"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, as well as 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. BTW, has anyone else ever noticed that the instrumental break in this song is interchangeable with the one in Mungo Jerry's "In the Summertime"?
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
Comments
Post a Comment