Them Changes (Buddy Miles album)

Them Changes is an album by American artist Buddy Miles, released in June 1970. It reached number 8 on the 1970 Jazz Albums chart, number 35 on the Billboard 200 and number 14 on the 1971 R&B albums charts.[1]

Them Changes
Studio album by
ReleasedJune 1970
StudioAudio-Finishers Studios, Chicago, Illinois
GenreFunk rock, R&B, soul
Length33:28
LabelMercury
ProducerBuddy Miles, Steve Cropper, Robin McBride
Buddy Miles chronology
Electric Church
(1969)
Them Changes
(1970)
We Got to Live Together
(1970)

Reception

Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic [1]
Christgau's Record GuideC[2]

Writing for Allmusic, music critic Steve Kurutz called the album "quite simply, one of the great lost treasures of soul inspired rock music... definitely worth the extra effort to try to locate."[1] Conversely, Robert Christgau wrote "His singing is too thin to carry two consecutive cuts, his drumming has to be exploited by subtler musicians, and the title cut is the only decent song he ever wrote."[2]

Track listing

  1. "Them Changes" (Buddy Miles) – 3:22
  2. "I Still Love You, Anyway" (Charlie Karp) – 4:14
  3. "Heart's Delight" (Miles) – 4:08
  4. "Dreams" (Gregg Allman) – 4:53
  5. "Down by the River" (Neil Young) – 6:22
  6. "Memphis Train" (Rufus Thomas) – 2:57
  7. "Paul B. Allen, Omaha, Nebraska" (Miles) – 5:33
  8. "Your Feeling Is Mine" (Otis Redding) – 2:13

Personnel

  • Buddy Miles – vocals, drums, bass, guitar, keyboards, background vocals
  • Bob Hogins – keyboards, organ, piano, electric piano, trombone, background vocals
  • Charlie Karp – guitar, background vocals
  • Andre Lewis – clavinet, organ, piano, background vocals
  • Robin McBride – electric harpsichord, keyboards, piano, background vocals
  • Billy Cox – bass, fuzz bass
  • David Hull – bass, background vocals
  • Roland Robinson – bass
  • Marlo Henderson – guitar, background vocals
  • Jim McCarty – guitar
  • Wally Rossunolo – guitar
  • Duane Hitchings – organ
  • Bob Parkins – organ
  • Teddy Blandin – trumpet
  • Peter Carter – trumpet
  • Tom Hall – trumpet
  • James Tatum – tenor saxophone
  • Mark Williams – tenor saxophone, background vocals
  • Phil Woods – flugelhorn, piano, background vocals
  • Toby Wynn – baritone saxophone
  • Lee Allen – saxophone
  • Bobby Pittman – tenor saxophone, alto saxophone
  • Fred Allen – background vocals

Production notes

  • Steve Cropper – producer
  • Buddy Miles – producer, arranger
  • Robin McBride – producer
  • Bob Hogins – arranger
  • Charlie Karp – arranger
  • Warren Dewey – engineer
  • Alan Hendler – engineer
  • Fred Breitberg – assistant engineer
  • Bruce Swedien – mixing engineer
  • Richard Germinaro – design
  • Burnell Caldwell – photography
  • John Craig – design consultant
  • Dean Rudland – liner notes
  • Desmond Strobel – art direction
gollark: If you fund osmarks.net with 81294129046894162481647126412846194 funding, I can buy a TPU and execute it faster.
gollark: I'm asking it about helloboi first. It is very slow.
gollark: > What if bees literally apioform?<|endoftext|>It's very popular.<|endoftext|>In the current network, it's not very widely used, and it's not really used yet.<|endoftext|>I don't see why that's a quirk of some sort.<|endoftext|>I still think that the best way to do rights is to have people arbitrarily erase their memory and/or repurpose each other.<|endoftext|><@!2930660666066606688215756> Yes.<|endoftext|>I should probably just transfer ownership to the potatOS registry.<|endoftext|><@!2930660668866606666606667890625663247974> Give me the code and/or soul and/or soul and/or soul and/or soul and/or soul.<|endoftext|>The PotatOS privacy policy is very clear.<|endoftext|>It's not anomalous, though. It's anomalous.<|endoftext|>I see.<|endoftext|>I've heard of it, and it's a "
gollark: Aha!
gollark: It has no information on what if bees literally apioform.

References

  1. Kurutz, Steve. "Them Changes > Review". Allmusic. Retrieved October 2, 2015.
  2. Christgau, Robert (1981). "Consumer Guide '70s: M". Christgau's Record Guide: Rock Albums of the Seventies. Ticknor & Fields. ISBN 089919026X. Retrieved March 8, 2019 via robertchristgau.com.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.