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Monday, June 1, 2026

Canned Heat - "Time Was" / "Low Down" (1969) [Mono Single]

Canned Heat - "Time Was" b/w "Low Down"

Original 1969 mono single mixes
Liberty 15 200, German pressing (Discogs)
~ThePoodleBites rip at 96 kHz / 24 bit FLAC + full high-res scans!~

When Canned Heat released their new single "Time Was" in late February / early March of 1969, it immediately began climbing in the pop charts, and for good reason -- even these nearly 60 years later, it is easily recognized as one of the band's best songs. However, its burning flip side, "Low Down," has not gained the same public accreditation, which is a shame. I suspect this injustice originated because, for reasons unknown, "Low Down" was left off the band's fourth studio LP Hallelujah, released later that August. Appearing only on 45, the dedicated mono "Low Down" was then never reissued; in fact, these 50-some years later, all the song's appearances on YouTube (previous to my post) stem from a digital remix prepared for the 1994 Uncanned! compilation CD, a remix which has been used by all contemporary reissues since. As the original mono mix is the only one that was approved and released during the lifetime of guitarist Alan "Blind Owl" Wilson, who unexpectedly passed away at just 27 years old the following year, and since these versions were the first and only ones available to anyone in the world for most of 1969 and afterwards, I think this excellent single is worth preserving in the best possible sound quality.

Many thanks to C.F. the Record Phantom for contributing some rare editions of this single
for audio evaluation and hi-res scanning!



Vintage stereo and mono mixes were prepared for both tracks on this 45. The A-side, "Time Was," was released in stereo on the Hallelujah LP late in the summer of '69, whereas the mono version -- abridged and about 50 seconds shorter than the LP -- appeared only on 45, as the Hallelujah record was never released in mono. As good as the mono version sounds, it also sounds largely the same as a mono fold-down of the stereo mix.

On the other hand, the B-side "Low Down" sounds more like a dedicated mono mix, with a louder instrumental track to supplement the vocals than its stereo counterpart; though it's admittedly possible that the difference is solely due to a huge EQ adjustment between them. The song only appeared in this mono form, except for two cases: notably, the stereo mix was issued in full on a rare French compilation LP from 1975, History Of Canned Heat, with excellent sound quality. Secondly, an unedited mono fold-down of the stereo variant seems to have been released on the original 1969 British 45, instead of the punchier American mono version: unless I am wrong about the "main" mono version being dedicated, this was the only edition of the "stereo" mix available that year. Either way, neither original mix was ever reissued again, and only the aforementioned 1994 stereo remix persists in the digital era. Overall I feel (and C.F. agrees) that the mono mix is the tougher one, though the stereo mix has better fidelity, and the more recent remix has an extended psychedelic ending unheard elsewhere.

Full-page ad from Billboard, 05 Apr 1969 German 'Platten-Pass' that came with some copies of the 45
German "Platten-Pass" text (English / Deutsch)

RECORD PASS No. 15 200 A

Special Features
The American blues-beat prophets strike back with their latest record. After their tracks "On The Road Again" and "Going Up The Country" became international big hits, "TIME WAS" also immediately landed on the U.S. charts. Al Wilson, lead singer of Canned Heat, bespectacled, avid reader, and nicknamed "The Blind Owl" due to his chronic nearsightedness, once again interprets this song with his haunting, hit-worthy voice. This was the third installment...
Vintage U.S. Liberty pressings leave much to be desired in the sound quality department, and this 45 is no exception. Stateside it was pressed both on styrene (cut by various mastering facilities) and on vinyl as a promo, with vinyl copies surprisingly sounding worse than styrene ones -- a truly perplexing, uncommon phenomenon. So poor is the vinyl that chunks of music repeatedly cut in-and-out on side 1. This significant gaffe, especially from a major label like Liberty, can only be described as a head-scratcher. The styrene editions, on the other hand, are highly prone to wear, and quickly developed groove damage after a few plays, rendering modern playback without distortion a pipe dream.

Multi-year searches for a better source of this 45 ensued. C.F., himself a major fan of "Low Down," procured a rare Japanese edition, which came with an awesome mini-booklet and was pressed on quiet Japanese vinyl, but nonetheless sounds extremely muted, having been sourced from an obviously low-quality copy tape. I set out to procure every European edition that I could get my hands on, and successfully tracked down unsatisfying editions from France, Italy, and the U.K., all with various problems. The U.K. copy was the most confusing of these, sounding quite different from the others, with better dynamics and frequency response but a quieter instrumental track beneath the vocals; I later attributed this to it being a mono fold-down from the stereo mix (see above).

Following suspicions from the Record Phantom, I eventually landed on a copy of the German edition. I did not expect much at all from this Deutschepressung, so imagine my surprise to find that it sounds virtually indistinguishable from what the U.S. pressing would have been if it'd been pressed on higher-quality plastic. The near-identical frequency response between the German and U.S. spectrograms is striking. After many comparisons verifying these astonishing conclusions, I opted to use this German 45 for the bulk of this restoration: I think it cannot be bested by its peers.

