Search - Spooky Tooth :: Last Puff (Dig)

Last Puff (Dig)
Spooky Tooth
Last Puff (Dig)
Genres: Pop, Rock, Metal
 
  •  Track Listings (11) - Disc #1

2004 compilation features 22 digitally remastered tracks & is packaged in a digipak with eight page booklet featuring rare photos, session details, & biographical notes. Proper.

     
1

Larger Image

CD Details

All Artists: Spooky Tooth
Title: Last Puff (Dig)
Members Wishing: 7
Total Copies: 0
Label: Repertoire
Release Date: 6/23/2005
Album Type: Extra tracks, Import
Genres: Pop, Rock, Metal
Styles: Blues Rock, Progressive, Progressive Rock
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1
UPCs: 4009910107324, 4988005518200

Synopsis

Album Description
2004 compilation features 22 digitally remastered tracks & is packaged in a digipak with eight page booklet featuring rare photos, session details, & biographical notes. Proper.

Similar CDs

 

CD Reviews

A great find
Paul S. Carver | New Hope PA | 06/21/2008
(5 out of 5 stars)

"I found this LP album recently. Not knowing about the group, I took a chance. Boy am I impressed! Unexplicably, its become one of my favorite albums. Its got a loose, shambling quality that is endearing. I love the slow "heavy" groove of all the tracks. They somehow managed to "outweird" Joe Cocker on their cover of the Cocker tune. I especially like "Nobody There At All"; it has such great songwriting and soulful playing I surprised myself by getting a little verklempt. Buy this album for an example of an overlooked heavy late-60s rock 'n roll classic."
Literally A Last Gasp for Spooky Tooth
Christopher L. Dolmetsch | Hurricane, WV USA | 02/04/2007
(3 out of 5 stars)

"In 1968 I was drawn into Spooky Tooth, a band that at the time was one of Island Record's "best kept secrets." Already familiar with many of Island's avant garde rock acts (Traffic, Fairport Convention, Free, Jethro Tull) I was eager to hear what these lads from Carlisle had to offer. I was floored by "It's All About" and even more impressed by "Spooky Two." from there the splintering of the band and the subsequent releases "Ceremony" and "The Last Puff" were clearly downhill endeavors. This re-issue of "The Last Puff" demonstrates that fact with the original tracks augmented by the somewhat earlier singles. A case in point is the album version of Elton John's "Son Of Your Father," which when compared to the earlier single release of the same tune (even using the same instrumental track), shows that Gary Wright's strong lead vocals intertwined with Mike Harrison's are absent from the album's rendition and the latter suffers somewhat from their omission. Truth is this album was a contractual obligation and not really a credible step forward. Still it does mark the final stage of an extraordinary band, and can be appreciated for what it is: a final hurrah or a last puff."