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Videos Album: Mr. Wonderful1968

Mr. Wonderful
Studio album by
Released23 August 1968
RecordedApril 1968
StudioCBS, London
GenreBlues rock[1]
Length41:30
LabelBlue Horizon
ProducerMike Vernon
Fleetwood Mac chronology
Fleetwood Mac
(1968)
Mr. Wonderful
(1968)
The Pious Bird of Good Omen
(1969)

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Mr. Wonderful

Fleetwood Mac

1968 Estudio
  • Fecha Lanzamiento: 23 Agosto 1968 · Fecha Grabación: Abril 1968 -
    Discográfica: Blue Horizon · Estudio de grabación: CBS, London · Productor: Mike Vernon

    1968 studio album by Fleetwood Mac

    Professional ratings
    Review scores
    SourceRating
    AllMusic [2]

    Mr. Wonderful is the second studio album by British blues rock band Fleetwood Mac, released on 23 August 1968. This all-blues album was broadly similar to their debut album, albeit with some changes to personnel and recording method. The album was recorded live in the studio with miked amplifiers and PA system, rather than plugged into the board.[3] A horn section was introduced and Christine Perfect (later Christine McVie) of Chicken Shack was featured on keyboards. The album took a total of four days to record.[4] In the US, the album was not released, though around half of the tracks appeared on English Rose.

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    Review

    1968 studio album by Fleetwood Mac

    Professional ratings
    Review scores
    SourceRating
    AllMusic [2]

    Mr. Wonderful is the second studio album by British blues rock band Fleetwood Mac, released on 23 August 1968. This all-blues album was broadly similar to their debut album, albeit with some changes to personnel and recording method. The album was recorded live in the studio with miked amplifiers and PA system, rather than plugged into the board.[3] A horn section was introduced and Christine Perfect (later Christine McVie) of Chicken Shack was featured on keyboards. The album took a total of four days to record.[4] In the US, the album was not released, though around half of the tracks appeared on English Rose.

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    The band originally wanted the album to be titled A Good Length, which would have featured an "obvious phallic symbol" on the album`s front cover according to Fleetwood, although this idea was rejected. Udder Sucker was the next proposed title, and Fleetwood travelled to his godmother`s farm to take a photo underneath a cow for the cover art, but the record label also turned this idea down. Fleetwood instead posed naked on the cover of Mr. Wonderful.[4]

    An expanded version of Mr. Wonderful was included in the box set The Complete Blue Horizon Sessions.

    Reception

    Compared to the huge success of the band`s first album, Fleetwood Mac, the follow-up received rather muted critical reviews: AllMusic described it as "a disappointment". Four of the songs, "Dust My Broom", "Doctor Brown", "Need Your Love Tonight" and "Coming Home", all begin with an identical Elmore James riff. "Evenin` Boogie" was the first instrumental released by Fleetwood Mac.

    Sputnik Music describes the style as "vocally conservative, sticking to gruff mannerisms, and it often sounds like Green is drunkedly wandering through the music. The production adds further insult to injury, as it muffles his voice rather than amplifying it and makes the instruments sound murky."[5]

    Track listing

    Side one
    No.TitleWriter(s)Length
    1."Stop Messin` Round"Peter Green, C.G. Adams2:22
    2."I`ve Lost My Baby"Jeremy Spencer4:18
    3."Rollin` Man"Green, Adams2:54
    4."Dust My Broom"Elmore James, Robert Johnson2:54
    5."Love That Burns"Green, Adams5:04
    6."Doctor Brown"J. T. Brown, W. Glasco3:48

    Side two
    No.TitleWriter(s)Length
    7."Need Your Love Tonight"Spencer3:29
    8."If You Be My Baby"Green, Adams3:54
    9."Evenin` Boogie"Spencer2:42
    10."Lazy Poker Blues"Green, Adams2:37
    11."Coming Home"James2:41
    12."Trying So Hard to Forget"Green, Adams4:47

    Personnel

    Fleetwood Mac

    • Peter Green – vocals, guitar, harmonica
    • Jeremy Spencer – vocals, slide guitar
    • John McVie – bass guitar
    • Mick Fleetwood – drums

