Flamingo

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Flamingo album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 10   Total Length: 37:50

eMusic Features

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Six Degrees of Kings of Leon’s Aha Shake Heartbreak

By Yancey Strickler, eMusic Contributor

It used to be easier to pretend that an album was its own perfectly self-contained artifact. The great records certainly feel that way. But albums are more permeable than solid, their motivations, executions and inspirations informed by, and often stolen from, their peers and forbearers. It all sounds awfully formal, but it's not. It's the very nature of music — of art, even. The Six Degrees features examine the relationships between classic records and five… more »

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A Tale of Two Cults: the Flamin’ Groovies and Spirit

By Lenny Kaye, eMusic Contributor

Two old faves recently surfaced on eMusic, and I must say it's been a pleasure to renew their acquaintance. Both bands grew up in the California '60s, polar opposites from southern El and northern Es, and were as much reaction to their hometowns as representative. Each had a cultish lifeline that has served to burnish their reputation since an early seventies heyday, and both made music of a heightened musical ideal and purity. Spirit's first album… more »

They Say All Music Guide

While the Flamin’ Groovies’ first album, Supersnazz, loaded their high-octane retro-rock down with a loving but overly intrusive production, their next long-player, Flamingo, went in exactly the opposite direction; for their second time at bat (and their second major label), the Groovies cranked up their amps and kicked up the tempos, while producer Richard Robinson stripped the band’s sound to the bone. If Flamingo has a flaw, it’s that the album is just a bit too basic; the recording sounds a bit flat and muddy, and it isn’t very flattering to either Tim Lynch’s guitar or Danny Mihm’s drums (and who fell in love with the panning control while they were mixing?). But if Flamingo sometimes sounds more like a demo than a finished album, it’s a demo of a great band firing on all cylinders; with “Gonna Rock Tonite,” the album starts out in fifth gear and never stops, with even the less manic tunes (such as the bluesy “Childhood’s End”) sounding sharp and full of fire, and the many rave-ups raving mighty fine indeed (notable exception: the trippy “She’s Falling Apart,” which proves these guys didn’t understand psychedelia and had no business playing it, which was a considerable virtue in the Bay Area during the late ’60s and early ’70s). If the engineering sometimes lets them down, Flamingo does a far, far better job of capturing what made the Groovies a great band than their debut and ranks alongside their very finest work. [Buddha Records' 1999 CD reissue tacks on six potent bonus tracks from a live-in-the-studio session which appeared in part on the 1976 compilation Still Shakin'.] – Mark Deming

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