Vinyl Records, LPs and CD Marketplace
 
   
Cart Sign In



Steve Miller Band

 - 

Number 5

 

Tracklist

(Vinyl)
A1   Good Morning      2:45
A2   I Love You      2:49
A3   Going To The Country      3:43
A4   Hot Chili      3:28
A5   Tokin's      4:20
B1   Going To Mexico      2:23
B2   Steve Miller's Midnight Tango      2:38
See more tracks

* Items below may differ depending on the release.

          

Review


The rock and roll drought of 1970 shows no signs of letting up as summer comes to a close. A few good records have been released here and there but on the whole things have been pretty bad. These two albums show the problems even the best established bands are having. Quicksilver and the Steve Miller Band have been two of the most consistent groups in the country over the past couple of years but these two new releases don't come near the excellence of either group's past work.

On first listen, Number 5 just sounds like a mediocre Steve… Read More

Miller album but after hearing it a few times, you discover mistake after mistake in arranging, mixing, you name it. Instruments clash on "Going To The Country" and "Hot Chili," the vocal is almost inaudible on "Jackson-Kent Blues" and "Never Kill Another Man" stumbles a couple of times before it gets going. These things might not matter so much if the music had other things going for it but the material is strictly second-rate and the group's playing is generally uninspired. Probably the best cut on the record is "Going To Mexico," a derivative blues that sounds like it belonged on Sailor. Incidentally, this is the only cut which Glyn Johns, who co-produced all of the Miller Band's other albums, has anything to do with and his absence might be the reason for many of the technical problems here.

A reason for the weakness in material might be related to the political nature of the album. Half of the songs deal with social and political themes and these types of songs do not show Steve Miller at his strongest. He's earnest enough—"I'm a troubadour looking for a chance," he sings—but like most of us, he can only make outraged statements, ask basic questions—"Will you be the one who killed another man?"—and offer no real solutions. Like most artists from Dylan on down, Miller is best when he writes about things close to him and avoids the rhetoric and sloganeering that seem to come with political discussion.

Although Quicksilver's new release, Just For Love, seems untouched by political considerations, it has more weak spots than Miller's album. Unlike the other two Quicksilver studio albums, which were carefully recorded and mixed, this one sounds like it was thrown together with little or no preparation beforehand. Most of the vocals are terribly recorded; they sound similar to Doug Sahm's distorted vocals on a couple of cuts on the Mendocino album which turned out to be demo tapes. As a matter of fact, I wouldn't be surprised if "Freeway Flyer" or "The Hat" are just that. The two unfocused instrumentals, "Wolf Run (Parts 1 & 2)" and "Cobra" sound like they were thought up at the last minute to make the album a respectable length. Even "Just For Love" which makes it the first time around has a second part to it that unsuccessfully attempts to give the album a unity it does not possess.

The only two songs that are really up to par come ba


Steve Miller Band Discography        Recently Listed             

Refine Search Results

Artist
Title
Label
Cat Num
Barcode
Genre
Country
Seller
Priceto





No Vinyl+CDR







    
1 Listed For Sale:   steve miller band        number 5        LP Gatefold        Clear Filters

Page 1 of 1
Show
  Artist   Title   Format   Condition   Seller Price    
Top of Page Page 1 of 1
Show


Search STEVE MILLER BAND at