    Additional personnel

    • Christine Perfect – keyboards, piano
    • Duster Bennett – harmonica
    • Steve Gregory – alto saxophone
    • Dave Howard – alto saxophone
    • Johnny Almond – tenor saxophone
    • Roland Vaughan – tenor saxophone

    Production

    • Producer: Mike Vernon
    • Engineer: Mike Ross
    • Coordination: Richard Vernon
    • Cover design: Terence Ibbott
    • Photography: Terence Ibbott

    Charts

    1968 weekly chart performance for Mr. Wonderful

    Chart (1968)

    Peak
    position

    Finnish Albums (The Official Finnish Charts)[6]

    6

    Norwegian Albums (VG-lista)[7]

    8

    UK Albums (OCC)[8]

    10

    1968 studio album by Fleetwood Mac

    Professional ratings
    Review scores
    SourceRating
    AllMusic [2]

    Mr. Wonderful is the second studio album by British blues rock band Fleetwood Mac, released on 23 August 1968. This all-blues album was broadly similar to their debut album, albeit with some changes to personnel and recording method. The album was recorded live in the studio with miked amplifiers and PA system, rather than plugged into the board.[3] A horn section was introduced and Christine Perfect (later Christine McVie) of Chicken Shack was featured on keyboards. The album took a total of four days to record.[4] In the US, the album was not released, though around half of the tracks appeared on English Rose.

    The band originally wanted the album to be titled A Good Length, which would have featured an "obvious phallic symbol" on the album`s front cover according to Fleetwood, although this idea was rejected. Udder Sucker was the next proposed title, and Fleetwood travelled to his godmother`s farm to take a photo underneath a cow for the cover art, but the record label also turned this idea down. Fleetwood instead posed naked on the cover of Mr. Wonderful.[4]

    An expanded version of Mr. Wonderful was included in the box set The Complete Blue Horizon Sessions.

    Reception

    Compared to the huge success of the band`s first album, Fleetwood Mac, the follow-up received rather muted critical reviews: AllMusic described it as "a disappointment". Four of the songs, "Dust My Broom", "Doctor Brown", "Need Your Love Tonight" and "Coming Home", all begin with an identical Elmore James riff. "Evenin` Boogie" was the first instrumental released by Fleetwood Mac.

    Sputnik Music describes the style as "vocally conservative, sticking to gruff mannerisms, and it often sounds like Green is drunkedly wandering through the music. The production adds further insult to injury, as it muffles his voice rather than amplifying it and makes the instruments sound murky."[5]

    Track listing

    Side one
    No.TitleWriter(s)Length
    1."Stop Messin` Round"Peter Green, C.G. Adams2:22
    2."I`ve Lost My Baby"Jeremy Spencer4:18
    3."Rollin` Man"Green, Adams2:54
    4."Dust My Broom"Elmore James, Robert Johnson2:54
    5."Love That Burns"Green, Adams5:04
    6."Doctor Brown"J. T. Brown, W. Glasco3:48

    Side two
    No.TitleWriter(s)Length
    7."Need Your Love Tonight"Spencer3:29
    8."If You Be My Baby"Green, Adams3:54
    9."Evenin` Boogie"Spencer2:42
    10."Lazy Poker Blues"Green, Adams2:37
    11."Coming Home"James2:41
    12."Trying So Hard to Forget"Green, Adams4:47

    Personnel

    Fleetwood Mac

    • Peter Green – vocals, guitar, harmonica
    • Jeremy Spencer – vocals, slide guitar
    • John McVie – bass guitar
    • Mick Fleetwood – drums

    Additional personnel

    • Christine Perfect – keyboards, piano
    • Duster Bennett – harmonica
    • Steve Gregory – alto saxophone
    • Dave Howard – alto saxophone
    • Johnny Almond – tenor saxophone
    • Roland Vaughan – tenor saxophone

    Production

    • Producer: Mike Vernon
    • Engineer: Mike Ross
    • Coordination: Richard Vernon
    • Cover design: Terence Ibbott
    • Photography: Terence Ibbott

    Charts

    1968 weekly chart performance for Mr. Wonderful

    Chart (1968)

    Peak
    position

    Finnish Albums (The Official Finnish Charts)[6]

    6

    Norwegian Albums (VG-lista)[7]

    8

    UK Albums (OCC)[8]

    10