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Showing posts with label Country Joe & The Fish. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Country Joe & The Fish. Show all posts

Sunday, April 18, 2021

Country Joe & The Fish - I-Feel-Like-I'm-Fixin'-To-Die (1967) [Original Mono Mix]

Country Joe & The Fish - I-Feel-Like-I'm-Fixin'-To-Die

Original 1967 Dedicated Mono Mix
USA White-Label Promo – Vanguard VRS 9266
~ThePoodleBites rip in 96 kHz / 24 bit FLAC + full high-res scans!~

Back in 2018, I ripped the stereo version of this classic psych album, but I've also wanted to add the mono version to this blog, as it is certainly a dedicated alternate mix which some people are going to prefer. I guess mono heads will rave about its superior instrument balance, smoother song transitions, and "punchy" mono sound; for me, I find it hard to choose between this and the stereo. In the past whenever I've wanted to listen to this album I've always reached for the stereo LP, but now after forcing myself to listen to this mono version for awhile, the stereo does sound a bit wonky. Who knows; probably my mind will change again tomorrow. 

I've purchased four clean original mono copies of this album over the last few years, all pressed with different stampers and having slightly different sound. I postponed working on this album until I could find a copy which was to be definitive, and I think I've found one in this white label promotional copy. This was pressed with the earliest stampers and was probably the only variant approved by the band, if in fact it was band-approved at all. At any rate the sound is phenomenal and will undoubtedly stand as the definitive mono version for many years to come.

Original mono front cover showing the full band's unusual getup 

David Cohen shared verbally some years ago how the photo used on this cover came about. As I recall, the band was taken to a studio where there were various costumes laying around, which the band selected to wear individually. David was a wizard; Joe was a (Vietnamese?) soldier; Barry Melton chose a Nazi uniform, which Vanguard carefully edited so that the swastika was replaced by an American flag. 


By July of 1967, with the San Francisco "Summer of Love" in full-swing, the band had relocated from their chilled-out hippie Berkeley roots into the hustle and bustle of busy New York City. While living in the (now-famous) Chelsea Hotel, they began work on their second album at Vanguard Studios next door, only 4 months after the release of Electric Music. Through the summer and into the fall the band played gigs on the east coast, which went with high reviews, but inevitable infighting had begun behind the scenes; it could've been the pressure from the record company, the hot summer city heat, or just diverging artistic interests, but the internal tension steadily grew more palpable.

A preliminary tape recorded at Sierra Sound Lab with engineer Bob de Souza (who worked on the first album) was already extant, but all the songs were reworked in the New York studio, some quite vastly so. Record producer / A&R man Samuel Charters shares much interesting information about the recording during this period:

"Some of the songs were new, Joe's beautiful ballad for Janis Joplin, JANIS, and PAT'S SONG, written for Pat Sullivan; MAGOO, named for a local Hell's Angels leader, and the instrumental piece COLORS FOR SUSAN, named for Susan Grabart [sic: Susan Graubard], the flutist with Pat Kilroy's group, The New Age. COLORS FOR SUSAN had grown out of a long talk with Joe, and describing to him the emotions I'd felt hearing Erik Satie's "Les Sonneries de la Rose-Croix" in a still New York garden at sunset. It was one of the most original of the Fish pieces, even if audiences—and sometimes the band themselves—had a little trouble understanding it. When they performed it in Berkeley they sat in a line across the stage, while Chicken stood at the drums, and they ended the set with its slow modal chordings."


No time was spared in perfecting the band's artistic studio masterpiece. Songs went through several different arrangements and styles before their final versions were solidified. Overdubs were added where the band felt it was necessary, including harpsichord and calliope to touch off the scathingly sarcastic title track. Joe was the primary songwriter and artistic visionary, but he had trouble getting the band as close to the expression as he imagined. Throughout the sessions he became so exhausted that at one point the band proceeded to record "Janis" without him, letting him catch up on sleep then come in later for overdubs. Even as the album reached completion, a last all-night session featured Joe playing through old songs, trying to find another piece to stick in the cracks. 

In September 1967, the album was declared finished, but the heat had finally caused tensions to boil over. Whether it was from the stress of recording, the exhaustion from performing, the constant pressure of the press, or the ever-growing internal disagreements: the band just, broke up. 

