Savoy Brown were one of the genuine British blues bands, with a clear affinity for the style of Alvin Lee's Ten Years After, but with an instrumental synergy closer to Peter Green's Fleetwood Mac and even John Mayall's Heartbreakers. In 1970, this band, originally from the small town of Battersea in southwest England, faced its first major setback when almost all of its founding members left simultaneously: Lonesome Dave, Roger Earl, and Tony Stevens, who went on to form the boogie-rock band Foghat. Therefore, the sole survivor, guitarist Kim Simmonds, had to reorganize the band, recruiting a completely new lineup, starting with singer Dave Walker, bassist Andy Silvester, and drummer Dave Bidwell, as well as pianist Paul Raymond, all former members of the blues band Chicken Shack. Taking advantage of Walker's fervent vocals, which counterbalanced Simmonds' energetic and robust guitar, this new lineup recorded Savoy Brown's seventh album, "Street Corner Talking", a powerful and solid example of the best British blues rock of the early 70s. Tracks like the elegant versions of Willie Dixon's "Wang Dang Doodle" and the Motown classic "I Can't Get Next To You", plus the dark and sublime "All I Can Do" or the bluesy subtlety of "Tell Mama", are credit enough for an attractive and multifaceted album, where each musician contributes their talent uniformly to the final result, demonstrating that the loss they had suffered did not diminish them in either quality or grandeur.


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