Product Description
Scarce Actual 1977 Japanese Pressing Still In Top Condition! Includes Insert With Lyrics In English & Japanese. ‘Live Stock’ Is A Terrific Live Album By Blues Guitar Telecaster Master, The Late Great Roy Buchanan.
Recorded in New York City at Town Hall, November 27, 1974 by the Record Plant Mobile Studio.
Condition – Vinyl: EXCELLENT!
Condition – Cover: EXCELLENT!
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. Top condition Japanese pressings are becoming scarcer ~ therefore more collectable and valuable every year.
Side 1:
Reelin’ And Rockin’
Hot Cha
Further On Up The Road
Roy’s Bluz
Side 2:
Can I Change My Mind
I’m A Ram
I’m Evil
AMG –
A primary recommendation for all dimensions of blues guitar lovers and those interested in experiencing the craftsmanship of the man once hailed as “The Greatest Unknown Guitarist In The World.” By the time this long-player hit the street, Roy Buchanan (guitar/vocals) had already departed from his oft-acrimonious relationship with Polydor Records. To their credit, the label issued Live Stock (1975), which captured the artist in performance at Town Hall in New York City on November 27, 1974. This disc features the recently corralled combo of Bill Price (vocals), John Harrison (bass), Malcolm Lukens (keyboards), and Byrd Foster (drums/vocals). Interestingly, the instrumentalists would reconvene behind Buchanan for his next two studio albums, A Street Called Straight (1976) and Loading Zone (1977), as well as the thoroughly superior, import-only Live in Japan (2003). With the exception of the seminal Snakestretchers, this aggregate would stay with the guitarist for longer than any of his numerous other support bands. Practically by default, having returned Buchanan to the stage, the music instantly becomes more conducive to inspiration. The set list highlights both a sampling from earlier efforts, as well as a few covers that are personalized by Buchanan’s inimitable stringed artistry. Whether by design or serendipity, each track focuses on his animated solos. Ranging from the driving boogie of Roy Milton’s “Reelin’ and Rockin” [note: not to be confused with Chuck Berry’s rock & roll anthem of virtually the same name] to the stinging fretwork that commences the Memphis soul of Al Green’s slithery “I’m a Ram,” Buchanan is undeniably at the peak of his abilities. The spirited reading of “Further on up the Road” is particularly worthwhile, as his leads alternately from a rapid-fire slide action to emphatic wails that punctuate the melody with equal measures of deadly accuracy and limber precision. Live Stock is a primary recommendation for all dimensions of blues guitar lovers and those interested in experiencing the craftsmanship of the man once hailed as “The Greatest Unknown Guitarist In The World.”