Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective

Thank Christ for the Bomb

1970 studio album by The Groundhogs From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Thank Christ for the Bomb
Remove ads

Thank Christ for the Bomb is the third studio album recorded by The Groundhogs, originally released by Liberty Records in 1970.[5] It was engineered by Martin Birch, who had previously worked on albums by Deep Purple,[6] Jeff Beck, Fleetwood Mac and Peter Green. It entered the UK Melody Maker album charts at number 27 on 20 June 1970, and had a total of 3 entries in that chart.[7]

Quick facts Studio album by The Groundhogs, Released ...
More information Review scores, Source ...

The album is a concept album, or to be exact, has two concepts. Side 1 (tracks 1–4) addresses what McPhee termed "alienness" while side 2 is, according to the sleeve notes, "the story of a man who lived in Chelsea all his life; first in a mansion then on the benches of the embankment".

Remove ads

Artwork

The image of Pete Cruickshank on the left of the cover is adapted from photograph Q 1 in the Imperial War Museum's photograph archive.

Track listing

All tracks composed by Tony McPhee

  1. "Strange Town" – 4:16
  2. "Darkness Is No Friend" – 3:48
  3. "Soldier" – 4:51
  4. "Thank Christ for the Bomb" – 7:15
  5. "Ship on the Ocean" – 3:27
  6. "Garden" – 5:19
  7. "Status People" – 3:32
  8. "Rich Man, Poor Man" – 3:25
  9. "Eccentric Man" – 4:53

2003 CD reissue bonus tracks (live versions)

  1. "Garden" – 3:35
  2. "Eccentric Man" – 5:01
  3. "Soldier" – 15:03

Personnel

The Groundhogs
  • Tony McPhee – guitars, vocals
  • Peter Cruickshank – bass
  • Ken Pustelnik – drums
Technical

References

Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.

Remove ads