Farmer – keyboards
  • Colin Cooper – vocals, saxophone, harmonica, guitar
  • Pete Haycock – guitar, vocals, bass
  • Derek Holt – bass, guitar, keyboards
  • George Newsome – drums
  • Arthur Wood – keyboards
  • Peter Filleul – keyboards
  • Colin Cooper – vocals, saxophone, harmonica, guitar
  • Pete Haycock – guitar, vocals, bass
  • Derek Holt – bass, guitar, keyboards, vocals
  • Peter Filleul – keyboards
  • John Cuffley – drums
1975–1977 1977–1978 1978–1979 1979–1980
  • Colin Cooper – vocals, saxophone, harmonica, guitar
  • Pete Haycock – guitar, vocals, bass
  • Derek Holt – bass, guitar, keyboards, vocals
  • John Cuffley – drums
  • Richard Jones – keyboards, guitar, bass
  • Colin Cooper – vocals, saxophone, harmonica, guitar
  • Pete Haycock – guitar, vocals, bass
  • Derek Holt – bass, guitar, keyboards, vocals
  • John Cuffley – drums
  • Peter Filleul – keyboards
  • Colin Cooper – vocals, saxophone, harmonica, guitar
  • Pete Haycock – guitar, vocals, bass
  • Derek Holt – bass, guitar, keyboards, vocals
  • John Cuffley – drums
  • Peter Filleul – keyboards
  • Nicky Hopkins – keyboards
  • Colin Cooper – vocals, saxophone, harmonica, guitar
  • Pete Haycock – guitar, vocals, bass
  • Derek Holt – bass, guitar, keyboards, vocals
  • John Cuffley – drums
  • Peter Filleul – keyboards
1980–1983 1983 1983–1985 1985
  • Colin Cooper – vocals, saxophone, harmonica, guitar
  • Pete Haycock – guitar, vocals, bass
  • Derek Holt – bass, guitar, keyboards, vocals
  • John Cuffley – drums
  • George Glover – keyboards, backing vocals
  • Colin Cooper – vocals, saxophone, harmonica, guitar
  • Pete Haycock – guitar, vocals, bass
  • George Glover – keyboards, backing vocals
  • Dave Marquee – bass
  • Henry Spinetti – drums
  • Colin Cooper – vocals, saxophone, harmonica, guitar
  • Pete Haycock – guitar, vocals, bass
  • George Glover – keyboards, backing vocals
  • John "Rhino" Edwards – bass
  • Jeff Rich – drums
  • Colin Cooper – vocals, saxophone, harmonica, guitar
  • George Glover – keyboards, backing vocals
  • Roy Adams – drums
  • Lester Hunt – guitar, backing vocals
  • Roger Inniss – bass
1985–1991 1991–2008 2008–2012 2012–present
  • Colin Cooper – vocals, saxophone, harmonica, guitar
  • George Glover – keyboards, backing vocals
  • Roy Adams – drums
  • Lester Hunt – guitar, backing vocals
  • Derek Holt – bass
  • Colin Cooper – vocals, saxophone, harmonica, guitar
  • George Glover – keyboards, backing vocals
  • Roy Adams – drums
  • Lester Hunt – guitar, backing vocals
  • Neil Simpson – bass
  • George Glover – keyboards, backing vocals
  • Roy Adams – drums
  • Lester Chase – guitar, backing vocals
  • Neil Simpson – bass
  • Johnny Pugh – vocals, saxophone, harmonica
  • George Glover – keyboards, backing vocals
  • Roy Adams – drums
  • Lester Chase – guitar, backing vocals
  • Neil Simpson – bass
  • Graham Dee – vocals
  • Chris Aldridge - saxophone

Timeline [edit]

Discography [edit]

Albums [edit]

Yr Title Chart positions
AUS
[12]
CAN
US
[13]
Britain
[iii] [14]
1969 The Climax Chicago Blues Band
Plays On
197
1970 A Lot of Canteen
1971 Tightly Knit
1972 Rich Human
150
1973 FM/Alive
107
1974 Sense of Direction
33[15]
37
1975 Postage Album
69
1976 Gold Plated
45[xvi]
27
56
1978 Shine On
59[17]
71
1979 Real to Reel
170
1980 Flight the Flag
65
75
1981 Lucky for Some
1983 Sample and Concur
1988 Drastic Steps
1993 Dejection from the Cranium
1994 25 Years 1968–1993
2004 Large Blues
2011 Climax Blues Band World Tour 1976
2014 Security Alert: The Live Bootleg
2018 Tempus Fugit 4-track EP: Album Sampler
2019 Easily of Time
"—" denotes releases that did non nautical chart or were not released in that territory.

