Vanilla Fudge (album) explained

Vanilla Fudge
Type:studio
Artist:Vanilla Fudge
Cover:Vanilla_Fudge_Debut.JPG
Released:August 1967
Recorded:1967
Length:42:41
Producer:Shadow Morton
Next Title:The Beat Goes On
Next Year:1968

Vanilla Fudge is the debut studio album by the American psychedelic rock band Vanilla Fudge. Released in summer 1967 as Atco 33-224/mono, SD 33-224/stereo, it consists entirely of half-speed covers and three short original instrumental compositions.

The album was Vanilla Fudge's most successful, peaking at #6 on the Billboard album charts and number #8 in Finland in November 1967.[1] [2] Parts of the original stereo LP were actually mixed in mono, including the entire track "You Keep Me Hangin' On". An edited version of "You Keep Me Hangin' On" was released as a single and also charted.

Reception

Allmusic's Paul Collins retrospectively rated Vanilla Fudge four out of five stars some time in the 2000s. He stated that "nobody could accuse Vanilla Fudge of bad taste in their repertoire" and that most of the tracks "share a common structure of a disjointed warm-up jam, a Hammond-heavy dirge of harmonized vocals at the center, and a final flat-out jam." However, he also said that "each song still works as a time capsule of American psychedelia."

Track listing

Side 1 of the album ends with: "The following is a series of high-frequency tones..."

CD reissues have a modified track listing for the tracks on side 2 of the LP:

The text in all uppercase letters in the CD reissue track listing spells out "STRAWBERRYFIELDS".

Personnel

References

The Allmusic review is of the 2002 album of the same name rather than of the original 1967 LP.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Billboard. 18 November 1967.
  2. Book: Nyman, Jake . Suomi soi 4: Suuri suomalainen listakirja . Tammi . 2005 . 951-31-2503-3 . 1st . Helsinki . 243 . fi.