» » Siren - Strange Locomotion
Siren  - Strange Locomotion FLAC album

Tracklist Hide Credits

A1 Relaxing With Bonnie Lou 3:22
A2 Some Dark Day 3:32
A3 Hot Potato 4:07
A4 Soon 3:45
A5 Gigolo 4:27
A6 I'm All Aching 3:03
B1 Strange Locomotion 3:00
B2 Shake My Hand
Guitar – Kevin Coyne
3:17
B3 Lonesome Ride 2:20
B4 Fetch Me My Woman 7:37
B5 Fat Moaning Minnie 2:50
B6 Squeeze Me 2:35

Companies, etc.

  • Printed By – Garrod & Lofthouse
  • Record Company – Warner Bros. Records Ltd.

Credits

  • Bass – Dave Clague (tracks: A1, A3, A5, B1, B4, B6)
  • Design [Sleeve] – John Jones , Nick Cudworth
  • Drums – Tat Meager (tracks: A1, A3 to A5, B1, B4, B6)
  • Engineer – Mike Ross*
  • Guitar – Dave Clague (tracks: A1, A4, B1, B3, B6), Nick Cudworth (tracks: A2, A4, A5, B3, B5)
  • Lead Guitar – Mick Gratton (tracks: A1, A3, B1, B4, B6)
  • Photography By – Keith Pollard
  • Piano – Nick Cudworth (tracks: A1, A3, A5 to B1, B4, B6)
  • Producer – Dave Clague, Dave Clague
  • Vocals – Kevin Coyne
  • Written-By – D. Clague* (tracks: A3, B1, B4, B6), K. Coyne*, N. Cudworth* (tracks: A1 to B1, B3 to B6)

Notes

Issued in gatefold sleeve.

Other versions

Category Artist Title (Format) Label Category Country Year
388 7014.2 42, GH 70142 Siren Strange Locomotion ‎(CD, Album, RE) Rockport Records GmbH, Golden Hind 388 7014.2 42, GH 70142 Germany 1994
TURPD3 Siren Strange Locomotion ‎(2xCD, Album, RE) Turpentine Records TURPD3 UK 2014
AIRAC-1462 Siren Strange Locomotion ‎(CD, Album, Ltd, RE, RM, Pap) Air Mail Archive, Dandelion Records AIRAC-1462 Japan 2008
EKS-74087 Siren Strange Locomotion ‎(LP, Promo) Dandelion Records, Elektra EKS-74087 US 1971
EKS-74087 Siren Strange Locomotion ‎(LP, Album) Elektra, Dandelion Records EKS-74087 US 1971


Siren  - Strange Locomotion FLAC album

Musician performer: Siren

Title: Strange Locomotion

Country: Germany

Date of release: 1971

Style: Blues Rock

Genre: Rock

Size FLAC: 1968 mb

Rating: 4.6 / 5

Votes: 944

Other Formats: DXD MP2 DTS TTA VOX ASF DTS

Related to Siren - Strange Locomotion FLAC Albums

Granijurus
Here is a mixed-up of blues, country-blues and country music lead by Kevin Coyne, a very underrated songwriter. Kevin is singing and playing acoustic guitar, slide guitar and electric guitar and co-wrote most of the tracks here.At the end of the 60s, white blues used to be very popular especially in UK with bands like Fleetwood Mac, John Mayall and The Bluesbreakers, Savoy Brown and Chicken Shack. Siren was not in the forefront and seems to be a forgotten gem by now.When I heard the original "Gardener Man", I just noticed that David Bowie ripped off the rhythmic background to write "The Jean Genie" 3 years later...The acoustic blues tracks are very convincing: "Get Right Church", "Wasting My Time", the beautiful "And I Wonder", "Asylum" and the great "I Wonder Where". Among those tracks, only the first one with slide guitar is a cover.Some blues tracks are more orchestrated like the classic cover of "Rock Me Baby", "Sixteen Women" and "The War Is Over" in which you can hear great electric guitar playing with solos, piano and drums."Wake Up Your Children" sounds like if there was a hint of Jethro Tull and Focus who were very famous in 1969, with solo flute playing backed by acoustic guitar. A very pleasant song.There is quite a wide range of blues styles here.Warmly recommended forgotten stuff.
Granijurus
Here is a mixed-up of blues, country-blues and country music lead by Kevin Coyne, a very underrated songwriter. Kevin is singing and playing acoustic guitar, slide guitar and electric guitar and co-wrote most of the tracks here.At the end of the 60s, white blues used to be very popular especially in UK with bands like Fleetwood Mac, John Mayall and The Bluesbreakers, Savoy Brown and Chicken Shack. Siren was not in the forefront and seems to be a forgotten gem by now.When I heard the original "Gardener Man", I just noticed that David Bowie ripped off the rhythmic background to write "The Jean Genie" 3 years later...The acoustic blues tracks are very convincing: "Get Right Church", "Wasting My Time", the beautiful "And I Wonder", "Asylum" and the great "I Wonder Where". Among those tracks, only the first one with slide guitar is a cover.Some blues tracks are more orchestrated like the classic cover of "Rock Me Baby", "Sixteen Women" and "The War Is Over" in which you can hear great electric guitar playing with solos, piano and drums."Wake Up Your Children" sounds like if there was a hint of Jethro Tull and Focus who were very famous in 1969, with solo flute playing backed by acoustic guitar. A very pleasant song.There is quite a wide range of blues styles here.Warmly recommended forgotten stuff.