Chris Spedding (album)

Chris Spedding is the fifth, self-titled studio album by English singer-songwriter and guitarist Chris Spedding.

Chris Spedding
Studio album by
Released1976
StudioThe Château du Regard, France
GenrePub rock, roots rock, rock & roll
LabelRAK
ProducerMickie Most
Chris Spedding chronology
The Only Lick I Know
(1972)
Chris Spedding
(1976)
Hurt
(1977)
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic[1]

2013 reissue

Chris Spedding was reissued on 14 October 2013 by Culture Factory USA, an independent label that specialises in cult artists. The reissue CD was packaged in a miniature replica of the original quality vinyl packaging complete with an inner sleeve that features the original lyrics, photographs of Spedding and credits for the album. The label side of the CD features a replica of what the original RAK label looked like at the time of issue and even features "grooves" as if the black CD is made of vinyl.

The reissues did not have any additional outtakes or bonus tracks.[2]

Track listing

All tracks composed by Chris Spedding; except where indicated

  1. "New Girl in the Neighbourhood"
  2. "School Days"
  3. "Sweet Disposition"
  4. "Bedsit Girl"
  5. "Guitar Jamboree"
  6. "Jump in My Car" (Ted Mulry)
  7. "Hungry Man"
  8. "Motor Bikin'"
  9. "Catch That Train"
  10. "Nervous"
  11. "Boogie City"

Personnel

  • Chris Spedding - guitar, vocals
  • Les Hurdle - bass
  • Dave Cochran - bass on "Motor Bikin'"
  • Brian Bennett, Tony Carr - drums
  • Barry Morgan - drums om "Motor Bikin'"
  • Chas Mills, Neil Lancaster, Tony Burrows - backing vocals
Technical
gollark: I apologize for the SHEER rudeness of the following meme, however:
gollark: Orbital asking lasers.
gollark: Too bad, orbital asking lasers *have* been activated.
gollark: If people *actually* didn't mention anything unless someone explicitly asked for it, conversations would basically just be about one topic, and very boring and brief.
gollark: I didn't ask whether you asked. "Who asked" embodies an entirely unreasonable standard which nobody applies except to make some sort of ridiculous point - which is good, since if it *were* something people genuinely stuck to, it would kill off all conversation ever.

References

  1. Thompson, Dave. "Chris Spedding – Review". AllMusic. Retrieved 5 March 2015.
  2. "Home". Culturefactoryusa.com. Retrieved 2014-01-15.
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