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Hogwash [Bonus Tracks]

 
Album Review: Hogwash [Bonus Tracks]

Review

Hogwash falls somewhere in between the Groundhogs' raw, blues-meets-electric rock sound of the late '60s and early '70s, and the less enthusiastic material that followed. It initiates more of a fundamental prog rock sound, with Tony McPhee's guitar work (along with a smattering of keyboard bits) taking on some well-maintained aggression. The album is the first for the former Egg drummer Clive Brooks, replacing Ken Pustlenik who left after 1972's Who Will Save the World album, while bass player Peter Cruickshank dishes out some of the group's better bottom-heavy riffs. But, even with a hearty progressive foundation in place, the material from Hogwash has a hard time competing with 1970's Thank Christ for the Bomb or the conceptual Split album, which came out a year later. "Earth Shanty" and "S'one Song" aren't overwhelming, but the defined British blues sound coming from McPhee's guitar playing on "I Love Miss Ogyny" makes up for them. "You Had a Lesson"'s energy comes from the erratic time signatures, while the one minute and 25 seconds of "The Ringmaster" is caught up in a psychedelic, space rock ride. "3744 James Road" is pure Groundhogs, rumbling along with a slightly tainted blues chug, and accompanied by an unrefined vocal pounce. The band's inattentiveness begins to show up on "Sad Is the Hunter," "Mr. Hooker, Sir John," and infrequently throughout the albums last few tracks, with the genuine spunk and organic feel of the instruments losing their ruggedness. While Hogwash isn't their most solid album through and through, it has more fruitful moments than ineffective ones, and it still stands as the Groundhogs' last worthy release. 1974's Solid and both releases from 1976, Crosscut Saw and Black Diamond, show the band's evident dispersal from their original sound. ~ Mike DeGagne, All Music Guide

Tracks

Track TitleComposersPerformersTime
I Love Miss Ogyny Tony McPhee The Groundhogs (5:24)
You Had a Lesson Tony McPhee The Groundhogs (5:53)
The Ringmaster Tony McPhee The Groundhogs (1:23)
3744 James Road Tony McPhee The Groundhogs (7:18)
Sad Is the Hunter Tony McPhee The Groundhogs (5:19)
S'one Song Tony McPhee The Groundhogs (3:38)
Earth Shanty Tony McPhee The Groundhogs (6:50)
Mr Hooker, Sir John Tony McPhee The Groundhogs (3:37)
Rolling and Tumbling [*] Tony McPhee The Groundhogs (2:32)
Death Letter [*] Tony McPhee The Groundhogs (4:15)
Me and the Devil Blues [*] Robert Johnson The Groundhogs (3:55)
No More Doggin' [*] Tony McPhee The Groundhogs (3:50)

Credits

The Groundhogs (Main Performer), Clive Brooks (Drums), Peter Cruickshank (Bass), Paul Hardiman (Tape Operator), Tony McPhee (Synthesizer), Tony McPhee (Bass), Tony McPhee (Guitar), Tony McPhee (Vocals), Tony McPhee (Producer), Martin Rushent (Engineer), Andrew Thompson (Remastering), Pierre Tubbs (Photography), George Snow (Effects), John O'Regan (Liner Notes)
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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