J. Geils Band - "Live" Full House

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Album Details

Title: "Live" Full House
Artist: J. Geils Band
Release Date: 1972
Re-Released On: 9/1/2009
Label: Atlantic, Warner Bros.
Duration: 32:54
Album Type(s): live
UPCs: 075678280320, 075678142222, 075678142246, 4943674093373
Genre: Rock
Styles: Rock & Roll, Blues-Rock, Hard Rock, Contemporary Pop/Rock, Album Rock
Moods: Confident, Party/Celebratory, Raucous, Rousing, Amiable/Good-Natured, Greasy, Playful, Swaggering, Boisterous, Carefree, Cheerful, Energetic, Exuberant, Freewheeling, Fun, Happy, Rambunctious, Rowdy, Brash, Rollicking
Total Copies: 0
Members Wishing: 0
Number of Discs/SwapaCD Credits: 1

Track Listings

  1. First I Look at the Purse
  2. Homework
  3. Pack Fair and Square
  4. Whammer Jammer
  5. Hard Drivin' Man
  6. Serves You Right to Suffer
  7. Cruisin' for a Love
  8. Looking for a Love

Additional Releases

YearTypeLabelCatalog #
2009CDWarner Bros.13615
1989CDAtlantic7241
------CDAtlanticSD-7241-2

Other Editions

  • No other editions were found for this album.

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Album Review

The J. Geils Band made many fine, sometimes great, studio albums but where they really captured their full, thrilling potential was on the concert stage. Most live albums tend to be a poor excuse for actually being at the show in question, but the Geils Band's live albums jump out of the speakers with so much joy, fun, and unquenchable rock & roll spirit that you might as well be there. "Live" Full House was their first live record, and it is a blast from start to finish. Recorded in 1972 at Detroit's Cinderella Ballroom, the group runs through songs from their first two albums, The J. Geils Band and The Morning After, kicking out the jams on rockers like the Motown chestnut "First I Look at the Purse," Otis Rush's "Homework," and one of the group's first self-penned classics, "Hard Drivin' Man," as well as positively scorching through an incredible version of John Lee Hooker's dark and evil blues "Serves You Right to Suffer." It's easy to overlook J. Geils himself on guitar when you have a magnetic frontman like Peter Wolf or the unstoppable force that is harp player Magic Dick (check "Whammer Jammer" for proof of his greatness), but his soloing on this track serves notice that he could tear off a ferocious solo with the best of them. "Live" Full House is a short, punchy shot of rock & roll genius by one of the great bands of the '70s and one of the best live albums ever recorded. ~ Tim Sendra, All Music Guide

Credits

NameCredits
Danny KleinBass
Dinky DawsonLive Mixing
Geoffrey HaslamProducer, Engineer
J. GeilsGuitar, Producer, Arranger
Magic DickHarmonica, Trumpet
Peter WolfVocals
Seth JustmanProducer, Keyboards, Vocals
Stephen BladdVocals, Drums

Member Reviews

Kelly F. wrote on 9/9/2009...

2 of 2 member(s) found this review helpful.

If you love Rock & Roll, by which I mean if you have ever danced yourself nearly to death while screaming in primal joy -- then you would have LOVED any show by the J Geils Band during the early 70s. Geils is an underrated guitar player, Magic Dick may be the most amazing harp player in history, and Peter Wolf drove the band hard and kept the crowd whipped to a frenzy. This album captures the band in all their nasty, ragged edged, high energy glory. The sound quality is questionable, but was often questionable even live in small venues they played at the time (this album was recorded at The Cinderella Ballroom in Detroit, a place my adult self would want a series of vaccinations after visiting but which was heaven for my teenaged self). Put it in the CD player, crank it up, and prepare to howl, shake, shimmy and grin! I'd give this one six stars if I could.