Instrumental Asylum
Instrumental Asylum is an EP by Manfred Mann, released in 1966. The EP is a 7-inch vinyl record and released in mono with the catalogue number His Master's Voice-EMI 7EG 8949.
Instrumental Asylum | ||||
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EP by | ||||
Released | 3 June 1966[1] | |||
Recorded | 12 & 24 January 1966 | |||
Genre | British R&B, jazz-rock | |||
Language | English | |||
Label | His Master's Voice-EMI | |||
Producer | John Burgess | |||
Manfred Mann chronology | ||||
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Manfred Mann EP chronology | ||||
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Background
The band recorded this as they were in the process of re-organizing. All the songs chosen were covers of current relatively well known pop and rock songs, The Yardbirds' "Still I'm Sad" being the most obscure. Mike Vickers had left and been replaced on guitar by bassist Tom McGuinness, who in turn was replaced on bass by Jack Bruce. Horn players Henry Lowther and Lyn Dobson took over the lead spot from singer Paul Jones, who was soon to quit the band. There is little evidence of Jones on the record. As with most of their other records, both albums and EPs of this era, the liner notes were written by Manfred Mann member Tom McGuinness.
Personnel
- Manfred Mann – keyboards
- Henry Lowther – trumpet and flute
- Lyn Dobson – saxophone
- Paul Jones – harmonica
- Tom McGuinness – guitar
- Jack Bruce – bass guitar
- Mike Hugg – drums and vibes
Chart performance
This EP was the band's least successful effort since their initial EP release, Cock-a-Hoop in 1964. It reached # 3 in the British EP charts.[2]
References
- Footnotes