$11.00
Add to Cart
Here We Are Again lp - Country Joe and the Fish vsd79299
Only 1 available
Details
Shipping: US-Mainland: $5.50 (more destinations)
Sales Tax: check
Condition: Used
Returns: 10 days, buyer pays return shipping (more)
1969, Vanguard Recordings, stereo
Condition: Very good to very good + condition, has been listened to, name on label. Cover is in acceptable condition with edge and record rim wear.
Here I Go Again (3:24) Donovan's Reef (4:18) It's So Nice To Have Love (3:25) Baby, You're Driving Me Crazy (2:43) Crystal Blues (6:18)For No Reason (3:55) I'll Survive (2:28) Maria (3:30) My Girl (2:16) Doctor Of Electricity (3:58)
"By the time of Country Joe & the Fish's fourth album, the group seemed to consist of only Joe McDonald and Barry Melton, who had started the band in the beginning. Here We Are Again continued CJ&F's move toward pop (especially on "Here I Go Again") and bluesy rock, and away from their folk and jug band beginnings. But there were no songs to match some of the idiosyncratic winners on earlier albums, and the anonymous studio backing lacked the spontaneity of the original Fish. Though there would be one more new album in 1970 (C J Fish), Country Joe & the Fish no longer existed as anything other than a name; a fact that would be underlined in December 1969 by the simultaneous releases of Greatest Hits and McDonald's solo album, Thinking of Woody Guthrie." ~ William Ruhlmann, All Music Guide
We are a smoke/pet free home. Trust in the over 1700 feedbacks at my ebay site (elisia1).
Condition: Very good to very good + condition, has been listened to, name on label. Cover is in acceptable condition with edge and record rim wear.
Here I Go Again (3:24) Donovan's Reef (4:18) It's So Nice To Have Love (3:25) Baby, You're Driving Me Crazy (2:43) Crystal Blues (6:18)For No Reason (3:55) I'll Survive (2:28) Maria (3:30) My Girl (2:16) Doctor Of Electricity (3:58)
"By the time of Country Joe & the Fish's fourth album, the group seemed to consist of only Joe McDonald and Barry Melton, who had started the band in the beginning. Here We Are Again continued CJ&F's move toward pop (especially on "Here I Go Again") and bluesy rock, and away from their folk and jug band beginnings. But there were no songs to match some of the idiosyncratic winners on earlier albums, and the anonymous studio backing lacked the spontaneity of the original Fish. Though there would be one more new album in 1970 (C J Fish), Country Joe & the Fish no longer existed as anything other than a name; a fact that would be underlined in December 1969 by the simultaneous releases of Greatest Hits and McDonald's solo album, Thinking of Woody Guthrie." ~ William Ruhlmann, All Music Guide
We are a smoke/pet free home. Trust in the over 1700 feedbacks at my ebay site (elisia1).



