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Three Man Army - A third of a lifetime (1971)

Three Man Army - A third of a lifetime (1971) NO, I DON´T MAKE MONEY WITH ANY OF MY VIDEOS & ALL THE RIGHTS BELONGS TO ORIGINAL OWNER AND ARTIST.

01 Butter Queen 00:00
02 Daze 05:23
03 Another way 09:27
04 Third of a lifetime 16:17
05 Nice one 20:48
06 Three man army 25:00
07 Agent man 30:08
08 See what i took 35:44
09 Midnight 39:16
10 Together 44:41

BONUS TRACKS:
11 What's your name 51:16 (This song is 2x here, it´s mistake, just skip it on next song)
12 Travelin' 59:25

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Copyright Disclaimer Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for "fair use" for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing. Non-profit, educational or personal use tips the balance in favor of fair use. It is not to be used for copying and selling. No copyright infringement intended.

INFO: Once brothers Adrian (g, voc) and Paul Gurvitz (b) had disbanded their trio, Gun,
they rushed immediately, with former Spooky Tooth drummer Mike Kellie by their side,
into a new heavy rock adventure - a project, which proved to be well ahead of its time.
Three Man Army made their debut in 1971 on "A Third Of A Lifetime"
with Buddy Miles (dr, org, b) as a famous guest star.
The "in every way easily written material made people sit up and take notice,
above all, because of the excellent rhythm craft" (Sounds) and shaped
the most dramatic hard rock sound of highest caliber.
Three Man Army were elevated up to the level of cult stars
on the British underground circuit.
The well-in-demand session drummer, Tony Newman, was recruited for
the recording of "Three Man Army" and "Three Man Army II" in 1973.
Previously, Newman garnered experience and reputation on the rock scene
with Jeff Beck, David Bowie and Chris Spedding, as
well as having been a member of May Blitz.
On their second outing, this British band sounded rougher and bluesier
than on their debut, which sparked frequent comparisons to Cream and Grand Funk Railroad.
Centre-stage was Adrian Gurvitz, a true guitar wizard, whose intricate,
hard-driving solos had gained notoriety since his days with Gun,
aided and abetted by the heavy, precise rhythm section.
Yet proper commercial success continued to elude them.
The band was often praised for their tight and professional live performances,
yet, at the end of the day, none of their records had made it into the charts.
The last crack at big time was attempted in 1974, with the release
of "Mahesha" - alas, it was sadly igonred by the public.
As a result, the Gurvitz brothers abandoned this project altogether,
and instead embarked on yet another venture, the
brand new Baker Gurvitz Army, featuring legendary Cream drummer Ginger Baker.
Later, the duo also played on two records by ex-Moody Blues
drummer Graeme Edge, in the mid-70s: "Paradise Ballroom" and "Kick Off Your Muddy Boots".
Later still, Adrian Gurvitz released two solo albums in 1979 and 1980, "Sweet Vendetta"
and "Il Assanio", and one in 1982, for Micky Most's RAK label, "Classic".
"Sweet Vendetta" featured a softer side of Adrian, with the slickly produced,
mellow funky soul, in the style of later Average White Band,
whereas "Classic" sounded as though things had gone all wrong…
Drummer Tony Newman returned to work once again with David Bowie; he also
played with Ollie Halsall's Boxer, and participated in the recording
of albums by such notable pop and rock luminaries as Joan Armatrading,
T.Rex, Shakin' Stevens, Kevin Ayers and Lee Clayton - all on the session basis. [chrisgesrock]

Three Man Army (Musical Group),A Third Of A Lifetime,1971,United Kingdom (Country),Europe (Continent),Buddy Miles (Musical Artist),Ginger Baker (Musical Artist),Paul Gurvitz,Mike Kellie,England (Country),Hard Rock (Musical Genre),Rock And Roll (Musical Genre),

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