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Stack Waddy - Bugger Off! - (1972 great uk heavy rock with outstanding
vocals - Wave)

Posted: 05 Feb 2013 10:47 PM PST
http://silveradoraremusic.blogspot.com/2012/04/stack-waddy-bugger-off-1972-great-uk.html


Stack Waddy's second and final studio album Bugger Off. Originally released
in 1972 John Peel favorites Stack Waddy were a raucous Rock 'N' Roll
quartet from Manchester who were signed to the late DJ's Dandelion Records
in the early '70s. This release also includes the 'lost' BBC Peel Session
of 1972 as bonus tracks.
"John doesn't claim to sing, his voice acting more as an instrument than a
method of conveying words... Mick produces the most incredible noises out
of his old battered machine... Stuart's bass chews its way through a
number, while his hair flies as he leaps about like a soul in everlasting
torment... Steve provides a form of percussion of an alpine rockfall
intensity..."



Tracks
01 Rosalyn
02 Willie the Pimp
03 I'm Your Hoochie-Coochie Man
04 It's All Over Now
05 Several Yards
06 You Really Got Me
07 I'm a Lover Not a Fighter
08 Meat Pies 'Ave Come But Band's Not 'Ere Yet
09 It Ain't Easy
10 Long Tall Shorty (Mainly)
11 Repossession Boogie
12 The Girl from Ipanema
13 Mama Keep Your Big Mouth Shut

CreditsJohn Knail - Vocals, HarmonicaSteve Revell - DrumsMick Stott -
GuitarStuart Banham - Bass
Here

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Stack Waddy - Stack Waddy (1971 great uk heavy rock with outstanding vocals
- Wave)

Posted: 05 Feb 2013 12:43 PM PST
http://silveradoraremusic.blogspot.com/2012/04/stack-waddy-stack-waddy-1971-great-uk.html


Stack Waddy's debut album is one of the "must hear" discs of the early
1970s, an uncompromising roar that might cavort through that shell-shocked
no man's land that sprawls between Captain Beefheart and the Edgar
Broughton Band, but which winds up defiantly beholden to absolutely nothing
else you've ever heard — one reason, perhaps, why the group vanished with
so little trace.Recorded live in the studio (or thereabouts, Stack Waddy is
a blurring blend of brutal band originals and deliciously mauled covers.
Beefheart's "Sure Nuff Yes I Do" is an unblinking highlight, while raw
takes on "Suzie Q" and "Road Runner" remind us of the group's mid 60s
genesis on the Manchester R&B scene.
There's also a version of Jethro Tull's "Love Story" that comes close to
topping the Sensational Alex Harvey Band in terms of lascivious power and
ferocity. Certainly John Knail takes no prisoners as he howls his way
through and, while Stack Waddy holds back from completely recreating the
live band experience (there's no breaking bottles, for a start), still this
is one of those few albums that genuinely requires you to wear protective
clothing.


01. Roadrunner (McDaniel) 3:26
02. Bring It to Jerome (Green) 5:18
03. Mothballs (Banham, Knail, Revell, Stott) 3:35
04. Sure Nuff 'N' Yes I Do (Bermann, VanVilet) 2:29
05. Love Story (Anderson) 2:19
06. Suzie Q (Broodwater, Hawkins, Lewis) 2:27
07. Country Line Special (Davies) 3:55
08. Rolling Stone (Waters) 3:25
09. Mystic Eyes (Morrison) 6:05
10. Kentucky (Banham, Knail, Revell, Stott) 2:42

Credits
John Knail - Vocals, Harmonica
Steve Revell - Drums
Mick Stott - Guitar
Stuart Banham - Bass

Here

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