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
Compilation album by
Various Artists
ReleasedNovember 3, 1972
GenreRock
Length45:19
LabelAtlantic K20024
ProducerVarious
Series chronology
The Age of Atlantic
(1970)
The New Age of Atlantic
(1972)

Track listing

Side one

  1. 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)
  2. Loudon Wainwright III: "Motel Blues" (L. Wainwright) – 2:43 (from Album II, cat. no. K40272, 1971)
  3. Gordon Haskell: "Sitting by the Fire" (Haskell) – 3:41 (from It Is and It Isn't, cat. no. K40311, 1972)
  4. Dr. John: "Where Ya at Mule" (Mac Rebennack) – 4:55 (from The Sun, Moon & Herbs, cat. no. K40250, 1971)
  5. Buffalo Springfield: "Bluebird" (Stephen Stills) – 4:28 (from Buffalo Springfield Again, cat. no. K40014, 1967)
  6. 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

  1. Cactus: "Long Tall Sally" (Robert "Bumps" Blackwell, Enotris Johnson, Richard Penniman) – 3:03 (from One Way... or Another, cat. no. K12345, 1971)
  2. Jonathan Edwards: "Everybody Knows Her" (Edwards) – 1:53 (from Jonathan Edwards, cat. no. K40282, 1971)
  3. 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)
  4. John Prine: "Sam Stone" (Prine) – 4:14 (from John Prine cat. no. K40357, 1971)
  5. 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

  1. Gramophone magazine, Vol 49, 1972, pg 1955.
  2. Billboard magazine, Vol 84, 1972, page 129.
  3. Martin Roach (ed.), The Virgin Book of British Hit Albums, 2009, ISBN 978-0-7535-1700-0, p.335
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.