Mixed Bag is a 1967 album by Richie Havens. Although often mistaken as his debut (It is his debut LP), this was actually Havens's third record (actually his first..Douglas Records later put out 2 unauthorized LPs). It followed two earlier, lesser-known releases on Douglas Records (Electric Havens was released in 1968, Richie Haven's Record was released in 1969). This was Havens's first record after signing on with manager Albert Grossman which led to this recording on a new folk music section of Verve Records.[6]
Mixed Bag is frequently cited as the singer's best work,[1] and was his first album to appear on Billboard's charts (appearing on both the jazz and pop charts). The recording was the first to introduce a wider audience to Havens's rich baritone vocals and the full-sound of Havens's distinct guitar style (thumb-chorded and played in open D tuning).[1]
Track listing
- "High Flyin' Bird" (Billy Edd Wheeler) – 3:35
- "I Can't Make It Anymore" (Gordon Lightfoot) – 2:48
- "Morning, Morning" (Tuli Kupferberg) – 2:17
- "Adam" (Havens) – 3:34
- "Follow" (Jerry Merrick) – 6:22
- "Three Day Eternity" (Havens) – 2:15
- "Sandy" (Jean Pierre Cousineau) – 3:12
- "Handsome Johnny" (Lou Gossett, Havens) – 3:53
- "San Francisco Bay Blues" (Jesse Fuller) – 2:30
- "Just Like a Woman" (Bob Dylan) – 4:46
- "Eleanor Rigby" (John Lennon, Paul McCartney) – 2:42
Credits
Charts
Releases
The album was initially released on vinyl in 1967 on Verve Forecast, a newly formed folk section at the Verve division of MGM Records.[1] It was re-released as a compact disk in 1993 on Polygram. In 2004, Mixed Bag was combined with two other Havens albums on a double CD titled, Flyin' Bird: The Verve Forecast Years, a limited edition release of 3000 individually numbered copies.[7][8]
year | format | label | catalog # |
1967 | LP | Verve/Forecast | FTS-3006 |
1967 | LP | Verve | 2317002 |
1967 | | Polydor | 835 210 |
1970 | LP | MGM | SE 4698 |
| CD | Verve | 835210 |
1993 | CD | Polygram | |
2004 | 2CD | Universal/Hip-O Select | [7] |
Trivia
- Electric Havens and Mixed Bag were two of the records reported among the personal collection of Haven's one-time Greenwich Village buddy, Jimi Hendrix.[9]
- In 1974 Havens released Mixed Bag II
Notes and sources
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 Jim Newsome, "Mixed Bag: Review", Allmusic"
- ↑ Music Hound, USA, 1998-99 (according to acclaimedmusic.net)
- ↑ Rolling Stone Album Guide, USA, 1992 (according to acclaimedmusic.net)
- ↑ Martin C. Strong The Great Rock Discography, 7th edition, UK (according to acclaimedmusic.net)
- ↑ Virgin Encyclopedia of Popular Music, UK, 2002 (according to acclaimedmusic.net)
- ↑ Ellen Geisel, "Richie Havens: Seeker of Change", Dirty Linen, 65, August-September 1968, p. 44-47
- ↑ 7.0 7.1 This is the double CD release, High Flyin' Bird: The Verve Forecast Years (Universal/Hip-O Select) which combines Mixed Bag with Something Else Again and Richard P. Havens, 1983. The release was limited to 3000 individually numbered copies (link at Hip-oselect.com).
- ↑ Brian Mathieson, Richie Havens Recordings(link)
- ↑ James Rotondi, "Listening Experience: Jimi Hendrix' Personal Record Collection", Guitar Player, 30:4, April 1996, p. 37-42