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Gloria
The Shadows Of Knight •
• 1966
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2:35 |
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2
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Light Bulb Blues
The Shadows Of Knight •
• 1966
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2:35 |
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3
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I Got My Mojo Working
The Shadows Of Knight •
• 1966
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3:32 |
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4
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Darkside
The Shadows Of Knight •
• 1966
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2:02 |
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5
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Boom Boom
The Shadows Of Knight •
• 1966
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2:30 |
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6
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Let It Rock
The Shadows Of Knight •
• 1966
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1:56 |
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7
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I Got My Mojo Working(alt)
The Shadows Of Knight •
• 1966
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3:15 |
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8
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Oh Yeah
The Shadows Of Knight •
• 1966
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2:48 |
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9
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It Always Happens That Way
The Shadows Of Knight •
• 1966
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1:55 |
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10
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You Can't Judge A Book By Looking At The Cover
The Shadows Of Knight •
• 1966
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2:38 |
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11
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(i'm Your) Hoochie Coochie Man
The Shadows Of Knight •
• 1966
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3:54 |
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12
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I Just Want To Make Love To You
The Shadows Of Knight •
• 1966
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3:49 |
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13
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Oh Yeah (mono)
The Shadows Of Knight •
• 1966
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2:50 |
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14
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Someone Like Me (mono)
The Shadows Of Knight •
• 1966
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5:06 |
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Gloria | ||||
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Studio album by | ||||
Released | April 1966 | |||
Recorded | March 1966 | |||
Studio | Universal Recording Corporation, Chicago, Illinois | |||
Genre | Rock, Garage rock, Proto-punk[1] | |||
Length | 38:06 | |||
Label | Dunwich (original release) Radar (UK 1979 release) Sundazed (CD release) | |||
Shadows of Knight chronology | ||||
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Singles from Gloria | ||||
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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Leer más
1966 studio album by Shadows of Knight
Review scores | |
---|---|
Source | Rating |
AllMusic | [1] |
Gloria is the first album by the Shadows of Knight, released in 1966 on Dunwich Records 666. The title track, a cover of the song by Them, became the group`s biggest hit, reaching number 10 on the Billboard charts.
The band released the Gloria album in the summer of 1966, after releasing "Gloria" as a single backed by "Darkside" in December 1965. The single reached #10 on the Billboard charts in May 1966.[2] Later in the year, "Oh Yeah" was released from the same album as a single backed by "Light Bulb Blues", and charted as high as #39. The album liner notes credit the album as "Produced for Dunwich Records" instead of crediting a specific producer.[3]
Although the band`s association with "Gloria" has caused some to categorize them as one-hit wonders, Cub Koda of AllMusic pushed back against this notion. He reviewed their debut favorably, saying "it positively rocks with a raw energy of a band straight out of the teen clubs, playing with a total abandon and an energy level that seems to explode out of the speakers. Equal parts Rolling Stones, Yardbirds, Who, and snotty little Chicago-suburb bad boys, the Shadows of Knight could easily put the torch to Chess blues classics, which make up the majority of the songs included here. Their wild takes on `I Just Want to Make Love to You,` `Oh Yeah,` and `Got My Mojo Working` rank right up there with any British Invasion band`s version from the same time period."[1]
Shadows of Knight
Technical
Chart (1966) | Peak position | Total weeks |
---|---|---|
U.S. Billboard 200 | 46[4] | 18 |
Year | Single | Chart | Position |
---|---|---|---|
1966 | "Gloria" | Billboard Hot 100 | 10[5] |
1966 | "Oh Yeah!" | Billboard Hot 100 | 39[6] |
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
1966 studio album by Shadows of Knight
Review scores | |
---|---|
Source | Rating |
AllMusic | [1] |
Gloria is the first album by the Shadows of Knight, released in 1966 on Dunwich Records 666. The title track, a cover of the song by Them, became the group`s biggest hit, reaching number 10 on the Billboard charts.
The band released the Gloria album in the summer of 1966, after releasing "Gloria" as a single backed by "Darkside" in December 1965. The single reached #10 on the Billboard charts in May 1966.[2] Later in the year, "Oh Yeah" was released from the same album as a single backed by "Light Bulb Blues", and charted as high as #39. The album liner notes credit the album as "Produced for Dunwich Records" instead of crediting a specific producer.[3]
Although the band`s association with "Gloria" has caused some to categorize them as one-hit wonders, Cub Koda of AllMusic pushed back against this notion. He reviewed their debut favorably, saying "it positively rocks with a raw energy of a band straight out of the teen clubs, playing with a total abandon and an energy level that seems to explode out of the speakers. Equal parts Rolling Stones, Yardbirds, Who, and snotty little Chicago-suburb bad boys, the Shadows of Knight could easily put the torch to Chess blues classics, which make up the majority of the songs included here. Their wild takes on `I Just Want to Make Love to You,` `Oh Yeah,` and `Got My Mojo Working` rank right up there with any British Invasion band`s version from the same time period."[1]
Shadows of Knight
Technical
Chart (1966) | Peak position | Total weeks |
---|---|---|
U.S. Billboard 200 | 46[4] | 18 |
Year | Single | Chart | Position |
---|---|---|---|
1966 | "Gloria" | Billboard Hot 100 | 10[5] |
1966 | "Oh Yeah!" | Billboard Hot 100 | 39[6] |