1971-1976 (Did You Hear Me?)
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1971-1976 | |||||
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Compilation album by Leo Kottke | |||||
Released | 1976 | ||||
Recorded | 1971-1976 | ||||
Length | 41:19 | ||||
Label | Capitol (ST-11576) | ||||
Producer | Denny Bruce | ||||
Professional reviews | |||||
Leo Kottke chronology | |||||
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Leo Kottke: 1971-1976 is a compliation album of songs released on Capitol during Kottke's tenure with that label. It is sometimes referred to as Did You Hear Me? due to the handwritten caption on the photo on the cover. He subsequently signed with Chrysalis Records. Six of the songs were edited or re-mixed for this release. The track "Morning is the Long Way Home" is an edited down version of the original release from Ice Water, minus the vocals. Kottke would re-record this version again in 1999 on One Guitar, No Vocals.
It peaked at #153 on the Billboard Pop Albums charts.
The song "Pamela Brown" was also featured as the sole Leo Kottke track in a promotional-only compilation album from 1976 issued by Capitol records entitled The Greatest Music Ever Sold (Capitol SPRO-8511/8512), which was distributed to record stores during the 1976 Holiday season as part of Capitol's "Greatest Music Ever Sold" campaign. The campaign promoted 15 different Best Of... albums released by the label. Each of the actual albums represented were adorned with a gold-foiled round sticker which read "The Greatest Music Ever Sold", adhered to the front of the shrinkwrap.
Contents |
[edit] Track listing
[edit] Side one
- "Morning is the Long Way Home" Instrumental Break (Kottke) – 3:40
- "June Bug" (Kottke) – 2:12
- "When Shrimps Learn to Whistle" (Kottke) – 3:30
- "Room 8" (Kottke) – 2:58
- "Cripple Creek" (Traditional arranged by Leo Kottke) – 1:55
- "Pamela Brown" (Tom T. Hall) – 4:03
- "Standing on the Outside" (L. Kottke, M. Kottke) – 2:31
[edit] Side two
- "Grim to the Brim" (Kottke) – 3:10
- "Power Failure" (Gary Booker, Keith Reid) – 2:22
- "You Tell Me Why" (Ron Elliot) – 3:56
- "Why Ask Why?" (Norman Gimbel, Ken Lauber) – 2:09
- "Open Country Joy (Constant Traveler)" (J. McLaughlin) – 3:39
- "All Through the Night" (Traditional arranged by Leo Kottke) – 1:38
- "The Scarlatti Rip-off" (Kottke) – 3:26
[edit] Personnel
- Leo Kottke - 6 & 12-string guitar
- Bill Peterson - Bass
- Bill Berg - Drums
- Bill Barber - Piano, synthesizer
- Larry Taylor - Bass
- Paul Lagos - Drums
- Herb Pilhofer - Piano
[edit] Production notes
- Produced by Denny Bruce
- Art Direction: John Van Hamersveld
- Photography: John Seidermann, Denny Bruce