Easy Rider [Expanded]

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CD - Expanded / Remastered / Special Edition / Digi-Pak

  • Release Date: 03/23/2004
  • Original Release: 1969
  • 2 Disc Set
  • Sales Rank: 1,345
  • Label: HIP-O RECORDS
  • UPC: 602498163597

Listener Rating: (2 ratings)

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Editorial Reviews

This two-CD expanded version of the Easy Rider soundtrack actually is more like the original soundtrack joined by a second CD of similar music than a solid two CDs of music actually heard in, or even related to, the classic 1969 film. The first CD does indeed present the original soundtrack -- nothing more, nothing less -- which has an assortment of good late-'60s rock appropriate to the themes and moods of the movie. The second CD, with 19 cuts and 67 minutes of music, is actually a good half-hour longer than the soundtrack, offering more classic countercultural (but pretty popular) rock from the same era. The concept might be a little tenuous, to say the least -- it's basically an excuse to build a two-CD oldies compilation around. For a marketing ploy, though, it must be admitted that the music's pretty bitchin'. The actual soundtrack material on disc one balances well-known performers (Steppenwolf, the Byrds, Jimi Hendrix) with relatively little-heard items by lesser-known psychedelic acts (the Holy Modal Rounders' "If You Want to Be a Bird," Fraternity of Man's "Don't Bogart Me," and the Electric Prunes' "Kyrie Eleison"), even if only one cut (Steppenwolf's "Born to Be Wild") was an actual hit. Too, the original soundtrack benefits from two fine Roger McGuinn performances, a cover of Bob Dylan's "It's Alright Ma (I'm Only Bleeding)" and "Ballad of Easy Rider." Disc two is a more conventional assortment of classic rock from the psychedelic era, including its share of massive hits -- the Electric Prunes' "I Had Too Much to Dream (Last Night)," Jefferson Airplane's "White Rabbit," the Who's "I Can See for Miles," the Rascals' "Groovin'," Procol Harum's "A Whiter Shade of Pale," the Chambers Brothers' "The Time Has Come Today," the Youngbloods' "Get Together," and Thunderclap Newman's "Something in the Air." It also has the Band's version of "The Weight," which though used in the film could not be included on the original soundtrack LP for contractual reasons (a cover of the song by Smith was used in its place). Nothing on disc two's actually obscure, but there are a few cuts you won't hear often or ever on commercial classic rock or oldies radio, including the Flying Burrito Brothers' "My Uncle" and Richie Havens' "High Flyin' Bird." It all makes for a very good package of some of the more adventurous but popular music of the psychedelic era, though there's not much here to tempt specialized collectors. Richie Unterberger, All Music Guide

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Easy Rider [Expanded]by Anonymous

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April 07, 2004: In some ways it's fitting that the soundtrack to this landmark film has suffered a series of legal hassles from The Man. In its original 1969 vinyl release, it was denied the film's use of The Band's "The Weight" (by the band's then-label Capitol), and a sound-alike cover by Smith was issued in its place. More recently, the soundtrack was withheld from domestic CD reissue, squeaking out a European version many years before MCA's 2000 digital issue. The latter reunited The Band with their film-mates, at the expense of altering the original Smith-bred artifact. Hip-O's deluxe two-disc reissue provides the best of both worlds – including both versions of "The Weight" – and filling out a second disc of contemporaneous radio hits. ¶ The original soundtrack is a five-star release on its own, brilliantly capturing the flavor of the film and its times with a carefully selected set of music, and augmented with snippets of sound and dialogue. Many of these songs were, or became, period classics, burned into everyone's consciousness by endless radio play; but what really makes the album great are the non-hit tracks. Beyond the collection of well-worn hits are more unusual inclusions: The Holy Modal Rounders' lunatic old-timey "If You Want to be a Bird (Bird Song)," Fraternity of Man's stoner country "Don't Bogart That Joint" and The Electric Prunes' reverb-drenched psychedelic mass "Kyrie Ellison." Roger McGuinn's cover of Dylan's "It's Alright Ma (I'm Only Bleeding)" and his original "Ballad of Easy Rider" close out the original track lineup with a helping of paranoia, dissolution and salvation. ¶ Disc two adds 19 period selections that flesh out the country's growing acid-paranoia, from the independence-minded garage punk of The Seeds and psychedelic trippings of the Electric Prunes and Jefferson Airplane, to the reactionary folk of Richie Havens and The Youngbloods, and heavy-metal acid freak-out of Blue Cheer. Nearly all of this will be very familiar to those weaned on the era's radio, as well as those who've bought other late-60s anthologies. The Band's original version of "The Weight," omitted from the original soundtrack, is a bonus; the rest of the disc, which, unsurprisingly, plays more like an anthology than a film soundtrack, is superfluous in contrast to the original soundtrack.