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DISCID=aa0b210b
DTITLE=Ron Wood / I've Got My Own Album To Do
DYEAR=1974
DGENRE=rock
TTITLE0=I Can Feel The Fire
TTITLE1=Far East Man
TTITLE2=Mystifies Me
TTITLE3=Take A Look At The Guy
TTITLE4=Act Together
TTITLE5=Am I Grooving You
TTITLE6=Shirley
TTITLE7=Cancel Everything
TTITLE8=Sure The One You Need
TTITLE9=If You Gotta Make A Fool Of Somebody
TTITLE10=Crotch Music
EXTD=Originally Released 1974\nCD Edition Released September 13, 1994\n
EXTD=\nAMG EXPERT REVIEW: For his first album, Ron Wood enlisted Keith
EXTD= Richards and the Faces' pianist Ian McLagan as support and turne
EXTD=d in a loose, good-humored album that catches fire on the swagger
EXTD=ing "Take a Look at the Guy," the earnest cover of "If You Gotta 
EXTD=Make a Fool of Somebody," and the grinding R&B workout "Crotch Mu
EXTD=sic." -- Stephen Thomas Erlewine\n\n\nAMAZON.COM CUSTOMER REVIEW\n
EXTD=Great Album For Seventies/Eighties Stones or Faces Fans, January 
EXTD=23, 2007\nReviewer: John M. Lacey (Cairo, Egypt)\nI bought this o
EXTD=n a whim after purchasing the excellent Faces box set. What can I
EXTD= say except that this is an excellent album! I remember seeing th
EXTD=is on vinyl in my roommate's Stones collection and never bothered
EXTD= to listen to it....what a mistake! All of the songs could have e
EXTD=asily been on any 1970's Stones album and reveal what a great tal
EXTD=ent Ron Wood is. A+++ \n\n\nAMAZON.COM CUSTOMER REVIEW\nWhat a gr
EXTD=eat find!, December 9, 2006\nReviewer: C. M. Scheben (San Francis
EXTD=co, CA)\nI thought i knew all the important Rolling Stones and af
EXTD=filiates Albums of that period. I had been trying to squeeze the 
EXTD=most remote b-sides out of my Leon Russel, Dr John and Gram Parso
EXTD=ns Albums and then...i came accross a copy of this Ron Wood - I'v
EXTD=e Got My Own Album To Do.! Apart from the fact that in light of h
EXTD=istory i find this a very witty title this is a f***ing great alb
EXTD=um. You can tell that everybody spent a lot of time in jamaica (l
EXTD=ot's of reggae influences in the groove department) and it has th
EXTD=ese brilliant junkie riffs that keith richards and ron wood are s
EXTD=o famous for. rightfully so. listen to it back to back with 461 o
EXTD=cean boulevard by eric clapton, who was not only on heroin too bu
EXTD=t hung out in jamaica with the boys but i think crashed his ferra
EXTD=ri around the same time as keith crashed his Rolls, and you reali
EXTD=ze who has the better right (rhythm) hand. clearly Ron and Keith.
EXTD= Plus you have the not credited participation of mick jagger and 
EXTD=rod stewart which makes this album great just because of who play
EXTD=ed on it. And they produced quality songs. Ron could have been so
EXTD=mebody. He could have been a contender... but i guess the lure of
EXTD= playing with the rolling stones makes you reconsider your purpos
EXTD=e in life, mind all the chicks, dope and arena tours. Now that Mi
EXTD=ck Jagger has officially turned himself into Jane Fonda doing aer
EXTD=obics, it's very nice to hear music from a time when all these gu
EXTD=ys still mattered and when they were on top of their game and not
EXTD= completely washed up.\n\n\nAMAZON.COM CUSTOMER REVIEW\nIn the sh
EXTD=adow of a legend, March 22, 2006\nReviewer: Yuma (Charlottesville
EXTD=, Va.)\nAlways a very competent guitarist, (he seemed confused an
EXTD=d annoyed at the Super Bowl, though) he remains an impostor. In a
EXTD=ttempting to fill the shoes of Brian Jones, he failed miserably w
EXTD=here Mick Taylor at times was able to succeed. No great Stones al
EXTD=bums since Sticky Fingers...a sad fact that is an indictment on R
EXTD=W as well as on the shadow of a band that remains.\n\n\nAMAZON.CO
EXTD=M CUSTOMER REVIEW\ngem, April 17, 2004\nReviewer: Johnny Blades "
EXTD=sirin101" (Wellington New Zealand)\nThis was made around the same
EXTD= time as Ron's future band The Rolling Stones cobbled together th
EXTD=eir last album with the man he would replace on guitar, Mick Tayl
EXTD=or. That album, It's Only Rock n Roll, is a dark and rather below
EXTD=-par effort compared to the great Stones albums that preceded it.
