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Eden's Children - Sure Looks Real (1968 ABC Records) LP⭐

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Eden's Children - Sure Looks Real (1968 ABC Records) LP⭐

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Category: Music
Total size: 190.84 MB
Added: 2025-03-10 23:39:07

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Info Hash: E8F38B73967E5C859533AD8C1F7266B6F609E985
Last updated: 12.4 hours ago

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Artist: Eden's Children Album: Sure Looks Real Label: ABC Records – ABCS-652 Format: Vinyl, LP, Album Country: US Released: 1968 Genre: Heavy Psychedelic Rock Audio codec: FLAC | lossless Tracklist: A1. Sure Looks Real 4:15 A2. Toasted 1:56 A3. Spirit Call 2:31 A4. Come When I Call 3:30 A5. Awakening 2:55 B1. The Clock's Imagination 2:44 B2. Things Gone Wrong 4:50 B3. Wings 2:31 B4. Call It Design 3:06 B5. Invitation 3:22 B6. Echoes 2:12 Personnel: Richard «Sham» Schamach - lead vocals, lead & acoustic guitars, piano, bass Larry Kiley - bass, lead guitar (02, 08), lead vocals Jimmy Sturman - drums The second (and final) album, Eden’s Children, was released in the fall of 1968 and was again produced by Bob Thiele, but this time with the directorial assistance of Jonathan Whitecup. The cover of the disc was designed by the genius photographer Elliott Landy, who worked with various underground publications in New York and is known for his iconic photos of such rock legends as Bob Dylan, Jim Morrison, Jimi Hendrix and Janis Joplin. In 1969, he would become the official photographer of the historic Woodstock Festival. On the second disc, the Boston trio overcomes the influence of the Cream group, which was quite noticeable on the first album, and opens their arms to soft vocal harmonies, minor moods and jazzy guitar chords. And although the album, called "Sure Looks Real", is somewhat uneven in its structure and is not so saturated with the virtuoso and filigree guitar playing of "Sham" Schamach as on the first long-playing work, its overall quality level is beyond doubt. "Children of Eden" once again unloaded from their creative reserves another dozen of the same foggy psychedelic sounds as before, but the new disc still had a noticeably greater jazz influence than the first, which, apparently, led to its initial underestimation even among the band's loyal fans, and as a result, it never managed to ram the list of the 200 best American records published in the "Billboard" magazine