Original album release ad in the Los Angeles Free Press, 24 November 1967 (art by Tom Weller)

Nonetheless, the album's release proceeded with due haste. It was issued sometime between 11 November (when a Billboard article says it was "soon-to-be-released"; Cash Box similar) and 24 November (when a full-page ad appeared in the Los Angeles Free Press, pictured above), and approximately simultaneously with The Serpent Power and Erik's Look Where I Am. A single with "Janis" (backed with a lame "instrumental" / orchestral version) was rushed out to precede the album release by at least a week or two, with a Billboard reviewer calling the song an "unusual folk oriented easy beat ballad... Exceptional material, well performed." 

Cash Box review, 2 Dec 1967
Billboard review, 2 Dec 1967
The record appeared in Billboard's New Album Releases that December, simultaneously with a harsh review. This was probably much to the dismay of Vanguard, who had invested no small expense in producing the band's latest LP. Luckily, the Cash Box review was much more positive. The album emerged on the Billboard charts at #134 on 23 December, and steadily began to climb. A second single, "Who Am I" b/w "Thursday," was released in January 1968, which probably helped with the album's promotion. The band's heightened politicism influenced several pointed articles around this time, primarily denouncing Joe's "slew of insults hurled at President Johnson" during live performances. While the album hit #41 in Cash Box Top 100 Albums on 3 February, the album only peaked at #69 in Billboard two weeks later, then steadily began to fall in both lists. This was much below the highs that Electric Music had produced, though from no clear lack of trying on behalf of the record company, or the band. 

Yes, "The Electric Fish" (as the Joe-less band was called) did not stay devoid of its Country leader for long. Much promotion was put into the band headlining shows on both coasts in the months following the album release. The band would reunite again for their next album, appropriately titled Together, but things had changed. Other members of the group started to take on more artistic control, and the sound of the group swayed further and further away from the folk/blues-worn psychedelia on which they had laid their foundation and more towards pop/soul-oriented music: surely a welcome change for some, but equally alienation for others.

Concert advertisement in Los Angeles Free Press, 22 Dec 1967
TV advertisement in the Berkeley Barb, 15 Dec 1967

This mono mix has only been issued twice. The first time was on vinyl, upon original issue back in 1967. These days the mono variant of this album is somewhat more rare than the stereo, but both are fairly common; the trick is in finding a clean pressing with the earliest stampers. The only reissue was done on CD back in 2013 concurrently with the stereo mix, similar to the "deluxe" treatment given Electric Music. While it was nice hearing the mono mix from tapes, the mastering unfortunately suffered a similar fate as the former; lots of gain, dynamic range compression, and seemingly a treble boost to top it all off. So for those that prefer a natural, "unremastered" sound, the original pressings remain superior. I've applied the usual amount of manual restoration work here resulting in a sound which I think is, for now at least, quite definitive. 

Scans of all the ads pictured here are included in high-res lossless files. By the way, I've also scanned a bunch of old ads / photos and added them to my last two County Joe & The Fish posts. Now is a great time to go back and grab them! And I look forward to reading your thoughts about the stereo vs. mono mix -- please feel free to leave a comment about which one you prefer on the respective post!




Lineup:
"Country" Joe McDonald – vocals, acoustic guitar, rhythm guitar
Barry "The Fish" Melton – lead & rhythm guitar, 12-string guitar, backing vocals, kazoo
David Bennett Cohen – calliope, harpsichord, bells, organ, lead & rhythm guitar, backing vocals
Bruce Barthol – bass guitar, barking (tr. 1)
Gary "Chicken" Hirsh – drums, conga, bells, wine bottle

Track listing:
1) "The Fish Cheer & I-Feel-Like-I'm-Fixin'-To-Die Rag" -- 3:45
2) "Who Am I" -- 4:04
3) "Pat's Song" -- 5:25
4) "Rock Coast Blues" -- 3:55
5) "Magoo" -- 4:47
6) "Janis" -- 2:35
7) "The Bomb Song" -- 1:06
8) "Thought Dream" -- 4:53
9) "The Bomb Song (Reprise)" -- 0:26
10) "The Acid Commercial" -- 0:38
11) "Thursday" -- 2:41
12) "Eastern Jam" -- 4:39
13) "Colors For Susan" -- 5:58

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 2020 (recording)
– iZotope RX 7 audio editor (manual declicking, EQ subtraction, additional adjustments)
– Audacity 2.3.3 (fades between tracks, split tracks)
– Foobar2000 v1.5.1 (tagging, dynamic range analysis)


Thanks for taking the time to read my posts and check out my blog. I'd greatly appreciate it if you leave a small comment below. Notes from my readers are what inspire me to keep going. Thanks!

