Kind Of A Drag

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Kind Of A Drag album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 5   Total Length: 12:00

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Breakthrough Band - five stars!

rjw2000

The Buckinghams stood alone as a white horn band, who sounded like R&B, sometimes; on the other hand, they anticipated what Chicago and BS&T did a few years later. A small corpus of work, but great music. One of the most underrated and overlooked bands of the 60's.

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Not the Buckinghams I know...

Loni

Carl Giammarese and Nick Fortuna still perform as the Buckinghams and they are so much better than this. I don't know who the lead singer is on this album, but it might be Dennis Tufaro who was the original lead.

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Of all the popular music styles and sub-genres of the late '60s and early '70s, "horn rock" is perhaps the only one that hasn't been revived and revered by subsequent generations. A perhaps inevitable offshoot of mid-'60s "blue eyed soul" acts like Tom Jones, The Righteous Brothers and Mitch Ryder & the Detroit Wheels, the "horn rock" movement began in earnest in 1967 when Chicago pop group The Buckinghams, under the direction of producer James William… more »

They Say All Music Guide

Given its source, Kind of a Drag was one of the most extraordinary albums of the 1960s. One expected great, diverse LPs out of the likes of the Beatles and the Rolling Stones, among others; by contrast, even the better albums by top garage-punk outfits such as the 13th Floor Elevators generally had a one-note feel to them, or were conspicuously strong in one direction. So when a Chicago-based garage band (or were they a garage band?) like the Buckinghams, with one serious hit (the title track) to their name, put out a long-player that embraced soul, blues, garage punk, and English pop-rock with just about equal aplomb, it must have caught purchasers, radio programmers, and music writers alike off guard. Kind of a Drag isn’t the kind of searing punk document that their Windy City rivals the Shadows of Knight presented with their two LPs — the latter group’s work stood next to the Buckinghams roughly where the Who’s albums did next to those of the Beatles. The Buckinghams’ lean, guitar-driven garage punk versions of “Sweets for My Sweet” (a cover of the Searchers’ version, not the Drifters’) and the Hollies’ “I’ve Been Wrong” are juxtaposed with a horn-ornamented version of the Beatles’ “I Call Your Name” — on which the lead guitar is playing what sound almost like mandolin riffs; and all are sandwiched between the horn-driven “I’ll Go Crazy” and the raw, bluesy “I’m a Man” (patterned after the Yardbirds’ rendition, with some twists that are all the Buckinghams’ own). They still come off somewhat as light-weights, as on their cover of “Lawdy Miss Clawdy,” but that’s a minor lapse. The Sundazed CD reissue restores “I’m a Man,” which was pulled off of the original LP, and it also has about the best sound that this release has ever offered. – Bruce Eder

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