EXTD= The truth is, with Taylor, Keith Richards and Mick Jagger all gu
EXTD=esting on it, Ron's album is a better album than It's Only Rock n
EXTD= Roll, and in no small way another chapter in the Stones catalogu
EXTD=e. In some ways, I've Got My Own Album to Do is the great forgott
EXTD=en Stones album, under Wood's direction.\nA fine collection of so
EXTD=ngs with a real patchwork quilt of material. A few things should 
EXTD=be pointed out about why this album is great: firstly, the player
EXTD=s are top notch - not only the aforementioned Stones, but in Andy
EXTD= Newmark and Willie Weeks a world class rythm section, Ian McLaga
EXTD=n and Rod Stewart from the Faces, among others, feature on the LP
EXTD=; secondly, the songs are strong, showing how good Ron really is,
EXTD= or was before his talent underwent subjugation in the Stones; an
EXTD=d thirdly, the album has stood the test of time and reflects perf
EXTD=ectly the good-time spirit that Ron is all about because the LP w
EXTD=as clearly made in the name of fun and passion for music - it has
EXTD= a home studio feel to it, yet it's grunty and slick in parts too
EXTD=. A diverse album of different rock, funk, blues and even pop gro
EXTD=oves.\nRon's voice aint bad either, and he uses Jagger and Stewat
EXTD=r's well-known voices sparingly, to his credit, bringing them in 
EXTD=like lead instruments, or texturing them with his own wiry crow.\n
EXTD=There's a cople of Jagger/Richards originals on this album, and t
EXTD=hey can be considered Rolling Stones songs (even if Charlie and B
EXTD=il werent on them!) and one of them 'Sure the One You Need' is on
EXTD= the highlights of the album, just beautiful Chuck Berry rock tha
EXTD=t Keith and Ron churn out so well. 'Can You Feel the Fire?' and '
EXTD=You Mystify Me' are excellent too. Overall, I cannot see a weak s
EXTD=ong on this album, and the jam or funk songs are more than mere f
EXTD=iller tracks.\nRock on Ron. Maybe you should write more with the 
EXTD=Stones\n\n\nAMAZON.COM CUSTOMER REVIEW\nRonnie has good company, 
EXTD=October 2, 2000\nReviewer: "tdshalseytaylor" (Grosse Ile, MI USA)
EXTD=\nAccording to rock legend, Keith Richards met Wood's wife at a c
EXTD=lub one night. She invited Keith over to check it out; he stayed 
EXTD=for four months! Ron must be a good guy to have all these guys he
EXTD=lp him out on this good sounding eight track recording. You can a
EXTD=lmost hear the Guinness being poured....Chris Robinson (crowes) w
EXTD=ishes he was invited. If you like homemade basement tapes, get th
EXTD=is!\n\n\nHalf.com Details \nContributing artists: Keith Richards 
EXTD=\nProducer: Gary Kellgren, Ron Wood \n\nAlbum Notes\nPersonnel: R
EXTD=on Wood (vocals, guitar); Ian McLagan (keyboards); Willie Weeks (
EXTD=bass); Andy Newmark (drums).\n\nUp until the early 1970's, Ron Wo
EXTD=od was known primarily as a sideman in various bands (The Creatio
EXTD=n, the Jeff Beck Group, and the Faces). In 1974, Wood took a step
EXTD= out from out of the shadows and issued his first solo release, I
EXTD='VE GOT MY OWN ALBUM TO DO. His debut has a definite 'home made' 
EXTD=feel to it, with such all-star friends as the Face's keyboardist/
EXTD=pianist Ian McLagan and the Rolling Stones' Keith Richards join W
EXTD=ood in the festivities. Standouts include a pair of Richards trac
EXTD=ks ("Act Together" and "Sure the One You Need"), a cover of "If Y
EXTD=ou Gotta Make A Fool of Somebody," and the crude n' bluesy album 
EXTD=closer, "Crotch Music."\n\nIndustry Reviews\n4 Stars - Excellent 
EXTD=- ...There's a pub-styled chug-a-lug, a loose country feel, booze
EXTD=sque sub-Faces harmonies to the whole affair that is...rather wee
EXTD=-wee-hours-effective...\nQ Magazine (01/01/1995)\n\n\nROLLING STO
EXTD=NE REVIEW\nRon Wood, whose role in the Faces has paralleled Keith
EXTD= Richard's function in the Rolling Stones, has put together what 
EXTD=is less a solo album than a friendly, late-night session involvin
EXTD=g the front men of the Faces and the Stones. But I've Got My Own 
EXTD=Album To Do is still a Wood album in that he wrote six of the 11 
EXTD=songs (including "Far East Man" with George Harrison), and he's t
EXTD=he only musician involved who could maintain such a happy-go-luck
EXTD=y attitude about a personal project. The charm of the album is it
EXTD=s simultaneous display of spirited playing and disarming casualne
EXTD=ss.\n\nAppropriately, Keith Richard is almost as visible as Wood 
EXTD=throughout: He takes the lead vocal on "Sure the One You Need," o
EXTD=ne of the two new Jagger/Richard compositions he debuts on the al
EXTD=bum, and his gritty guitar work and brittle vocals complement Woo
EXTD=d's not dissimilar playing and singing. Ian McLagan's keyboards a
EXTD=re as prominent here as they are integral to the Faces' sound, an
EXTD=d there are vocal performances from Rod Stewart and Mick Jagger, 
EXTD=although they're not credited.\n\nAside from the closing cut--a m
EXTD=erely competent soul instrumental--everything on the album is inf
EXTD=used with one-take spontaneity, but none more so than a rendition
EXTD= of "If You Gotta Make a Fool of Somebody," sung with staggering 
EXTD=sincerity by Wood, Stewart and Richard. Wood's "I Can Feel the Fi
EXTD=re" (on which Jagger sings) manages at once to be a syncopated re
EXTD=ggae tune and a swaggering, Stones-like rocker, its gears miracul
EXTD=ously meshing. Two other originals, "Mystifies Me" (sung with Ste
EXTD=wart) and "Cancel Everything" (a duet with Keith) are fine, affec
EXTD=ting ballads that suggest Wood should write more often.\n\nWood's
EXTD= gregariousness and lack of egocentricity have resulted in that r
EXTD=are item -- a one-off album that (like the Alvin Lee/Mylon LeFevr
EXTD=e collaboration of last year) documents a group of players in a m
EXTD=oment of musical and interpersonal harmony. (RS 173 -- Nov 7, 197
EXTD=4)  -- BUD SCOPPA
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