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Justine&Same..1970..Full Album.2........

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Justine&Same..1970..Full Album.2........Justine (13) ‎– Justine
Genre:
Rock, Folk, World, & Country
Style:
Acid Rock, Folk Rock, Psychedelic Rock
Année:
1970.......Popis za praćenje
Letenje
Volim te više nego što je dobro za mene da.
Nosnice
Ona donosi jutro sa sobom
Povratak na stijenu
Putnik
Morska pila
Mini razmetanje
G. Jones.
Je li to dobro, to je lijepo.
Satovi
Hej, poznavao sam te
Nepoznato putovanje.......Tracklist
Flying
Love You More Than It's Good For Me To
Nostrils
She Brings The Morning With Her
Back To Boulder
Traveller
Sea Saw
Mini Splurge
Mr Jones
Is That Good, That's Nice
Clocks
Hey I Used To Know You
Unknown Journey......Justine's biography
A quirky British psych folk band consisting of three female vocalists and several male guitarists, JUSTINE's music consisted of West Coast American acid pop combined with rather stalwart English contemporary folk, and blended in with a host of obvious psychic influences. The result was an interesting blend of sounds living in their lonely studio album.

The band is said to have amplified its sound by 'lending' local musicians and even small orchestral rallies for their limited live and studio performances. The band stared american singer Laurie Styvers, who will release two solo albums shortly after the band's dissolution. Unfortunately, Styvers succumbed to personal demons in the late 1990s. John McBurnie would continue to appear with Lee Jackson (NICE, REFUGEE) and Brian Chatton of FLAMING YOUTH in short-lived JACKSON HEIGHTS. The whereabouts of the rest of the group remain largely unknown. Justine was short-lived and quickly forgotten, but the band managed to release a really charming and intoxicating record, especially if you're one of those people who loves the pop sound of the late sixties/early 1970s (which of course had more than a little psyche sprinkled in it). The harmonic and brightly delivered parts of these songs fit perfectly into this description, while at the same time the post-war influence of the British people is evident in the many arrangements that lie embedded between loosely joined and stone twists. It's clear that guitarists John McBurnie and Keith Trowsdale grew up on Shirley Collins and the like, while the lovely young ladies who delivered vocals seem to have taken their cues from Mamas &the Papas, Quicksilver Messenger Service and every other band like them who surrounded themselves with paisley and patchouli until time and moderation made them change or fade. LADISLAV&Z.......