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A live version of "SWLABR" was released on BBC Sessions and the Deluxe Edition of Disraeli Gears, which also includes a four-minute demo version. Several Cream compilation albums include the song, such as Best of Cream, Heavy Cream, Strange Brew: The Very Best of Cream, The Very Best of Cream, Those Were the Days and Gold.
Disraeli Gears is the second studio album by the British rock band Cream.It was produced by Felix Pappalardi and released on Reaction Records.The album features the singles "Strange Brew" and "Sunshine of Your Love".
Live Cream Volume II: 1972 [17] "Stormy Monday" T-Bone Walker: Royal Albert Hall London May 2-3-5-6, 2005: 2005 [18] "Sunshine of Your Love" † Jack Bruce Eric Clapton Pete Brown: Disraeli Gears: 1967 [4] "SWLABR" † Jack Bruce Pete Brown: Disraeli Gears: 1967 [16] "Sweet Wine" † Ginger Baker Janet Godfrey: Fresh Cream: 1966 [10] "Take It ...
"Strange Brew" is a song by the British rock band Cream. First released as a single in May 1967 in the UK and July 1967 in the US, [1] it was later added to their second studio album Disraeli Gears. [2] The song features Eric Clapton on lead vocals rather than the usual lead by Jack Bruce.
Those Were the Days is a retrospective compilation of music recorded by the British rock band Cream, released on 23 September 1997.It comprises four compact discs and includes almost every studio track released during the band's active lifetime, with the exception of the original "Passing The Time" from Wheels of Fire, and all but three tracks from the live material recorded in 1968 and ...
These songs contain some of the singer-songwriter’s most biting lyrics, the kind that twist the emotional knife into anyone’s heart. Swift’s eleventh studio album is no different.
'Sunshine of Your Love', Cream's best-known song, is a culmination of the British adaptation of blues into rock and also the direct precursor of Led Zeppelin and heavy metal, where this type of blues-based motivic riff and harmonic motions like A–C–G or E–G–A (as in "Whole Lotta Love") serve as the basis for a seemingly endless number ...
The song goes on to call out a high school bully, whom Swift seemingly likens to Kardashian as capital letters in the track title spell out Kim. Taylor Swift VALERIE MACON/AFP via Getty Images.