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Allmusic[4]

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]

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".

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

  1. ^ "The Top 30 British Blues Rock Albums Of All Time". Classic Rock. Future plc. 23 March 2007. Retrieved 1 September 2018.
  2. ^ Banks, Joe (March 2021). "The Groundhogs: their path from blues to something far more progressive". Prog Magazine. Retrieved 9 December 2024.
  3. ^ Clarke, Patricia (5 August 2021). "Luke Haines on 'Garden' from Thank Christ For The Bomb (1970)". theQuietus. Retrieved 27 December 2021.
  4. ^ Thompson, Dave. Thank Christ for the Bomb at AllMusic
  5. ^ "Thank Christ for the Bomb". www.discogs.com. Retrieved 24 July 2011.
  6. ^ "Groundhogs—Thank Christ for the Bomb". www.headheritage.co.uk. Retrieved 24 July 2011.
  7. ^ "Thank Christ for the Bomb". Official Charts Company. Retrieved 24 July 2011.
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