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This Time Long Ago
Guess Who
This Time Long Ago
Genres: Alternative Rock, Pop, Rock, Classic Rock, Metal
 
  •  Track Listings (15) - Disc #1
  •  Track Listings (13) - Disc #2

Because of the success of 2003's Shakin' All Over/Hey Ho!/It's Time, Friday Music is proud to release yet another incredible Guess Who collection This Time Long Ago (The Lost Sessions 67-68). This specially priced delux...  more »

     
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CD Details

All Artists: Guess Who
Title: This Time Long Ago
Members Wishing: 2
Total Copies: 0
Label: Ranbach Can/Zoom
Release Date: 6/18/2001
Album Type: Import
Genres: Alternative Rock, Pop, Rock, Classic Rock, Metal
Style: Album-Oriented Rock (AOR)
Number of Discs: 2
SwapaCD Credits: 2
UPC: 626534001025

Synopsis

Album Description
Because of the success of 2003's Shakin' All Over/Hey Ho!/It's Time, Friday Music is proud to release yet another incredible Guess Who collection This Time Long Ago (The Lost Sessions 67-68). This specially priced deluxe 2 CD set is filled with almost 100 minutes of rarities, unreleased sessions and classic rock standards of which most have never been heard in the United States until now! The Guess Who & Bachman Turner Overdrive founder Randy Bachman again has rescued these tapes from oblivion, and has carefully restored them for the Friday Music label. The packaging is superb as it includes a wonderful 14-page essay and a collection of never seen photos from Bachman's own archives. A true treasury of rare gems for loyal Guess Who fans everywhere! This Time Long Ago continues their journey from their humble Winnipeg beginnings to becoming the superstar act which is still playing together in 2004! With songs ranging from their second U.K chart hit "His Girl" to unreleased versions of songs from their Wheatfield Soul, Canned Wheat and American Woman albums, these "lost sessions" really cover a lot of musical territory. Check out the newly discovered version of "These Eyes" with the Winnipeg Symphony Orchestra. Burton Cummings vocals are really in exceptional form on this classic track as well as all of the other tunes in this new package. Their rare Canadian single of the Neil Young penned "Flying On The Ground Is Wrong" receives star treatment as well earlier versions of Guess Who staples "Wednesday In Your Garden", "When Friends Fall Out" and "Of A Dropping Pin." Another reason to rave about this collection is because of the unreleased songs unearthed from the Canadian television show Let's Go. Randy Bachman, Burton Cummings, Jim Kale and Garry Peterson appeared weekly and played not only their own material but also a selection of hit songs from the era. Their interpretations of "White Room", "Love Is All Around" and "Light My Fire" are highly interesting and enjoyable to hear after all these years of being stored in the vaults. These tracks make this collection worth its weight in gold.

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CD Reviews

Worthwhile if you like late 60's pop
Daniel P. Hudelson | Grandville, MI USA | 03/16/2004
(4 out of 5 stars)

"Rescued from oblivion by Randy Bachman's Ranbach label, this collection proves how accomplished The Guess Who were before their US breakthrough hit, "These Eyes", with material drawn from the previous couple years. "This Time Long Ago", "Flying On The Ground" (a Neil Young composition), are "Miss Felicity Grey" are a few of the songs which demonstrate that this band was every bit as good as what your typical top ten group of '67 or '68. A portion of the material was restored from some recently recovered tapes from their tenure as house band on the Canadian dance TV show, LET'S GO, so we also get to hear their interpretations of such hits as "Summertime Blues" (Blue Cheer style), "Love Is All Around", "White Room", and "Light My Fire". "Light My Fire" is particularly impressive, done twice, first, in Jose Feliciano style, then busting into Doors style. This barely 20 yr old Burton Cummings has no trouble being bluesly and pained a la Jose, nor delivering edgy, break on through vocals, Morrison style, although there's a certain young "cuteness" to the latter, warmer than the Lizard King's rendition. Also included in the 2 disc set are a couple of songs that were later released on their RCA debut LP, WHEATFIELD SOUL, "These Eyes", "A Wednesday In Your Garden" (a lovely hidden GW gem of a song) & "Friends of Mine". Here, "Friends of Mine" is much more raw (a touch of adolescent-sounding sadism, but forgiveable, taking age into account), and perhaps embarrassing to modern-day Cummings, but very interesting, with a very cool closing abstract jass saxophone solo. The symphony, also heard on "Wednesday", also adds a fresh flavor for those accustomed to the WHEATFIELD SOUL version. One gem in particular on THIS TIME LONG AGO, is the jazz standard, "I'm In The Mood For Love". We now realize that Burton Cummings had these jazzy bluesy vocal stylize-abilities long before he started wearing the mustache and touring with that white grand piano. The Cummings-Bachman interplay is impressive for a couple young guys, Randy, doing his Lenny Breau, Burton & his Chet Baker. There's a couple little hiccups on this record, like the extremely goofy version of "Pretty Blue Eyes", and "Sitar Saga" (now we realize how far & quickly Burton progressed on flute from here to "Undun" or "Follow Your Daughter Home"), but I've only scratched the surface regarding this CD's points of interesting. Very informative liner notes from Canadian Rock Historian, John Einarson are included."
Finally.
Aaronite | Vancouver BC | 08/09/2001
(4 out of 5 stars)

"I bought this album a week before the opening night of their American Woman Tour to get myself in the mood for the show. I'm a big fan of the band, but until this album, was disappointed we didn't have a rarities album like other bands from that era. And now it's here..I gave the disc 4 stars, but that's really because the second disc in the set redeems the first. An interesting lok at the band in its renaissance after Chad Allen left, but aside from the odd Pretty Blue Eyes and the amazingly adept Sitar Saga, there isn't all that much spectacular stuff. Until disc 2. Starting with two versions of the Doors' Light My Fire, and rolling through a number of alternate versions of future album tracks, from These Eyes to 6am or Nearer, and a remarkable White Room, It really shows how the band grew into what we have today. This disc makes the set well worth it.A real Guess Who Fan needs this. If you aren't a huge fan, don't worry too much about getting it."
Made me a fan of the Guess Who All Over Again
Robert Miller | Eastern USA | 12/15/2001
(5 out of 5 stars)

"This is a really great collection, although I enjoy the first disk more than the second. Randy Bachman's There's no getting away from you is fabulous. It ranks up there with some of their moody lesser known gems, compositions such as The Answer- it's one of their best. You have a great variety of pop songs on this collection as well as covers and earlier versions of songs that were re-recorded on American Woman & Canned Wheat. These earlier versions are for the most part at least as good if not better than the later versions. The warped Pretty Blue Eyes is as funny as anything you ever heard - sung through a megaphone along with a Walter Brennan type of narration, topped off by a drunken sounding trombone solo ala Dylan's Rainy Day Woman or Kristofferson's I may drink too much. You have to hear it to believe it. There are only three misses - The Feliciano-version Light My Fire and White Room don't have the right feel or sound. The earlier version of Friends of Mine is brutal - RCA must have wisely forced Cummings to tone down/delete the lyrics about infanticide and incest. Still I'll give him credit - he outdid Jim Morrison with his outrageous lyrics. This collection is absolute fun, and is a prime example of why this highly underrated band was the best thing that ever came out of Canada. Just buy it damn it!"