Wheatfield Soul
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Wheatfield Soul is the fifth studio album by the Canadian rock band The Guess Who. This album is notable for being the first full-length "Guess Who" album to feature Burton Cummings on lead vocals and the first without original lead singer Chad Allan.
About the album
Wheatfield Soul, while not a major success, is still a favorite among the band's fan base. "These Eyes" was their breakthrough single and a radio favorite across the world. "Pink Wine Sparkles in the Glass" has notable lyrics and is also a radio favorite in Winnipeg. "I Found Her in a Star" is an underrated ballad written by Cummings which features fuzz guitar by Bachman. The song "Lightfoot" is a tribute to fellow Canadian Gordon Lightfoot. Wheatfield Soul is the group's first psychedelic LP[1] that also focuses on British influenced pop and rock.[2]
The most notable track on the album, is "Friends of Mine". Strange Days by The Doors had just been released a year prior to the recording of this song and Strange Days contained "When the Music's Over", which is clearly an influence to "Friends of Mine", as many of the vocal chords are similar, the song is lengthy and the lyrics are an attempt by Cummings to sound like his then influence, Doors' lead singer Jim Morrison.
An original version of "Friends of Mine" can be found on the Guess Who's posthumous compilation This Time Long Ago. The track features Cummings singing about "doing it" with "your very own mother" and smothering six-month-old babies. RCA most likely advised the group to not release that version on Wheatfield Soul.
Side two begins with "When You Touch Me", which has an opening guitar riff that sounds identical to that of Tiny Bradshaw's "Train Kept A-Rollin'". "A Wednesday In Your Garden" is another underrated track. A sole composition by Bachman, the song features jazz chords, perhaps inspired by The Zombies' usage of the same sound on many of their hit records. "Lightfoot" is written about fellow Canadian musician Gordon Lightfoot. "Love and a Yellow Rose" showcases many of the Guess Who's musical talents, as Peterson plays the tablas and Bachman plays a sitar and a fuzz guitar on the song.
"Maple Fudge" sounds similar to a Paul McCartney ballad, specifically "When I'm Sixty-Four", and likely is lyrically influenced by "Eleanor Rigby". The Beatles were a huge influence on the Guess Who, as the Guess Who often covered their songs on CBC's TV entertainment series Let's Go, or during any live performance in the early going of their career. "We're Coming to Dinner" closes the album.
Added to the 2009 remastered CD version was "When Friends Fall Out," "Guess Who Blues," and "Of a Dropping Pin." This version of "When Friends Fall Out" never made it to any original, early Guess Who albums but was known for its strong drum beat and organ sound.[3] A later version appeared on American Woman.
Review scores | |
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Source | Rating |
Allmusic | link |
Robert Christgau | B–[4] |
Rolling Stone | (positivie)[5] |
Original track listing
All songs written by Randy Bachman/Burton Cummings except as noted.
- "These Eyes" - 3:45
- "Pink Wine Sparkles in the Glass" - 2:13
- "I Found Her in a Star" (Cummings) - 2:36
- "Friends of Mine" - 10:04
- "When You Touch Me" (Bachman, Cummings, Rob Matheson) - 3:38
- "A Wednesday in Your Garden" (Bachman) - 3:20
- "Lightfoot" (Bachman, Cummings, Matheson) - 3:07
- "Love and a Yellow Rose" - 5:05
- "Maple Fudge" - 1:49
- "We're Coming to Dinner" - 2:43
2009 Remastered CD (IconoClassic ICON 1008)
- "These Eyes"
- "Pink Wine Sparkles in the Glass"
- "I Found Her in a Star
- "Friends of Mine
- "When You Touch Me
- "A Wednesday in Your Garden"
- "Lightfoot"
- "Love and a Yellow Rose"
- "Maple Fudge"
- "We're Coming to Dinner"
- "When Friends Fall Out" - 3:17
- "Guess Who Blues" - 3:31
- "Of a Dropping Pin" - 3:24
CD Mastered by Bob Irwin at Sundazed Studios, Coxsackie, NY and Vic Anesini at Sony Music Studios, NY
Personnel
- Randy Bachman – lead guitar, backing vocals, sitar
- Burton Cummings – organ, lead vocals, piano, rhythm guitar, flute
- Jim Kale – bass, backing vocals
- Garry Peterson – drums, backing vocals, percussion, tabla
- Ben McPeek - Musical director
- David Greene - Engineer
- Elliot Scheiner - Engineer
- Jack Richardson - Producer[6]
Charts
Album
Year | Chart | Peak Position |
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1969 | Billboard 200[7] | 45 |
Singles
Year | Single | Chart | Position |
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1969 | "These Eyes" | Canada[8] | 7 |
Australia | 100 | ||
Billboard Hot 100[9] | 5 |
References
- ^ Riley Haas (13 September 2013). The Beatles Are the Greatest Rock Band of All Time and I Can Prove It. Riley Haas. p. 230. ISBN 978-0-9921513-0-0.
- ^ Wheatfield Soul at AllMusic
- ^ The Guess Who, "When Friends Fall Out" Early Verision Retrieved March 16, 2015
- ^ Christgau, Robert (July 31, 1969). "Consumer Guide (2)". The Village Voice. Music section. Retrieved 2012-03-03.
- ^ Edmonds, Nancy (14 June 1969). "Records". Rolling Stone (35). San Francisco: Straight Arrow Publishers, Inc.: 36.
- ^ The Guess Who, Wheatfield Soul Credits Retrieved March 16, 2015
- ^ The Guess Who, Wheatfield Soul Chart Position Retrieved March 16, 2015
- ^ The Guess Who, "These Eyes" Canadian Chart Position Retrieved March 16, 2015
- ^ The Guess Who, "These Eyes" U.S. Chart Position Retrieved March 16, 2015