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The Saints  - The Most Primitive Band In The World (Live From The Twilight Zone, Brisbane 1974)h1
Rock
Performer: The Saints
Title: The Most Primitive Band In The World (Live From The Twilight Zone, Brisbane 1974)
Style: Punk
Year 1995
Country UK
Genre: Rock
Rating: 4.5
Votes: 510
MP3 size: 1329 mb
FLAC size: 1643 mb
WMA size: 1843 mb
Other formats: FLAC WAV ADX VOX AHX MP3 MP4

The Saints - The Most Primitive Band In The World (Live From The Twilight Zone, Brisbane 1974) mp3 album


The Saints  - The Most Primitive Band In The World (Live From The Twilight Zone, Brisbane 1974) mp3 album

Tracklist

A1 Wild About You
A2 Do The Robot
A3 One Way Street
A4 Knock On Wood
A5 Erotic Neurotic
B1 River Deep, Mountain High
B2 Lies
B3 (I'm) Stranded
B4 Messin' With The Kid
B5 (I'm) Misunderstood

Credits

  • Artwork By [Cover Concept] – Judi Dransfield
  • Artwork By [Design] – Cameron Moss
  • Bass – Ivor Hay
  • Drums – Laurie Mysterio
  • Guitar – Ed Kuepper
  • Mastered By – Don Bartley
  • Vocals – Chris Bailey

Other versions

Category Artist Title (Format) Label Category Country Year
HOT 1053 CD The Saints The Most Primitive Band In The World (Live From The Twilight Zone, Brisbane 1974) ‎(CD, Album) Hot Records HOT 1053 CD UK 1995
HOT 1053 CD The Saints The Most Primitive Band In The World (Live From The Twilight Zone, Brisbane 1974) ‎(CD, Album) Hot Records HOT 1053 CD Australia 1995
7 72956-2 The Saints The Most Primitive Band In The World - Live From The Twilight Zone Brisbane 1974 ‎(CD, Album) Hot Records , Restless Records 7 72956-2 US 1995


Flarik
These tracks were recorded early-to-mid `74, almost a year after the band had formed and almost 2 1/2 years before the release of the first Saints` single in 1976. The recording was made in Ed Kuepper`s parents` garage, except for "Misunderstood" which was recorded at Queensland University, direct onto a mono cassette-deck and features the second line-up of the band. Before this the Saints were a 3-piece, with Ivor Hay on piano and no drummer. In a different universe this would have been the first Saints LP. It captures the band near the beginning of its first phase, as opposed to the EMI release which was at the end, and without geting into a debate about aesthetics, this one`s probably better. Possibly due to the 3 million line-up changes and years of rejection that folowed, a bit of spontaneity may have been knocked out of the Saints. Whatever, compared to these recordings, the EMI album sounds, ironically, almost a bit formularized. Certainly, Chris Bailey`s singing doesn`t get much better than the rather spiffing performance contained herein and Ivor Hay`s playing has a panache that maybe wasn`t matched by later bass-players. Laurie`s Deonardo Coleman-style drumming also had a lot going for it. Anyway, if you like the early Saints, have a listen to to this!