All editions of this 45 have slightly different fade-outs, indicating that individual mastering engineers were responsible for adjusting the volume before the tape cuts. The German 45 has marginally earlier fades than some U.S. styrene variations; nonetheless, the styrene discs play conveniently clean in the fade-outs, where quieter music was not damaged by groove burn. This feature, along with these U.S. 45s' perfect match of sound quality to the German edition, allowed me to carefully splice the U.S. fades onto the otherwise German-sourced audio at the single-sample level, while carefully matching the waveform volumes such that the edit is completely indistinguishable to the ear. I believe, therefore, that this is the ideal version of these mono tracks, mating the sound quality of the German vinyl with extended fades from the U.S. styrene.

Front cover for the Japanese 45, utilizing the same artwork as the U.S. "Going Up The Country" 45 and the Living The Blues LP
Japanese 45 release notes (English / 日本語)

New Rock Best Hit Series


Time Was (2' 35")
Low Down (2' 30")
Canned Heat

Born amidst the waves of rock music and raised with its currents, Canned Heat showed little interest in actual music, instead becoming captivated solely by various thoughts, creations, and ideas centered on the unknown, yet unfinished, music of the world. This was because they sensed that there was "another ocean" in the world.

To become a great pioneer is, so to speak, to become a navigator to a destination, not to be a Columbus' egg. Just as the human brain doubles its function only when the "new cortex" is added on top of the "old cortex," when a new type of musical adventure is undertaken upon the old musical tradition, it is possible to give people incredible emotions. The "dramatic" imagination that elevated the easily produced picture-story shows into drama is a characteristic of youth.

For the past few years, the creation of new rock music, which had always started in Britain and spread to America, is about to be reclaimed by America once again. The dark messages of white bluesmen are now exploding everywhere, like the surface of the moon. American modern blues groups such as the Paul Butterfield Blues Band, Big Brother and the Holding Company, Iron Butterfly, The Blues Project, The Doors, The Moby Grape, The Grateful Dead, Electric Flag, The Amboy Dukes, Country Joe and the Fish, Blood, Sweat and Tears, Quicksilver Messenger Service, and The Young Bloods, in conjunction with John Mayall and the Bluesbreakers, Cream, The Jeff Beck Group, Ten Years After, Traffic, Fleetwood Mac, and Joe Cocker's Grease Band, heralded the dawn of modern blues.

For Canned Heat, these groups cannot be unknown. This is because blues rock, which is reaching an "artistic" level, cannot be understood as isolated points, but rather as interconnected lines; without that, it will not only fail to reach completion but will inevitably collapse.

The Heat's blues is certainly built upon traditional blues, but its significance lies in drawing it into a new current and elevating it to a modern blues brimming with contemporary sensibilities. Their confidence, passion, and soul are infused into it, captivating even younger generations who didn't previously listen to the blues as blues. This is a product of their flexible musical spirit.

They didn't ignore the fact that their peers were riding the wave of commercialism. They tried to find out what their peers and female fans were doing in Times Square, New York. They either gained or rejected certain nourishment from that whirlwind of temptation. In an age of surplus, it's natural that there's a lot to discard. Perhaps they weren't consciously striving for this, but what they always achieved was a genuine blues, human emotion, and empathy for the communicative methods that humanity should emphasize. They sought it in the middle ground between R&B and folk blues. Their belief was that true blues should exist not only for black people, but for white people too, and their assertion was that they would continue to pursue the blues until the fire in their hearts for music was extinguished.

At 26, Bob “The Bear” Hite perfected the technique of using vocals as an integral part of the instruments. Similarly, 26-year-old Alan “Blind Owl” Wilson taught people the essence of blues harmonica. 25-year-old Henry “Sunflower” Vestine established the Vestine style of guitar playing, while simultaneously pouring everything into their music, imbuing it with emotional as well as social implications. 27-year-old Larry Taylor revolutionized bass guitar playing. And finally, Mexican-born Adolfo “Fito” de la Parra, who replaced original member Frank Cook on drums, added yet another fresh element to Canned Heat's music.

They combined boogie, shuffle, and blues, constantly pursuing a new modern blues until the day they die.

Canned Heat Records
"Time Was" and "Low Down" are their fourth single. Following "Rollin' And Tumblin," "On The Road Again," and "Going Up The Country," both A and B sides are original numbers, released in February 1969. Three LPs were released: "On The Road Again" (July 1968), "Living The Blues" (November 1968), and "Boogie With Canned Heat" (September 1968).
[TBS - Mikio Kitayama]




Picture sleeve and labels of the French edition



Italian pressing, again using the same artwork as the Japanese edition




Track listing:
1) "Time Was" -- 2:38
2) "Low Down" -- 2:36

Vinyl condition: M-
Dynamic Range: DR 10

Equipment / Lineage:
– Audio-Technica VMN40ML stylus on AT150MLx dual moving-magnet cartridge
– Audio-Technica AT-LP1240-USB direct drive professional turntable (internal stock preamp/ADC removed)
– Pro-Ject Phono Box S2 Ultra preamp with dedicated Zero Zone linear power supply
– Focusrite Scarlett 6i6 MkII (96kHz / 24bit)
– Adobe Audition CC 2024 (recording)
– iZotope RX 11 audio editor (manual declicking, EQ subtraction, additional adjustments)
– Audacity 3.x.x (fades between tracks, split tracks)
– Foobar2000 v2.x.x (tagging, dynamic range analysis)

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