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Journey to the Center of the Mind
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Singles chronology

Poison Heart
Poison Heart
0/0/1992

Journey to the Center of the Mind

The Ramones

1993 Single
  • Fecha Lanzamiento: 1993 · Fecha Grabación: 1993 -
    Discográfica: Mainstream · · Productor: Bob Shad
    1
    Journey to the Center of the Mind
    The Ramones • w: Ted Nugent, Steve Farmer • 1993
    2:52
  • 2
    Mississippi Murderer
    The Ramones • 1992 /09 /01
    0:00
  • Album


    Acid Eaters

    Acid Eaters

    Fecha Lanzamiento: 1 Diciembre 1993 · Fecha Grabación: 1993 -
    Discográfica: Radioactive · Estudio de Grabación: Baby Monster (New York City); Chung King (New York City) · Productor: Scott Hackwith
    1
    Journey To The Center Of The Mind
    The Ramones • w: Ted Nugent, Steve Farmer • 1993 /12 /01
    2:52
  • 2
    Substitute
    The Ramones • w: Pete Townshend • 1993 /12 /01
    3:15
  • 3
    Out Of Time
    The Ramones • w: Mick Jagger, Keith Richards • 1993 /12 /01
    2:41
  • 4
    The Shape Of Things To Come
    The Ramones • w: Barry Mann, Cynthia Weil • 1993 /12 /01
    1:46
  • 5
    Somebody To Love
    The Ramones • w: Darby Slick • 1993 /12 /01
    2:31
  • 6
    When I Was Young
    The Ramones • w: Eric Burdon, John Weider, Vic Briggs, Danny McCulloch, Barry Jenkins • 1993 /12 /01
    3:16
  • 7
    And 7 Is
    The Ramones • 1993 /12 /01
    1:50
  • 8
    My Back Pages
    The Ramones • w: Bob Dylan • 1993 /12 /01
    2:27
  • 9
    Can´t Seem To Make You Mine
    The Ramones • w: Sky Saxon • 1993 /12 /01
    2:42
  • 10
    Have You Ever Seen The Rain
    The Ramones • w: John Fogerty • 1993 /12 /01
    2:22
  • 11
    I Can´t Control Myself
    The Ramones • w: Reg Presley • 1993 /12 /01
    2:55
  • 12
    Surf City
    The Ramones • w: Brian Wilson, Jan Berry • 1993 /12 /01
    2:26
  • "Journey to the Center of the Mind"
    Single by the Amboy Dukes
    from the album Journey to the Center of the Mind
    B-side"Mississippi Murderer"
    ReleasedJune 1968 (1968-06)[1]
    Recorded1967
    Genre
    Length3:11
    LabelMainstream
    Songwriter(s)
    Producer(s)Bob Shad
    The Amboy Dukes singles chronology
    "Baby, Please Don`t Go"
    (1968)
    "Journey to the Center of the Mind"
    (1968)
    "You Talk Sunshine, I Breathe Fire"
    (1968)

    Review

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    1968 single by the Amboy Dukes

    "Journey to the Center of the Mind" is a song released by the Amboy Dukes in June 1968.[1] It reached No.16 on the Billboard charts in 1968[2] and No.19 in Canada.[3]

    Original recording

    "Journey to the Center of the Mind" featured a psychedelic rock,[4] garage rock,[5] hard rock[6] and acid rock sound.[7] It features lyrics written by the Dukes` second guitarist Steve Farmer,[8] and melody written by Ted Nugent.[9][10] The song was recorded with a higher budget than their past work. During the recording there was considerable tension amongst the band members, and a few of them quit after the album was released, in the summer of 1968. The single helped define the psychedelic era as it peaked at No.16 on the Billboard charts.[11][12]

    Other versions

    The song was covered by Slade (as "Ambrose Slade") in 1969 on the album Beginnings, by The Ramones in 1994 on Acid Eaters[13] and by Sun City Girls in 2001 on Libyan Dream. It was included in the compilation album Nuggets: Original Artyfacts from the First Psychedelic Era, 1965–1968, on the 1998 CD reissue as a bonus track.

    Ted Nugent remade the song on his 2007 album Love Grenade.[citation needed]

    The lyrics are generally thought to be referring to drug use.[14][15][16][17]

    From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

    1968 single by the Amboy Dukes

    "Journey to the Center of the Mind" is a song released by the Amboy Dukes in June 1968.[1] It reached No.16 on the Billboard charts in 1968[2] and No.19 in Canada.[3]

    Original recording

    "Journey to the Center of the Mind" featured a psychedelic rock,[4] garage rock,[5] hard rock[6] and acid rock sound.[7] It features lyrics written by the Dukes` second guitarist Steve Farmer,[8] and melody written by Ted Nugent.[9][10] The song was recorded with a higher budget than their past work. During the recording there was considerable tension amongst the band members, and a few of them quit after the album was released, in the summer of 1968. The single helped define the psychedelic era as it peaked at No.16 on the Billboard charts.[11][12]

    Other versions

    The song was covered by Slade (as "Ambrose Slade") in 1969 on the album Beginnings, by The Ramones in 1994 on Acid Eaters[13] and by Sun City Girls in 2001 on Libyan Dream. It was included in the compilation album Nuggets: Original Artyfacts from the First Psychedelic Era, 1965–1968, on the 1998 CD reissue as a bonus track.

    Ted Nugent remade the song on his 2007 album Love Grenade.[citation needed]

    The lyrics are generally thought to be referring to drug use.[14][15][16][17]

    DISCOGRAFÍA

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