Thank you for reading, enjoy!  :)

"Nothing else has been able to stop the war... Maybe the Fish can!"
Album advertisement in New York newspaper The Village Voice, 30 November 1967

Monday, February 3, 2020

Country Joe & The Fish - Electric Music For The Mind And Body (1967) [Mono WLP]

Country Joe & The Fish - Electric Music For The Mind And Body

Original 1967 White Label Promotional LP
Vanguard VRS-9244 ~ MONO MIX
~ThePoodleBites Rip in 96kHz / 24bit FLAC + full high-res scans~

This Berkeley, California-based group's legendary debut has been considered by some to be the most psychedelic record by anyone ever; whether or not you agree with that assessment, it probably does not overstate the album's importance to the genre. Electric Music For The Mind And Body appeared at a time when psychedelic music was still in its infancy, and indeed many themes present here would find their way onto other late-'60s records, e.g. Ultimate Spinach. Unfortunately the album has been quite misrepresented in the digital era by a plethora of bad CD reissues, leaving most fans to turn to scratchy original records on aging equipment to hear the music at least somewhat properly.

I'm so excited to finally present this rip on my blog in stellar sound quality. I've been wanting to do this scarcer monaural version of this album for years, but found only a handful of noisy mono copies before this pristine white-label promo surprisingly dropped into my hands. This superior mono mix has only been issued twice, once upon original issue in 1967 and once again upon release of a dreadful revisionist CD reissue from 2013 (see my write-up below for details). The transfer & restoration presented here gives to my estimation the closest possible representation of the mono master tapes available to date. I think this will stand as the definitive version of this classic psychedelic LP. 


I originally ripped the stereo mix of this album some years before this blog existed, and was then surprised to find that the original stereo LP was superior to both the later CD and LP reissues by quite some margin. My restoration skills have evolved quite a bit since that original transfer, so I'm quite delighted to finally improve upon those existing shares now posted here. While not an altogether terrible mix, the stereo version of this album fell victim to bad mix-down choices which were common in the day (e.g. drums all in the right channel, poor balance upon fold-down, ...) which renders this tasty mono version sounding comparatively better today. Most will likely agree that the band's debut is best heard in the mono version presented here, and this WLP was pressed from the the very first original unworn stampers, a somewhat difficult thing to find these days with popular major-label releases.




















The mono mix was first reissued on CD in 2013 by Vanguard/Ace, compiled with a first-ever reissue of the original stereo mix (heavily noise reduced vinyl transfer, avoid at all costs!). The mono mix appeared to be from master tapes, but with a few big issues. Firstly, the mastering was done way too loud -- every track is limiting, and the dynamics of the recordings are totally lost due to overuse of compressors. Secondly, the equalization was totally cranked for a "more modern" sound, again destroying the natural sound of the recording. Thirdly the CD speed is slightly too fast, as is easily determined by comparing to original LPs on various equipment or by noting the recording's hum is slightly above its nominal value. Finally (and perhaps most frustratingly), it appears that either the stereo mix or multi-track masters were used for some occasional splicing, heard most obviously at the end of "Bass Strings." On the original mono mix, Joe McDonald's voice is drenched in reverb and his whispering of "L.S.D." for the second time is completely inaudible in the song's fade out; on the CD remaster/remix, the reverb is covered up with Joe's voice being much louder, and the second "L.S.D." is loud and clear. It's despicable that, over 50 years after initial release, a rip is necessary due to professional engineers tampering with this record's history!

Given the rarity of pristine mono copies these days and my appreciation of this album's longstanding history, I've taken a very "hands off" approach to mastering this item. My intention has been to preserve as best as possible the mastering of the original release and the sound of the master tapes. That means that 60Hz hum and its various overtones, present from the mixing console and also heard on the CD remaster in the parts not blanketed with noise reduction, are present here, although it would have been trivial for me to take this out without any noticeable damage to the music. It also means that the non-vinyl distortions/clicks heard primarily in "Martha Lorraine" but also in other tracks such as "Super Bird" and "Grace" (which you may or may not even hear) have been left intact. All these noises are part of the historic sound of this recording and better off left alone. I was extremely careful about which clicks I removed versus left in, having compared 1:1 with the CD reissue to ensure I didn't harm parts of the original recording. I've downloaded files from other rippers who have said things along the lines of "all that noise is on the tape!" only to find a master tape CD myself and realize the ripper either 1) couldn't hear the noise that I could, or 2) was otherwise totally lying; followers of my blog here will know that I am picky about audio quality and that I can guarantee my results.

