The New Age of Atlantic
The New Age of Atlantic, released in 1972, was the third in a series of rock music samplers released by the Atlantic label in the UK.[1] The collection is notable for its inclusion of two tracks, those by Yes and Led Zeppelin, unavailable in the UK at the time.[2] It reached no. 25 on the UK album charts in 1972.[3]
The New Age of Atlantic | ||||
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Compilation album by Various Artists | ||||
Released | November 3, 1972 | |||
Genre | Rock | |||
Length | 45:19 | |||
Label | Atlantic K20024 | |||
Producer | Various | |||
Series chronology | ||||
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Track listing
Side one
- Led Zeppelin: "Hey, Hey, What Can I Do" (John Bonham, John Paul Jones, Jimmy Page, Robert Plant) – 3:53 (from "Immigrant Song" US single B-side, cat. no. 2777, 1970)
- Loudon Wainwright III: "Motel Blues" (L. Wainwright) – 2:43 (from Album II, cat. no. K40272, 1971)
- Gordon Haskell: "Sitting by the Fire" (Haskell) – 3:41 (from It Is and It Isn't, cat. no. K40311, 1972)
- Dr. John: "Where Ya at Mule" (Mac Rebennack) – 4:55 (from The Sun, Moon & Herbs, cat. no. K40250, 1971)
- Buffalo Springfield: "Bluebird" (Stephen Stills) – 4:28 (from Buffalo Springfield Again, cat. no. K40014, 1967)
- Delaney, Bonnie & Friends: "Only You Know And I Know" (Dave Mason) – 3:24 (from D&B Together, cat. no. CBS KC 31377, 1972)
Side two
- Cactus: "Long Tall Sally" (Robert "Bumps" Blackwell, Enotris Johnson, Richard Penniman) – 3:03 (from One Way... or Another, cat. no. K12345, 1971)
- Jonathan Edwards: "Everybody Knows Her" (Edwards) – 1:53 (from Jonathan Edwards, cat. no. K40282, 1971)
- The J. Geils Band: "I Don't Need You No More" (Peter Wolf, Seth Justman) – 2:35 (from The Morning After, cat. no. K40293, 1971)
- John Prine: "Sam Stone" (Prine) – 4:14 (from John Prine cat. no. K40357, 1971)
- Yes: "America" (Paul Simon) – 10:30 (previously unreleased)
gollark: Assume there are integers x, y satisfying x²-y²=2(x-y)(x+y)=2x-y, x+y are both integers because they are a sum/difference of integersx, y >= 0 because (-x)²=x² so just ignore negative solutions since they only exist if a positive one does2 has the factors 2,1 so x-y, x+y must be 1, 2 in some orderx-y, x+y differ by 2yx-y, x+y differ by 12y=1y=½But y is an integer
gollark: We are having such advanced intellectual conversations.
gollark: yes.
gollark: Technically.
gollark: No.
References
- Gramophone magazine, Vol 49, 1972, pg 1955.
- Billboard magazine, Vol 84, 1972, page 129.
- Martin Roach (ed.), The Virgin Book of British Hit Albums, 2009, ISBN 978-0-7535-1700-0, p.335
External links
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