portrait of this blog's author - by Stephen Blackman 2008

Tuesday, December 06, 2022

The New Adult Bookstore Motel, Records & Liquor - What's Shakin'?!

Check out the Store guys and whilst I don't push official releases, titles that are long out of print are fair game eh? December's library list is chocka blocka!

I have wanted this album for years and it is still listed but long ago was over forty quid so . . . . . have at it I say. I have gone on and on about The Lovin' Spoonful and this rare gem contains the earliest recorded debut by the band after The Mugwumps and before Do You Believe in Magic!

Also it introduced us to Paul Butterfield Tom Rush and included Al Kooper and early Clapton (Powerhouse) but none the worse for that!


Track Listings

1Good Time Music - The Lovin' Spoonful - The Lovin' Spoonful
2Almost Grown - The Lovin' Spoonful - The Lovin' Spoonful
3Spoonful - The Paul Butterfield Blues Band - The Paul Butterfield Blues Band
4Off The Wall - The Paul Butterfield Blues Band - The Paul Butterfield Blues Band
5Can't Keep From Crying Sometimes - Al Kooper - Al Kooper
6I Want To Know - Eric Clapton & The Powerhouse - Eric Clapton
7Crossroads - Eric Clapton & The Powerhouse - Eric Clapton
8Lovin' Cup - The Paul Butterfield Blues Band - The Paul Butterfield Blues Band
9Good Morning Little Schoolgirl - The Paul Butterfield Blues Band - The Paul Butterfield Blues Band
10Steppin' Out - Eric Clapton & The Powerhouse - Eric Clapton
11I'm In Love Again - Tom Rush - Tom Rush
12Don't Bank On It Baby - The Lovin' Spoonful - The Lovin' Spoonful
13Searchin' - The Lovin' Spoonful - The Lovin' Spoonful
14One More Mile - The Paul Butterfield Blues B




























ERIC CLAPTON AND THE POWERHOUSE - CROSS ROADS
ALBUM Various ‎– What's Shakin' (1966)
The Powerhouse were a somewhat mysterious early rock supergroup -- or, at least were mysterious when the only three tracks they released first appeared. This was on Elektra's What's Shakin' sampler in 1966, which included three tracks credited to Eric Clapton & the Powerhouse. Among those were covers of Robert Johnson's "Crossroads"; "Steppin' Out," an instrumental that Clapton also did as part of John Mayall's Bluesbreakers; and "I Want to Know." The Powerhouse actually consisted of Stevie Winwood on vocals, Jack Bruce on bass, Paul Jones on harmonica, Ben Palmer on piano, and Pete York on drums. At the time, Winwood and York were part of the Spencer Davis Group, and Bruce and Jones were in Manfred Mann. Palmer, by far the most obscure member, had been in a band with Clapton during a brief time in 1965 when the guitarist had left the Bluesbreakers; later, he'd be a roadie for Cream. Of course, Clapton and Bruce would soon team up to form two-thirds of Cream, and Clapton and Winwood would play together at the end of the 1960s in Blind Faith. In addition, Cream did two of the songs from The Powerhouse session, "Crossroads" and "Steppin' Out," in concert. The Powerhouse versions of these songs were inferior to Cream's (and, in "Steppin' Out"'s case, also inferior to the version Clapton had done with Mayall), containing less energy, and differing from the more famous renditions by including piano in the arrangement. "I Want to Know" was just an average blues-rock tune, credited to "MacLeod," which was possibly a pseudonym for the group or for Paul Jones, as Jones was married to British author Sheila MacLeod. As interesting footnotes, Winwood was credited under the pseudonym of either Steve Anglo or Stevie D'Angelo on the original LP, probably to avoid contractual problems. However, Clapton admitted later that year in the British rock press that "Steve Anglo" was in fact Stevie Winwood, though it didn't stop Winwood from using the "Steve Anglo" pseudonym again for a recording with John Mayall, "Long Night," soon afterward. Also, for all its obscurity, "I Want to Know" was covered by Ten Years After on their first album in late 1967. The session itself was done in March 1966, at the instigation of Joe Boyd, who had just gone to London to open a U.K. office for the Elektra label. Paul Jones suggested getting together an all-star band and helped Boyd put together a proposed lineup. That lineup was the same as the one that played on the What's Shakin' tracks, except that the intended drummer was Ginger Baker; as Baker was away on tour, Pete York was used instead. Clapton, Winwood, Baker, and Bruce were still pretty unknown in the U.S. when the LP was issued in 1966, and even many big fans of Cream, Traffic, and the various musicians involved remain unaware of this early collaboration. In a March 1968 interview, incidentally, Eric Clapton said that an unreleased fourth track, a slow blues, was also recorded with The Powerhouse, although it has yet to officially surface.


Image result for What's Shakin

What's Shakin' - Discogs

Paul Butterfield with the Little Walter classic Off The Wall . . . . . 

1 comment:

Jobe said...

Thanks for the story on EC's Powerhouse. I did not know it