So, with all those details out of the way and now that you're salivating to actually hear this thing, I present to you: the Country Joe & The Fish debut album in gloriously unhindered mono beauty . . .


Full-page concert advertisement in
Los Angeles Free Press, 7 July 1967
Line-Up:
Country Joe McDonald - vocals, guitar, bells, tambourine
Barry "The Fish" Melton - vocals, guitar
David Bennett Cohen - guitar, organ
Bruce Barthol - bass, harmonica
Chicken Hirsch - drums

Track Listing:
1) "Flying High" – 2:51
2) "Not So Sweet Martha Lorraine" – 4:33
3) "Death Sound" – 4:28
4) "Porpoise Mouth" – 2:53
5) "Section 43" – 7:23
6) "Super Bird" – 2:09
7) "Sad and Lonely Times" – 2:28
8) "Love" – 2:27
9) "Bass Strings" – 5:11
10) "The Masked Marauder" – 3:13
11) "Grace" – 7:09

Vinyl Condition: M-
Dynamic Range: DR 13

Equipment Lineage:
– Audio-Technica AT150MLx Dual Moving-Magnet Cartridge
– Audio-Technica AT-LP1240-USB Direct Drive Professional Turntable (internal stock preamp/ADC removed)
– TCC TC-754 RIAA Phono Preamp (new regulated power supply, added LM7812 regulator)
– Focusrite Scarlett 6i6 MkII (96kHz / 24bit)
– Adobe Audition CC 2019 (recording)
– iZotope RX 7 Audio Editor (manual declicking, mono fold, EQ subtraction, additional adjustments)
– Audacity 2.3.3 (fades between tracks, split tracks)
– Foobar2000 v1.5.1 (tagging, dynamic range analysis)

Full album is available on YouTube here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=luuS9cF6x38

Thanks for taking the time to read my posts and check out my blog. I'd greatly appreciate it if you leave a small comment below. Notes from my readers are what inspire me to keep going. Thanks! 
MEGA: https://mega.nz/folder/SgUFRQCa#bn3ezZtuWCtB47Cdar3xrA
Enjoy! :)

Full-page ad for the album release in Los Angeles Free Press, 19 May 1967 (art by Tom Weller)

Monday, August 13, 2018

Country Joe & The Fish - I-Feel-Like-I'm-Fixin'-To-Die (1967) [Original USA Stereo Mix]

Country Joe & The Fish – I-Feel-Like-I'm-Fixin'-To-Die

Original 1967 USA Stereo LP
Vanguard VSD-79266
~ThePoodleBites rip in 96kHz / 24bit FLAC + high-resolution scans~

Here is a primo mastering of Country Joe & The Fish's best album. The fact that the band was able to release this masterpiece within the same year as Electric Music is quite astounding and speaks to the band's mastery of their craft. I've been wanting to do this LP for years (looking at my HDD now, it's been over 5 years since I did my first raw transfer of this album), but I wanted to ensure that my mastering would beat all digital versions of this album currently available, including all other rips and the CD remasters. The early CD version is really bad, way too loud (and some claim the wrong mix), and while the 2013 is a bit quieter, it's still very compressed / limited and the tape has numerous dropouts / problems that are apparent throughout the album. Since the incredible dynamics of this LP are certainly unparalleled by any rock album of its time, the numerous quiet sections throughout are notorious for noise even on the cleanest copies. For this rip, I opened a vintage copy that had remained sealed for over 50 years before reaching my hands. Finding this was not easy, and I still feel bad for opening it, but this rip was certainly worth it.


This album has a very special meaning to me, as it was the first psychedelic rock LP that I owned, and when I finally got that first copy, it was in nearly constant rotation on my turntable. I knew the title track from the infamous Woodstock performance, and I remember crawling around the house as a young kiddo singing that song before I could even understand what the words meant. But what's amazing here, is that immediately after perhaps the ultimate protest song of the 1960s, with its tongue-in-cheek tone and ironic juxtaposition of psychedelic ragtime with machine guns, Country Joe & The Fish manages to maintain their audience. This is certainly the furthest from a one-hit album as any of the great '60s masterpieces. 

