Details for this torrent 


1969 Blind Faith ‎– Blind Faith Viynlrip 24bit-192khz
Type:
Audio > FLAC
Files:
13
Size:
1.57 GB

Tag(s):
Blind Faith 1969 vinyl Eric Clapton Steve Winwood Ginger Baker Rock Blues Classic Rock Vinyl Rip Flac 24bit 192khz

Uploaded:
Mar 9, 2014
By:
sidmal



This is an original vinyl rip at 24bit/192khz by Sidmal, serveral programs have been 
used in order to replicate the sound, split, rename and tag the LP,into flac. I won't
 specify them at the moment, nor will I Boast about the equipment I use. please 
leave comments, be they positive or negative. 
Enjoy!!!!
P.S. No harm meant with the thumbnail, This is the front cover...

Blind Faith (2)   ΓÇÄΓÇô Blind Faith  
Label: 
RSO ΓÇÄΓÇô 2394 142 
Format: 
Vinyl, LP, Album, Reissue 

Country: 
 Germany  
Released: 
1969(1977)  
Genre: 
Rock 
Style: 
Classic Rock 



Tracklist 


A1    Had To Cry Today     8:49  
A2    Can't Find My Way Home     3:17  
A3    Well All Right     4:28  
A4    Presence Of The Lord     4:56  
B1    Sea Of Joy     5:22  
B2    Do What You Like     15:20  


Credits 

Arranged By ΓÇô Chris Blackwell, Robert Stigwood 
Artwork [Spaceship Built By] ΓÇô Mick Milligan 
Design [Cover Design], Photography By ΓÇô Bob Seideman* 
Producer ΓÇô Jimmy Miller 
 

Notes 

Stevie Winwood & Rick Grech appear through the courtesy of Island Records Ltd. 

A1, A2, B1: Island. 
A3: Southern. 
A4: Throat. 
B2: P.E. Baker. 

Allmusic.com:


Release Date
 July, 1969 

Genre
Pop/Rock
Blues


Styles
Album Rock
Blues-Rock
British Blues
Regional Blues
Contemporary Pop/Rock
Hard Rock


Recording Date

February 20, 1969 - June 24, 1969
Submit Corrections 

Album Moods

Indulgent  Organic  Earnest  Freewheeling  Rousing  Searching  Laid-Back/Mellow  Messy  Poignant  Rollicking  


Themes

Hanging Out  Road Trip  Summer  

Review by Bruce Eder 


Blind Faith's first and last album, more than 30 years old and counting, remains one of the jewels of the Eric Clapton, Steve Winwood, and Ginger Baker catalogs, despite the crash-and-burn history of the band itself, which scarcely lasted six months. As much a follow-up to Traffic's self-titled second album as it is to Cream's final output, it merges the soulful blues of the former with the heavy riffing and outsized song lengths of the latter for a very compelling sound unique to this band. Not all of it works -- between the virtuoso electric blues of "Had to Cry Today," the acoustic-textured "Can't Find My Way Home," the soaring "Presence of the Lord" (Eric Clapton's one contribution here as a songwriter, and the first great song he ever authored) and "Sea of Joy," the band doesn't do much with the Buddy Holly song "Well All Right"; and Ginger Baker's "Do What You Like" was a little weak to take up 15 minutes of space on an LP that might have been better used for a shorter drum solo and more songs. 
Unfortunately, the group was never that together as a band and evidently had just the 42 minutes of new music here ready to tour behind.