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Fresh Cream

 
Album Review: Fresh Cream

  • Artist: Cream
  • Rating: StarStarStarStarHalf Star
  • Release Date: 1966 12
  • Total Time: 40:52
  • Type: Compilation (best of)
  • Genre: Rock

Review

Fresh Cream represents so many different firsts, it's difficult to keep count. Cream, of course, was the first supergroup, but their first album not only gave birth to the power trio, it also was instrumental in the birth of heavy metal and the birth of jam rock. That's a lot of weight for one record and, like a lot of pioneering records, Fresh Cream doesn't seem quite as mighty as what would come later, both from the group and its acolytes. In retrospect, the moments on the LP that are a bit unformed -- in particular, the halting waltz of "Dreaming" never achieves the sweet ethereal atmosphere it aspires to -- stand out more than the innovations, which have been so thoroughly assimilated into the vocabulary of rock & roll, but Fresh Cream was a remarkable shift forward in rock upon its 1966 release and it remains quite potent. Certainly at this early stage the trio was still grounded heavily in blues, only fitting given guitarist Eric Clapton's stint in John Mayall's Bluesbreakers, which is where he first played with bassist Jack Bruce, but Cream never had the purist bent of Mayall, and not just because they dabbled heavily in psychedelia. The rhythm section of Bruce and Ginger Baker had a distinct jazzy bent to their beat; this isn't hard and pure, it's spongy and elastic, giving the musicians plenty of room to roam. This fluidity is most apparent on the blues covers that take up nearly half the record, especially on "Spoonful," where the swirling instrumental interplay, echo, fuzz tones, and overwhelming volume constitute true psychedelic music, and also points strongly toward the guitar worship of heavy metal. Almost all the second side of Fresh Cream is devoted to this, closing with Baker's showcase "Toad," but for as hard and restless as this half of the album is, there is some lightness on the first portion of the record where Bruce reveals himself as an inventive psychedelic pop songwriter with the tense, colorful "N.S.U." and the hook- and harmony-laden "I Feel Free." Cream shows as much force and mastery on these tighter, poppier tunes as they do on the free-flowing jams, yet they show a clear bias toward the long-form blues numbers, which makes sense: they formed to be able to pursue this freedom, which they do so without restraint. If at times that does make the album indulgent or lopsided, this is nevertheless where Cream was feeling their way forward, creating their heavy psychedelic jazz-blues and, in the process, opening the door to all kinds of serious rock music that may have happened without Fresh Cream, but it just would not have happened in the same fashion as it did with this record as precedent. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine, All Music Guide

Tracks

Track TitleComposersPerformersTime
I Feel Free (Lyrics) Jack Bruce, Pete Brown Cream (2:53)
N.S.U. (Lyrics) Jack Bruce Cream (2:47)
Sleepy Time Time (Lyrics) Janet Godfrey, Jack Bruce Cream (4:22)
Dreaming (Lyrics) Jack Bruce Cream (2:01)
Sweet Wine (Lyrics) Janet Godfrey, Ginger Baker Cream (3:20)
Spoonful (Lyrics) Willie Dixon Cream (6:33)
Cat's Squirrel Mick Abrahams, Traditional Cream (3:05)
Four Until Late (Lyrics) Traditional, Robert Johnson Cream (2:10)
Rollin' and Tumblin' (Lyrics) Muddy Waters Cream (4:43)
I'm So Glad Skip James Cream (3:59)
Toad Ginger Baker Cream (5:09)