Instead of continuing their political critiques, which the band was able to pull off stunningly well, the second track "Who Am I" is in every way the antithesis of the first. While the "I-Feel-Like-I'm-Fixin'-To-Die Rag" presents a very critical view of external negativity, "Who Am I" drastically changes tone into a quiet self-reflection which is in every way as scathing as the opener. The solemn statements and sheer honesty of Country Joe's words present his feelings as both genuine and relatable, which come as a complete shell shock after the bombastic opener. Such an amazing juxtaposition, while still maintaining meaningful continuity, is something that the band would have on no other album.

Following this is the most beautiful "Pat's Song," where we see two motifs for the first time: the first is of the band's affinity for fixing compositions to particular individuals, and the second is of color. There are certainly many colors here, from a heavily distorted guitar giving way to a mesmerizing bell solo, again flaunting the band's ability to maintain musicality while traversing incredible dynamical landscapes. 

If nothing else, "Rock Coast Blues" extends the vivid color of the San Francisco coast while exemplifying the band's ability for extremely tight performances. The following "Magoo" which ends side 1 is a perfect track in every way -- the band incorporates the sound of thunderstorms which emphasize the dramatic cymbal rolls and melodic guitars, then suddenly Joe's voice explodes and echoes across the sky -- a most incredible, ripping, deeply spiritual song, matching again the level of "Who Am I" but this time Joe talks in a second-person perspective to his audience, undeniably rare in rock music. The song builds to a startling crescendo, echoing "life before death" and "stay as you are," and just when you think it's time to get up and flip the album, the band surprises you -- there's more! An extremely and purposefully contemplative guitar trio again builds with the band to a crescendo which suddenly ends not in the darkness of before but on a somewhat more mysterious note.

Original promo photo for Vanguard Records

Upon flipping the album side, it becomes clear that the band knows you can't be so serious for long -- and indeed, if the existential beauty that ends the first part of the album had immediately continued, it may have felt as if the band was trying too hard. Not the case! Here, McDonald again finds a new mood to swing into, with a love song written to his ex-lover Janis Joplin. "Into my life on waves of electrical sound," and you can immediately feel the electrical waves flowing through the Fish's music and feel the intensity of McDonald's emotions. "Janis" epitomizes the purity which most love songs lack, but if you listen closely, you may be surprised that it's not as happy as it first seems. 

After taking an entire album-side's-worth of break from satire, the band comes in with "The Bomb Song" as the introduction to the much deeper-rooted "Thought Dream" -- here again the band demonstrates that while they are capable of heavy criticism, their propensity for meaningful sound is just as strong. After a reprise of the H-bomb "prayer," the band sings a radio ad-style ode to LSD. This is where the difference between the band's first album, Electric Music, and this sophomore work becomes most obvious to me. While the first record gives a wink and a whisper, here the band has lost their fears and anxieties and clearly embraced their audience, which leads both to something more brutal (as with the title track) but more honest, and thus more timeless. "The Acid Commercial" has been the first track on my 12-hour playlist ever since I first made it.

"Thursday" is next, which is the last vocal song on the album; it's a love song that is perhaps a remembrance of "Janis" but is more likely meant to show the concept of forward motion through time and the evolution of personal state through the apparent relationship contrast. After a final word, the band manages to find an influence they still haven't cited in their dictionary and goes into "Eastern Jam," which is exactly as it says, a jam over a simple I / bVII chord progression, which is surprisingly the furthest thing from boring, as the band maintains the concept of motion while growing to an unknown goal, but for some reason steps out of the way for what will be the album's closer.

The album ends with "Colors For Susan," another contemplative instrumental which brings back the motif of color and here combines it with a wide range of chordal resolutions in various unpredictable fashions. This track to me has always seemed like ascension -- after travelling through the diverse hardships the band creates, they end it with a final coda, and it brings a resolution to the LP that probably would be least expected naively listening to the record's first track. 

I believe this album is a true masterpiece of the genre, one of the undisputed classics, and if you can take the time out of your day to sit down, listen and make it all the way through, I have no doubts that you will likely agree.

Ash Grove concert advertisement in L.A. newspaper, circa April 1968(?)

