-
- The
Yardbirds
- f. 1963, Surrey, England, db. 1968
- Group / Rock 'n' Roll, Electric British Blues,
Blues-Rock, British-Invasion, Psychedelic, British Blues
For Your Love / 1965 / Repertoire
(4009910475720) 


For
Your Love |
I'm Not Talking | Putty (in Your Hands) | I Ain't Got You | Got to Hurry | I
Ain't Done Wrong | I Wish You Would | A Certain Girl | Sweet Music | Good
Morning Little Schoolgirl | My Girl Sloopy | I
Wish You Would (Long Version) | A Certain Girl (Alternate Version) | Got to
Hurry | Sweet Music | Heart Full of Soul | Steeled Blues | Paff Bumm | Questa
Volta | Paff Bumm
- Back in 1965, this album seemed like a real mess,
which was understandable, because For
Your Love wasn't a "real" album, in the sense
that the Yardbirds ever assembled an LP of that name or content. Rather,
it was the response of their American label, Epic Records, to the band's
achieving a number six single with the title track, with manager Giorgio
Gomelsky selecting the cuts. The quasi-progressive "For Your
Love," dominated by guest artist Brian Auger's harpsichord, is
juxtaposed with hard-rocking blues-based numbers, almost all of which
featured departed lead guitarist Eric Clapton (who is mentioned nowhere on
the LP), with current lead guitarist Jeff Beck on just three tracks. The
Clapton cuts, although primitive next to the material he was soon to cut
with John Mayall, have an intensity that's still riveting to hear four
decades later, and was some of the best blues-based rock & roll of its
era. The three Beck sides show where the band was really heading, beyond
the immediate success of "For Your Love" — "I'm Not
Talking" and "I Ain't Done Wrong" were hard, loud, blazing
showcases for Beck's concise blues playing, while "My Girl Sloopy"
was the first extended jam to emerge on record from a band on the British
blues scene; the source material isn't ideal, but Beck and company make
their point in an era where bands were seldom allowed to go more than four
minutes on even an album track — these boys could play and make it count.
The 13 bonus tracks are mostly blues-rock and are mostly scintillating,
and the Repertoire CD has the best sound that any of this music has ever
displayed.
-
- Copyright © 2004 by Dennis Vihar and
DeViCom. All Rights Reserved.
Date: 06. Jan 05