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Ten Years After is the debut album by English blues rock band Ten Years After. Recorded at Decca Studios in London in September 1967, and released on 27 October 1967, it was one of the first blues rock albums by British musicians.
The original Ten Years After reunited in 1983 to play the Reading Festival, [10] and this performance was later released on CD as The Friday Rock Show Sessions – Live at Reading '83. In 1988, the members reunited for a few concerts and recorded the album About Time (1989) with producer Terry Manning in Memphis .
Ten Years After discography; Studio albums: 12: ... Box sets: 5: This is the discography of British rock band Ten Years After. Albums ... Ten Years After 1967–1974:
About Time is an album by the blues rock band Ten Years After, released in 1989. [2] [3] It was the final studio album featuring Alvin Lee, their singer and most prominent songwriter since the band's formation. It was their first studio release in fifteen years (since Positive Vibrations, in 1974). [4] About Time peaked at number 120 on the US ...
It should only contain pages that are Ten Years After albums or lists of Ten Years After albums, as well as subcategories containing those things (themselves set categories). Topics about Ten Years After albums in general should be placed in relevant topic categories .
In a retrospective review, Jim Newsom of AllMusic opined that "the band and engineer Andy Johns mix studio tricks and sound effects, blues-based song structures, a driving rhythm section, and Alvin Lee's signature lightning-fast guitar licks into a unified album that flows nicely from start to finish." [2]
Now is the tenth studio album by blues rock band Ten Years After, released in 2004. [2]Longtime band member Alvin Lee had left the band to be replaced by singer/guitarist Joe Gooch alongside Chick Churchill (keyboards), Leo Lyons (bass), and Ric Lee (drums).
Watt is the fifth studio album by the English blues rock band Ten Years After, released in 1970. It was recorded in September 1970 except for the last track, a cover of Chuck Berry 's " Sweet Little Sixteen ", which is a recording from the 1970 Isle of Wight Festival .