Country Joe McDonald - vocals, guitar, bells, tambourine
Barry "The Fish" Melton - vocals, guitar
David Cohen - guitar, organ
Bruce Barthol - bass, harmonica
Gary "Chicken" Hirsh - drums

Track Listing:
01) "The Fish Cheer & I-Feel-Like-I'm-Fixin'-To-Die Rag" -- 3:43
02) "Who Am I" -- 4:04
03) "Pat's Song" -- 5:25
04) "Rock Coast Blues" -- 3:55
05) "Magoo" -- 4:45
06) "Janis" -- 2:36
07) "The Bomb Song" -- 1:06
08) "Thought Dream" -- 5:04
09) "The Bomb Song (Reprise)" -- 0:27
10) "The Acid Commercial" -- 0:37
11) "Thursday" -- 2:41
12) "Eastern Jam" -- 4:29
13) "Colors For Susan" -- 5:58

Vinyl Condition: Mint (vintage sealed copy)
**Note: scans are from my backup copy since I didn't feel like removing the shrink on my new copy. I also have not scanned the gigantic Fish Game (wow! I still need to play this), but you should be able to find it elsewhere, whereas this sound quality is only available here ;) 

Dynamic Range: DR 13

Lineage:
– Audio-Technica AT150MLx Dual Moving-Magnet Cartridge
– Audio-Technica AT-LP1240-USB Direct Drive Professional Turntable (internal stock preamp/ADC removed)
– TCC TC-754 RIAA Phono Preamp (new regulated power supply, added LM7812 regulator)
– Focusrite Scarlett 6i6 MkII (96kHz / 24bit)
– Adobe Audition CC 2018 (recording)
– iZotope RX 6 Audio Editor (manual declicking, additional adjustments)
– Audacity 2.2.2 (fades between tracks, split tracks)
– Foobar2000 v1.3.19 (tagging, dynamic range analysis)

Full album on YouTube here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PQbMKGo3404

Enjoy, and please leave a note of thanks below so that I know my work is not in vain! :) 

The Bank concert advertisement in the Los Angeles Free Press, 4 Oct 1968
Also featuring mentions of The Hook, the A.B. Sky (Skhy) Blues Band, Canned Heat, Spirit...

Thursday, June 15, 2017

Country Joe & The Fish – Electric Music… (1967) [Orig. US Stereo LP]

Country Joe & The Fish – Electric Music For The Mind And Body

Original 1967 USA Stereo Pressing
Vanguard ‎VSD•79244 (discogs)
~ThePoodleBites rip in 96kHz/24bit + full scans~

**NOTE**: This is an older rip and some vinyl noise will be heard on the recording. I've decided to allow it here for the time being since it still has much better sound quality than the CD. However, I may redo this rip with superior sound in the future. 




Multiple versions of this album have been ripped a number of times: I've seen the mono version thrice, and a stereo repressing from the '80s once as well, but I still have not found a rip of this original stereo pressing, which I personally see as the (currently) definitive version of the original stereo mix. So it’s a good thing I found this nice copy in the dollar bin. The EQ (or lack thereof) here is perfect to me. The 2013 CD has this mix, but it is extremely noise-reduced, compressed, limited, poorly equalized, and all sorts of bad; so this rip is necessary.

Track Listing:
  1. "Flying High" – 2:38
  2. "Not So Sweet Martha Lorraine" – 4:21
  3. "Death Sound Blues" – 4:23 - Labeled as "Death Sound" on the mono version of the album
  4. "Happiness Is a Porpoise Mouth" – 2:48 - Labeled as "Porpoise Mouth" on the mono version of the album
  5. "Section 43" – 7:23
  6. "Superbird" – 2:04
  7. "Sad and Lonely Times" – 2:23
  8. "Love" (Joe McDonald, Barry Melton, David Cohen, Bruce Barthol, John Francis Gunning, Gary Hirsh) – 2:19
  9. "Bass Strings" – 4:58
  10. "The Masked Marauder" – 3:10
  11. "Grace" – 7:03

Vinyl Condition: VG++ / NM-
Dynamic Range: DR12

Lineage:
– Audio-Technica AT150MLx Dual Moving-Magnet Cartridge
– Audio-Technica AT-LP1240-USB Direct Drive Professional Turntable (internal stock preamp/ADC removed)
– TCC TC-754 RIAA Phono Preamp (new regulated power supply, added LM7812 regulator)
– Focusrite Scarlett 6i6 MkII (96kHz / 24bit)
– Adobe Audition CC 2017.0.2 (recording)
– iZotope RX 6 Audio Editor (light declick, remove subsonic rumble)
– Audacity 2.1.2 (fades between tracks, split tracks)
– Foobar2000 v1.3.14 (tagging, dynamic range analysis)


MEGA: https://mega.nz/folder/bkgGyTaD#y1jnpjt5E3fnlcLL_pExmA
Enjoy, and as always, comments are appreciated & welcomed! 🙂