Product Description
Rare Actual 1969 Japanese First Pressing Still In Top Condition! Heavy Grade Gatefold Cover Includes Insert With Lyrics In English & Notes In Japanese, Labels Are Clean. The Final Album By Cream ~ Eric Clapton, Jack Bruce & Ginger Baker. Includes Wonderful Track With George Harrison, “Badge”.
Condition – Vinyl: EXCELLENT! Incredible to think that this record is over 55 years old!
Condition – Cover: EXCELLENT! Some foxing inside gatefold, but overall… terrific!
Japanese vinyl pressings are highly sought after by audiophiles and collectors, due to their premium sound quality and beautifully presented packaging. The sonic quality of Japanese records is regarded as the best in the world. No wonder all the original Mobile Fidelity Sound Lab records were pressed in Japan! The covers are printed on better quality heavy stock paper too. Near Mint Japanese pressings are becoming scarcer ~ and therefore more collectable and valuable every year.
Side 1:
I’m So Glad (Recorded live at The Forum, Los Angeles, 19 October 1968)
Politician (Recorded live at The Forum, Los Angeles, 19 October 1968)
Side 2:
Sitting On Top Of The World (Recorded live at The Forum, Los Angeles, 19 October 1968)
Badge
Doing That Scrapyard Thing
What A Bringdown
AMG –
Evenly dividing its time between tracks cut on-stage and in the studio, ‘Goodbye’ captures the trio at an empathetic peak as a band! After a mere three albums in just under three years, Cream called it quits in 1969. Being proper gentlemen, they said their formal goodbyes with a tour and a farewell album called -- what else? -- Goodbye. As a slim, six-song single LP, it's far shorter than the rambling, out-of-control Wheels of Fire, but it boasts the same structure, evenly dividing its time between tracks cut on-stage and in the studio. While the live side contains nothing as indelible as "Crossroads," the live music on the whole is better than that on Wheels of Fire, capturing the trio at an empathetic peak as a band. It's hard, heavy rock, with Cream digging deep into their original "Politician" with the same intensity as they do on "Sitting on Top of the World," but it's the rampaging "I'm So Glad" that illustrates how far they've come; compare it to the original studio version on Fresh Cream and it's easy to see just how much further they're stretching their improvisation. The studio side also finds them at something of a peak. Boasting a song apiece from each member, it opens with the majestic classic "Badge," co-written by Eric Clapton and George Harrison and ranking among both of their best work. It's followed by Jack Bruce's "Doing That Scrapyard Thing," an overstuffed near-masterpiece filled with wonderful, imaginative eccentricities, and finally, there's Ginger Baker's tense, dramatic "What a Bringdown," easily the best original he contributed to the group. Like all of Cream's albums outside Disraeli Gears, Goodbye is an album of moments, not a tight cohesive work, but those moments are all quite strong on their own terms, making this a good and appropriate final bow.