In 1975, Hot Tuna, the band led by former Jefferson Airplane members Jorma Kaukonen and Jack Casady, decided to shift their blues-folk style, which characterized their first four albums, towards a harder, blues-rock sound. "America's Choice" would be the first of this new phase for the group, dubbed "The Rampage Trilogy", and characterized by this new stylistic direction. Six months after the release of "America's Choice", came "Yellow Fever", the group's seventh album, which, like its predecessor, featured a new drummer, Bob Steeler, replacing Sammy Piazza. Long instrumental developments, heavy rock with distorted riffs and dense blues sounds are the common denominator of a repertoire composed of pieces such as the boogie rock "Baby What You Want Me To Do", the hard rock "Free Rain" and "Half/Time Saturation", the psychedelic southern "Sunrise Dance With the Devil", the blues rock "Hot Jelly Roll Blues" and "Song for the Fire Maiden", or the energetic instrumental "Surphase Tension".


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