Dixie rumproast   well done %28the lost album%29

Dixie Rumproast - Well Done (The Lost Album)

Format: streaming
Label: Pacemaker Entertainment Limited PROMO-1
Year: 2020
Origin: Toronto, Ontario, 🇨🇦
Genre: rock
Keyword: 
Value of Original Title: 
Inquiries Email: ryder@robertwilliston.com
Release Type: Albums
Buy directly from Artist:  https://canadiancds.com/dixie-rumproast/
Playlist: Ontario, 1970's, Rock Room

Tracks

Track Name
Natural Sun
No Jubilation
Rise Up and Shine
Lonely Road
Southern Road
Danger Man
Morning Breaking
Hang On
Back Road

Photos

Dixie rumproast   well done %28the lost album%29

Well Done (The Lost Album)

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Information/Write-up

When Toronto rockers Dixie Rumproast finally released their long-lost 1972 album Well Done through Pacemaker Entertainment in 2020, few could have predicted that the record’s resurfacing would result in the resolution of an almost 50-year-standing Rock and Roll mystery.

Comprised of Scott Kennedy (bass), John Bojicic (guitar), Mike Sherman (lead guitar & vocals) and Kon (drums), the group was formed from remnant members of Southern Ontario’s late ‘60s live act Icarus. After parting ways for a few years, the members reunited under the guidance of manager/producer Bob Ezrin in the early ‘70s.

The group and Ezrin began working on Dixie Rumproast’s debut album in Toronto, with executive production from renowned producer Jack Richardson (The Guess Who) and engineering duties from Terry Brown. Following two ill-fated deals with Dunhill/ABC and Epic Records, the bluesy, southern-tinged album was ultimately not released and lost to history – that is, until a remastered version was acquired and released in 2021 through Pacemaker.

Meanwhile down south, American singer-songwriter and The Merry-Go-Round band alum Emitt Rhodes was tending to his own burgeoning solo career. He released a self-titled album in 1970 to much critical acclaim (and Beatles comparisons) after signing a multi-album contract with Dunhill/ABC. Despite his initial success, Rhodes was unable to keep up with the heavy release demands – an album every six months – and legal troubles with the label eventually brought his career to a standstill.

To make matters worse, Farewell to Paradise, Rhodes’ final album under Dunhill/ABC, was mispressed, and several of these misattributed pressings ended up being distributed, likely due to the label’s own imminent closure. Fans attempted to figure out the identity of these mysterious mispressed recordings for years to no avail, with most reaching a consensus that a lost/unreleased Dunhill/ABC album had been printed under Rhodes’ name and title.

Fast forward to 2022: Dixie Rumproast’s Well Done (The Lost Album) is digitally released, and Rhodes fans continue to research the identity behind Farewell to Paradise’s mispressed copies. This time, however, they find answers – a Shazam search of the Rhodes record reveals that the mystery album is none other than Dixie Rumproast’s Well Done, solving a mystery that had perplexed listeners for close to half a century.

When asked about the recent revelations surrounding the lost album’s release, Dixie Rumproast bassist Scott Kennedy is torn between thrill and astoundment: “It’s hard to believe it’d been out there all these years. Let alone that, nobody knew it was us!”

Mike Sherman: lead guitar, vocals. keyboards
John Bojicic: guitar, vocals
Scott Kennedy: bass, vocals
Kon: drums, vocals, leader

Produced by Bob Ezrin
Engineered by Terry Brown
Executive producer: Jack Richardson
Remastered by Michael Sherman

Pacemaker’s first digital only release is a legendary “lost album”. Produced by Bob Ezrin, mixed by Terry Brown for Jack Richardson’s Nimbus 9 Productions, this should have been a hit. Unfortunately, the band was signed to ABC Records who soon went bankrupt.

The album was thought to have been lost, but Dave Bingham (Ugly Ducklings) found the safety masters while cleaning out Richardson’s offices.

Recently, it was discovered that the album did actually make it to vinyl back in 1973. Somehow Emitt Rhodes’ Farewell to Paradise album was mispressed and Dixie Rumproast audio was used. While many copies were returned and destroyed, the ABC collapse meant that their warehouses were liquidated and many of the mispressings got out on the market as “deletes”.

But nobody knew who the band was on these records as none of the Dixie material every made it out. Fortunately, with the digital release, the mystery was solved (thanks Shazam!) and Canadian record collectors are on the hunt for this suddenly valuable mispressing.

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