"Going (Goin') Up the Country" by Canned Heat.
OK, boys and girls, back to the 60s: Alan "Blind Owl" Wilson wrote this 1968 blues-rock classic inspired by Texas bluesman Henry Thomas' 1928 "Bull Doze Blues". Wilson was a blues scholar and his L.A.-based band promoted the genre and its early artists. It has been dubbed "a rural hippie anthem". Escaping the mayhem and pressure of city life and searching for a simpler existence close to nature. Some say, however, it is about draft-dodging. We'll never know, as "Blind Owl" took his own life in 1970 at age 27 (part of "The 27 Club"). #11 on Billboard Hot 100. Session musician Jim Horn laid down the trademark flute lines emulating Thomas' quills (early American panpipes). The band performed it at Woodstock. Song? Group?
Answer: "Going (Goin') Up the Country" by Canned Heat. Ultra-cool cats! The band took their name from a 1928 Tommy Johnson blues tune. Ardent students of the genre - Alan "Blind Owl" Wilson, Bob "The Bear" Hite, Henry "The Sunflower" Vestine, Larry "The Mole" Taylor and Adolfo "Fito" de la Parra.
https://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=going+up+the+country+canned+heat
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w1xBwWm46ug&list=RDw1xBwWm46ug&start_radio=1
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