Credits

Jack Bruce (Bass), Eric Clapton (Vocals), Eric Clapton (Guitar), Ginger Baker (Drums), Ginger Baker (Vocals), Jack Bruce (Guitar (Bass)), Robert Stigwood (Producer), Jack Bruce (Harmonica), Jack Bruce (Vocals), Jonathan Timperly (Engineer), Jack Bruce (Keyboards), John Timperly (Engineer)
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Wikipedia: Fresh Cream
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Fresh Cream
Studio album by Cream
Released December 9th 1966
Recorded July - October 1966 at Rayrik Studios in London, Ryemuse Studios in London
Genre Blues-rock
Length 40:52
Label Reaction (UK)
Polydor (Eur)
Atco (US)
Producer Robert Stigwood
Professional reviews
Cream chronology
Fresh Cream
(1966)
Disraeli Gears
(1967)
Eric Clapton chronology
Blues Breakers with Eric Clapton with John Mayall's Bluesbreakers
(1966)
Fresh Cream
(1966)
Disraeli Gears
(1967)

Fresh Cream is Cream's December 1966 debut album. It was the first LP release of producer Robert Stigwood's new "Independent" Reaction Records label. It reached number 6 in the UK in February 1967 and - eventually - number 39 in the US in August 1968. The British version omitted "I Feel Free" (then their current single), while the US version contained it, though it dropped "Spoonful". The CD re-issue of 2000 preserves both songs in the album's running order.

In 2003, the album was ranked number 101 on Rolling Stone magazine's list of the 500 greatest albums of all time.

Contents

Track listing

Side 1

  1. "I Feel Free" (Jack Bruce, Pete Brown) - 2:53
  2. "N.S.U." (Bruce) – 2:43
  3. "Sleepy Time Time" (Bruce, Janet Godfrey) – 4:20
  4. "Dreaming" (Bruce) – 1:58
  5. "Sweet Wine" (Ginger Baker, Godfrey) – 3:17
  6. "Spoonful" (Willie Dixon) – 6:30
    • The original U.S. release omitted "Spoonful" and inserted "I Feel Free" at the beginning of Side 1
    • *The track title N.S.U. is an abbreviation for "Non-Specific Urethritis".[1]

Side 2

  1. "Cat's Squirrel" (Traditional, arr. S. Splurge) – 3:03
  2. "Four Until Late" (Robert Johnson, arr. Eric Clapton) – 2:07
  3. "Rollin' and Tumblin'" (McKinley Morganfield) – 4:42
  4. "I'm So Glad" (Skip James) – 3:57
  5. "Toad" (Baker) – 5:11

Some 1980s-era album reissues also include "The Coffee Song" (Tony Colton, Ray Smith). These usually sequence the song as the third track on side 2, as per the Swedish edition described below.

Swedish Edition

There was also a Sweden only 1966 12-track release, as UK but adding "The Coffee Song" and "Wrapping Paper". Both vinyl and cover were made in Germany and exported for the Swedish market only - the German original had the same 10 tracks as UK. The group hated "Coffee Song" and didn't want it issued at all, but a mono version was mixed and coupled with "Wrapping Paper" as a single. There were no plans at this stage to release it in stereo, so for the Swedish issue a crude stereo mix was used. This was made during the sessions in early August 1966 for instructive purpose - the whole track as basic mono is mixed far right and a solo guitar overdub far left. Never intended for release this mix was soon lost and for later stereo issues a new one was made.

The front cover and record no. (623 031) are the same as the German issue, but three different back covers exist. The first, listed the correct 12 tracks, the second listed 10 tracks, and a third where the 12 track listing has been "glued" over the 10 track listing.

Track listing on record.

  1. "N.S.U"
  2. "Sleepy Time Time"
  3. "Dreaming"
  4. "Sweet Wine"
  5. "Spoonful"
  6. "Wrapping Paper"
  7. "Cat's Squirrel"
  8. "Four Until Late"
  9. "The Coffee Song"
  10. "Rollin´and Tumblin´"
  11. "I´m So Glad"
  12. "Toad"

Personnel

See also

References

  1. ^ Unterberger, Richie. "N.S.U.". Allmusic. http://www.allmusic.com/cg/amg.dll?p=amg&sql=33:hifwxxt0ldke. Retrieved 2008-02-05. 

External links


 
 

 

Copyrights:

Album Review. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Fresh Cream" Read more