Blood, Sweat & Tears | |
Type: | studio |
Artist: | Blood, Sweat & Tears |
Cover: | BS&T_cover.jpg |
Released: | December 11, 1968 |
Recorded: | October 7–22, 1968 |
Studio: | Columbia 30th Street, New York City |
Length: | 45:36 (Original) |
Label: | Columbia |
Producer: | James William Guercio |
Prev Title: | Child Is Father to the Man |
Prev Year: | 1968 |
Next Title: | Blood, Sweat & Tears 3 |
Next Year: | 1970 |
Blood, Sweat & Tears is the second album by the American band Blood, Sweat & Tears, released on December 11, 1968. It was the most commercially successful album for the group, rising to the top of the U.S. charts for a collective seven weeks and yielding three successive Top 5 singles. It received a Grammy Award for Album of the Year in 1970. The album has been certified quadruple platinum by the RIAA, with sales of more than four million units in the U.S. In Canada, the album enjoyed a total of eight weeks at number 1 on the RPM national album chart.
Al Kooper, Randy Brecker and Jerry Weiss had left BS&T after the first album. Founding members Bobby Colomby and Steve Katz searched for a replacement singer and selected David Clayton-Thomas. Three more musicians joined to bring the band to a total of nine members. Columbia assigned James William Guercio as producer for the album. Guercio was simultaneously working with the band Chicago.
"More and More", "Smiling Phases", and "You've Made Me So Very Happy" were among the songs that Kooper had arranged before leaving the group. Other arrangements were contributed by Fred Lipsius. The song selection was more pop oriented than the first album, with more compositions from outside the band.
The album was recorded at CBS's then state-of-the-art 30th Street Studio in New York City. The studio had just taken delivery of one of the first Ampex model MM-1000 16-track tape recorders. The new technology allowed for far more flexibility in overdubbing and mixing than the four and eight-track studio recorders which were standard in 1968. This was among the first 16-track recordings released to the public.
An additional song, "Children of the Wind", was recorded at these sessions but left off the album. It later appeared on the compilation The Very Best of Blood, Sweat and Tears: What Goes Up!
In his AllMusic retrospective review, music critic William Ruhlmann called the players a "less adventurous unit" than on the debut album, but called the album "more accessible... It was a repertoire to build a career on, and Blood, Sweat & Tears did exactly that, although they never came close to equaling this album." In his lengthy contemporary review, Jon Landau of Rolling Stone dismissed the album, writing; "The listener responds to the illusion that he is hearing something new when in fact he is hearing mediocre rock, OK jazz, etc., thrown together in a contrived and purposeless way."[1]
The album was voted number 660 in the third edition of Colin Larkin's All Time Top 1000 Albums (2000).[2] It was selected for the 2006 book 1001 Albums You Must Hear Before You Die.[3]
Album – UK Albums Chart (United Kingdom)