Uptown Avondale
Uptown Avondale is an EP by the band The Afghan Whigs. It bears the Sub Pop catalog number SPCD 53/215 and is representative of the Cincinnati band's soul influences. The EP contains covers of 4 classic Stax/Motown-era tracks:
- "Band of Gold", which was made famous by Freda Payne (after being rejected by Diana Ross and The Supremes)
- "True Love Travels on a Gravel Road", by Dallas Frazier/A.L. Owens, recorded by Elvis Presley and Percy Sledge among others
- "Come See About Me", a Holland–Dozier–Holland song that was a hit for The Supremes
- "Beware", by the Rev. Al Green
Uptown Avondale | ||||
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EP by | ||||
Released | 1992 | |||
Label | Sub Pop | |||
Producer | Greg Dulli (engineered by John Curley) | |||
The Afghan Whigs chronology | ||||
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Source | Rating |
Allmusic | link |
It also contains a stark, robotic remix of the Whigs song "Milez Is Ded" as a hidden track — the original was itself a sinister, funk-tinged hidden track on the 1992 album Congregation. This version takes the song and gives it a bit of a menacing dancefloor tweak, complete with a looped drum track (same bed as The Stone Roses' "Fools Gold", and dozens of other tracks from the same timeframe) and some heavy effects on the vocals and guitars. The band playfully referred to the new mix as "Rebirth of the Cool," as a pean to the Miles Davis album Birth of the Cool.
Track listing
- "Band of Gold"
- "True Love Travels on a Gravel Road"
- "Come See About Me"
- "Beware"
- "Rebirth of the Cool"