Albums (guest advent) [edit]

  • Three'south a Crowd, Tarney/Spencer Band (1978)

Singles [edit]

Year Title Nautical chart positions
AUS
[12]
Tin can
Can Air-conditioning
United states of america
[thirteen]
US
AC
[18]
U.k.
[xiv]
1969 "Like Uncle Charlie"
1971 "Cubano Chant"
"Reap What I've Sowed"
"Towards the Sun"
1972 "Mole on the Dole"
1973 "Shake Your Love"
1974 "Sense of Direction"
1975 "Using the Power"
1976 "Couldn't Go It Correct"
8
38
iii
43
10
1978 "Makin' Love"
91
"Mistress Moonshine"
1979 "Children of the Nighttime Time"
1980 "I Beloved Yous"
59
14
thirty
12
20
"Gotta Have More Dearest"
77
47
1981 "Darlin'"
1982 "Friends in High Places"
1983 "Listen to the Night"
"—" denotes releases that did not chart or were not released in that territory.

References [edit]

  1. ^ a b "Biography past Jason Ankeny". AllMusic . Retrieved 28 August 2009.
  2. ^ a b c Colin Larkin, ed. (1992). The Guinness Encyclopedia of Popular Music (Get-go ed.). Guinness Publishing. p. 507. ISBN0-85112-939-0.
  3. ^ a b Roberts, David (2006). British Hit Singles & Albums (19th ed.). London: Guinness World Records. p. 110. ISBNi-904994-10-5.
  4. ^ "NME biography". NME. Archived from the original on 21 February 2010. Retrieved 28 August 2009.
  5. ^ a b Pierre Perrone (22 November 2013). "Pete Haycock: Guitarist with the Climax Blues Band who went on to write film music for John Badham and Franc Roddam". The Contained . Retrieved 26 March 2015.
  6. ^ a b c d Garth Cartwright (vii Baronial 2008). "Colin Cooper Founding fellow member of the Climax Blues Ring". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 12 August 2020.
  7. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 24 June 2013. Retrieved fifteen Apr 2013. {{cite spider web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy every bit title (link)
  8. ^ "Drastic Steps - Climax Blues Band". Retrieved nine June 2018.
  9. ^ "Official website biography". Climaxbluesband.com. Archived from the original on 25 June 2009. Retrieved 28 August 2009.
  10. ^ "Colin Cooper obituary". The Times. 28 July 2008. Retrieved 21 Baronial 2018.
  11. ^ Corser, John. "New anthology and bout for Climax Blues Ring". Express & Star . Retrieved 2 March 2019.
  12. ^ a b Kent, David (1993). Australian Nautical chart Volume 1970–1992 (illustrated ed.). St Ives, N.S.W.: Australian Nautical chart Volume. p. 66. ISBN0-646-11917-6.
  13. ^ a b "Climax Blues Ring - Awards". AllMusic. Archived from the original on 13 Dec 2012. Retrieved 18 Feb 2022.
  14. ^ a b "CLIMAX Dejection BAND - full Official Chart History". Official Charts Company . Retrieved 18 February 2022.
  15. ^ "RPM Elevation 100 Albums - 19 October 1974" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 6 November 2012.
  16. ^ "RPM Top 100 Albums - July 9, 1977" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 13 December 2012.
  17. ^ "RPM Top 100 Albums - July 8, 1978" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 6 March 2014.
  18. ^ "Climax Dejection Band Top Songs / Nautical chart Singles Discography". Music VF . Retrieved 18 Feb 2022.

Other sources [edit]

  • Nick Finnis; Rob Logan, eds. (1975). The New Musical Express Book of Rock. Star Books. ISBN0-352-30074-4.

External links [edit]

  • Climax Dejection Band official website

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