Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Email
Answers.com

Tarkio

 
Album Review: Tarkio

Review

Tarkio Road was Brewer & Shipley's breakthrough album, featuring the hit "One Toke Over the Line." The 1996 CD reissue included two bonus tracks. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine, All Music Guide

Similar Albums

Come the Day, Where Were You When I Needed You, Photograph, Bridge Over Troubled Water, Mr. Tambourine Man, If You Can Believe Your Eyes and Ears, Forrest Gump [Original Soundtrack], Super Hits of the '70s: Have a Nice Day, Vol. 2, Songs of Leonard Cohen

Credits

Bob Jones (Drums), Jerry Garcia (Guitar), Bill Vitt (Drums), Noel Jewkes (Flute), Danny Cox (Vocals), Stephen Barncard (Engineer), Diane Tribuno (Vocals), Nick Gravenites (Vocals), Nick Gravenites (Producer), Tom Shipley (Vocals), Mark Naftalin (Keyboards), Michael Brewer (Guitar), Michael Brewer (Vocals), Tom Shipley (Bass), John Kahn (Bass), Fred Burton (Guitar)
Search unanswered questions...
Enter a question here...
Search: All sources Community Q&A Reference topics
Wikipedia: Tarkio (album)
Top
Tarkio
Studio album by Brewer & Shipley
Released 1970
Recorded Wally Heider Studios, San Francisco
Genre Folk rock
Length 36:43
Label Kama Sutra Records
Producer Nick Gravenites
Professional reviews
Brewer & Shipley chronology
Weeds
(1969)
Tarkio
(1970)
Shake Off The Demon
(1971)

Tarkio (1970), the third album released by Brewer & Shipley, was their most popular recording yielding two hit songs: "One Toke Over the Line" and "Tarkio Road".

The title came about when they left California in 1969 returning to the Midwest, this time to Kansas City, Missouri, where they played college towns in Iowa, Nebraska, Missouri and Kansas. One regular gig was Tarkio College in the small town of Tarkio, Missouri and being long-hairs at that time in that place it was essential not to stop in the small towns on the way back home. They found they could just make it from Tarkio to Saint Joseph, Missouri on a single tank of gas and took to calling the route "Tarkio Road".

The catchy single, "One Toke Over the Line", peaked at #10, garnering notice from Spiro Agnew for what he saw as its subversiveness. Ironically, the song was performed (by Gail Farrell and Dick Dale) on The Lawrence Welk Show, which billed it a "modern spiritual". [1] The song is notably mentioned in the opening of Hunter S. Thompson's Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas. [2]


Jerry Garcia contributed a distinctive steel guitar intro to the track "Oh Mommy" which was purportedly a plea to throw Richard Nixon out of office. The album also features John Kahn and Bill Vitt on bass guitar and drums, respectively; regulars of The Jerry Garcia Band.


Track listing

all songs Brewer & Shipley except where marked

Side A

  1. "One Toke Over the Line" – 3:16
  2. "Song from Platte River" – 3:15
  3. "The Light" – 3:09
  4. "Ruby on the Morning" – 2:15
  5. "Oh Mommy" – 3:03

Side B

  1. "Don't Want to Die in Georgia" – 3:45
  2. "Can't Go Home" – 2:29
  3. "Tarkio Road" – 4:30
  4. "Seems Like a Long Time" (Ted Anderson) – 4:12
  5. "Fifty States of Freedom" – 6:49

A CD reissue in 1996 added the following tracks

Personnel


 
 
Learn More
Omnibus (2006 Album by Tarkio)
Tarkio (Rock Band, 2000s)
Colin Meloy (Rock Artist, '90s, 2000s)

Help us answer these
How many Miles from arcola illinois to tarkio missouri?

Post a question - any question - to the WikiAnswers community:

 

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 "Tarkio (album)" Read more