Longbranch Pennywhistle is an early-in-genre country rock album by Longbranch Pennywhistle, a duo featuring the then-little-known Glenn Frey and John David Souther.[1] It also contains strains of folk rock.[2] It was released in 1970; the duo split up shortly afterwards.
Longbranch Pennywhistle | |
---|---|
Studio album by | |
Released | 1970 |
Studio | TTG Studios, Los Angeles, California |
Genre | Country rock, Folk rock |
Length | 30:18 |
Label | Amos Records |
Producer | Tom Thacker |
AllMusic's review of the album called it low-key and less commercial than the Eagles would be.[2]
One of the album's songs, "Kite Woman", would resurface on Souther's 1972 debut solo album, John David Souther.[2]
Track listing
edit- Side one
- "Jubilee Anne" (Souther)
- "Run, Boy, Run" (Frey)
- "Rebecca" (Frey)
- "Lucky Love" (Souther)
- "Kite Woman" (Souther)
- "Bring Back Funky Women" (Souther, Frey)
- Side Two
- "Star-Spangled Bus" (Souther)
- "Mister, Mister" (Souther)
- "Don't Talk Now" (James Taylor)
- "Never Have Enough" (Souther)
Personnel
edit- John David Souther - guitar, vocals, arrangements
- Glenn Frey - guitar, vocals, arrangements
- James Burton - guitar
- Ry Cooder - guitar
- Buddy Emmons - steel guitar
- Joe Osborn - bass
- Doug Kershaw - fiddle
- Larry Knechtel - piano
- Jim Gordon - drums
- Technical
- Tom "Take-damn It" Thacker - producer
- James Bowen - supervisor
- Chuck Britz, Michael Lietz - engineer
References
edit- ^ "History (1970)". West Hollywood, USA: Troubadour. Retrieved 2011-02-22.
- ^ a b c "Longbranch/Pennywhistle - Longbranch/Pennywhistle - Songs, Reviews, Credits". AllMusic. Retrieved 27 January 2019.
External links
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