Free - Tons Of Sobs 1968
Although
Free was never destined to scrape the same skies as
Led Zeppelin, when they first burst out of the traps in 1968, close to a year ahead of
Jimmy Page and company, they set the world of British blues-rock firmly on its head, a blistering combination of youth, ambition, and, despite those tender years, experience that, across the course of their debut album, did indeed lay the groundwork for all that
Zeppelin would embrace. That
Free and
Zeppelin were cut from the same cloth is immediately apparent, even before you start comparing the versions of "The Hunter" that highlight both bands' debut albums. Where
Free streaks ahead, however, is in their refusal to compromise their own vision of the blues -- even at its most commercial ("I'm a Mover" and "Worry"),
Tons of Sobs has a density that makes
Zeppelin and the rest of the era's rocky contemporaries sound like flyweights by comparison. The 2002 remaster of the album only amplifies the fledgling
Free's achievements. With remastered sound that drives the record straight back to the studio master tapes, the sheer versatility of the players, and the unbridled imagination of producer
Guy Stevens, rings crystal clear. Even without their visionary seer, however,
Free impresses -- three bonus tracks drawn from period BBC sessions are as loose as they are dynamic, and certainly make a case for a full
Free-at-the-Beeb type collection. Of the other bonuses, two offer alternate versions of familiar album tracks, while "Guy Stevens Jam" is reprised from the
Songs of Yesterday box set to further illustrate the band's improvisational abilities. As if they needed it. AMG.
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