
THE GROUNDHOGS 'ROADHOGS: LIVE FROM RICHMOND TO POCONO' LP
STREET DATE 11/26/21
An essential rock artefact tracing The Groundhogs from their pre - âThank Christ For The Bombâ blues roots to the final live show for the classic line up of Tony McPhee (guitar and vocals), Pete Cruikshank (bass) and Ken Pustelnik (drums).
Never before heard recordings from the Warner Brothersâ vaults including a vintage 1969 set from their show at the Richmond Athletic Ground (AKA The Crawdaddy Club) and their final explosive set at the Pocono Raceway track.
Includes the live debut of what would become the anthemic âCherry Redâ and McPheeâs seismic destruction of âAmazing Graceâ.
A career-spanning gem from the ultimate heavy rock power trio book-ending 976 days and 250-plus live shows.
âIn their stage act they concentrate on being as heavy and as hard-hitting as possible.â The Scene magazine
âPerforming on stage we feel that the emphasis is on excitement so we play the numbers that involve the greatest amount of movement and dynamics,â Tony McPhee told Star Pop.
Original: $45.00
-65%$45.00
$15.75Product Information
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Description
STREET DATE 11/26/21
An essential rock artefact tracing The Groundhogs from their pre - âThank Christ For The Bombâ blues roots to the final live show for the classic line up of Tony McPhee (guitar and vocals), Pete Cruikshank (bass) and Ken Pustelnik (drums).
Never before heard recordings from the Warner Brothersâ vaults including a vintage 1969 set from their show at the Richmond Athletic Ground (AKA The Crawdaddy Club) and their final explosive set at the Pocono Raceway track.
Includes the live debut of what would become the anthemic âCherry Redâ and McPheeâs seismic destruction of âAmazing Graceâ.
A career-spanning gem from the ultimate heavy rock power trio book-ending 976 days and 250-plus live shows.
âIn their stage act they concentrate on being as heavy and as hard-hitting as possible.â The Scene magazine
âPerforming on stage we feel that the emphasis is on excitement so we play the numbers that involve the greatest amount of movement and dynamics,â Tony McPhee told Star Pop.

















