Mick Abrahams - Mick's Back

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Album Details

Title: Mick's Back
Artist: Mick Abrahams
Release Date: 7/30/1996
Re-Released On: 2/15/2005
Label: Castle/Sanctuary, Castle Music Ltd., Indigo
Duration: 53:16
UPCs: 021823600024, 060768128620, 766126450128
Genre: Rock
Styles: Modern Electric Blues, Blues-Rock, British Blues, Regional Blues
Total Copies: 0
Members Wishing: 2
Number of Discs/SwapaCD Credits: 1

Track Listings

  1. The River's Invitation
  2. Bad Feeling
  3. Cold Women With Warm Hearts
  4. Time to Love
  5. Leaving Home Blues
  6. Long Grey Mare
  7. You'd Be a Millionaire
  8. Send Me Some Lovin'
  9. Yolanda
  10. Little Red Rooster
  11. Ain't No Love in the Heart of the City
  12. So Much Hard Luck
  13. Skyline Drive

Additional Releases

YearTypeLabelCatalog #
2005CDCastle Music Ltd.36000
2003CDCastle/Sanctuary81286
1996CDIndigo501

Other Editions

  • No other editions were found for this album.

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Album Review

It's a funny thing about Mick Abrahams -- he and his one-time Jethro Tull bandmate Ian Anderson are both "trapped" in time warps, but of very differing kinds: Anderson in a folky art rock musical loop and Abrahams in a '60s-style electric blues cycle, with the echoes of Chess Records' roster and also Albert King et al. rippling through his work. And at this late date, Abrahams may be the one with slightly more elbow room. The opening track on Mick's Back, Percy Mayfield's "The River's Invitation," could almost pass for an early-'60s Howlin' Wolf track, and the rest doesn't try to be much more advanced, nor does it have to be -- "Cold Women With Warm Hearts" offers Abrahams in his own "voice," and it all sounds very close to the kind of rootsy blues that Alexis Korner and Blues Incorporated used to do, with some of the virtuosity of the Graham Bond Organisation in there as well. The electric guitar is, of course, very prominently featured throughout, and there are saxes and even a little brass, but they're sufficiently subdued to keep the focus on Abrahams' playing where it belongs. His singing is also expressive, a powerful, raspy instrument in its own right -- coupled with the rippling instrumental breaks on songs like "Time to Love" and the mixed acoustic/electric textures of "Leaving Home Blues," the CD justifies itself as a still very credible version of '60s british blues, which will appeal to anyone who loved early Alexis Korner, Cyril Davies, Graham Bond, or the first two Cream albums. ~ Bruce Eder, All Music Guide

Credits

NameCredits
Colin HodgkinsonLiner Notes
Dave BaldwinOrgan, Piano, Keyboards
John HulmeTrumpet
John PriceBass, Guitar (Bass)
LenniSaxophone, Bass, Brass Arrangement
Mick AbrahamsGuitar (Acoustic), Slide Guitar, Vocals
Norman BeakerBrass Arrangement, Guitar (Rhythm), Bass
Sheila GottVocals (Background)
Tim FranksPercussion, Drums