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Spirit — Aren't You Glad
Album: The Family That Plays Together
Avg rating:
6.4

Your rating:
Total ratings: 343









Released: 1968
Length: 5:27
Plays (last 30 days): 0
Aren't you glad you're glad you're glad baby
Yes I'm glad so glad I'm that baby

Don't you know you know you know baby
Yes I know I know it's so baby

Heard you say you needed direction
But in your house the word is correction

Aren't you glad you're glad you're glad baby
Yes I'm glad so glad I'm that baby

Don't you know you know you know baby
Yes I know it's got to go baby

Streets are yours you're feeling much bolder
But summer has gone we're all a bit older
Now

Yep!

Aren't you glad you glad you glad baby
Yes I'm glad so glad I'm glad baby
Aren't you glad you glad you glad baby
Yes I'm glad so glad I'm glad baby
Aren't you glad you glad you glad baby
Aren't you glad you glad, baby

Oh

Nana nana nana nana

One two three
Hey!
Comments (94)add comment
Thank you my Family!

Love to you all!!! 
 dragon1952 wrote:
I guess you had to be there. I mean seriously, Spirit was pretty much a period-specific band, although a few of their songs transcend the era. They were an excellent band, excellent musicianship, lots of roots there. California played with (and was named by) Hendrix prior to the Experience, bassist Mark Andes went on to play in several decent bands...Firefall and Heart to name a couple. Jay Ferguson had a solo career as well as a stint as Jo  Jo Gunne with Andes. And John Locke went on as a member of Nazareth. If you don't like them, fine....but they are not "crap"

 
When I heard a friend's older brother playing "12 Dreams" I was transfixed - they just spoke to me. At that point 12 Dreams and a Best Of were their only albums in print and I really enjoyed hunting down their back catalog.

Of their later stuff I recommend "Farther Along". The entire band save for Ferguson were back for that album, plus Mark's brother Matt.
Give the song "Diamond Spirit" a listen. Hauntingly beautiful song by Randy written when he was homeless living on a beach in Hawaii.

Also a great piece of trivia is that Ferguson wrote the theme for the American version of the T.V. show "The Office".

A wonderful, ernest and flawed band. Way ahead of their time IMHO.

Love them. 
I rarely turn down the volume on RP, but I had to do it on this one.
I guess you had to be there. I mean seriously, Spirit was pretty much a period-specific band, although a few of their songs transcend the era. They were an excellent band, excellent musicianship, lots of roots there. California played with (and was named by) Hendrix prior to the Experience, bassist Mark Andes went on to play in several decent bands...Firefall and Heart to name a couple. Jay Ferguson had a solo career as well as a stint as Jo  Jo Gunne with Andes. And John Locke went on as a member of Nazareth. If you don't like them, fine....but they are not "crap"
Yes, very bad. Awful, in fact. Horrible. Dreck. Crap.
 moonridge2001 wrote:
Hurts head, make it stop...

 
Sorry MoonUnit, but I guess I'll have to jump out of my Microbus and beat you with my surfboard when I see you. Don't act surprised

.


You'll find this stretches your limits of credibility-  I made a Freedom of Information Act inquiry and found the X-File stating that both Bill and Randy California were abducted by UFOs near Modesto, in the same month in 1973. In case you were wonderi'n why you her so much Spirit... Don't get me wrong,  I think it was a good thing!
Hurts head, make it stop...
I am a square, too.  Just not quite old enough to have caught it first time round, I expect.
 Catalytic wrote:
Utter shit, never been happier for the PSD button.

 
Why don't you just say "I am a square"?
 KaraokeVox wrote:
a family that prays together....stays together.

cute title...whats the difference between praying and singing?  not much. 
 
I don't know if you're being facetious or not....I'll assume not so it's "plays together" not prays. Drummer Ed Cassidy was Randy's stepdad......not sure if that's what the reference is to but probably.
Spirit

fuckin' awesome

(yeah, I can hear a tinge of Blood Sweat and Tears, and some quality Zappa-like jammin' by Randy, love it  : ) 
Nice tune and guitar line. I've never heard this. RP does it again. 
 
 or Blood Sweat & Tears RandomousJam wrote:
raw, beautiful - bit like the beatles.

 


This one hasn't aged so well, imo.  Thanks RP, though, for keeping  Spirit alive  in the present (even though, as I recall, all of its members are not).
Glad to hear this
a family that prays together....stays together.

cute title...whats the difference between praying and singing?  not much. 
The basic riff, very good as it is, seems to have a long history. RC of Spirit prolly heard this riff somewhere (not saying he deliberately knicked it).
I tend to be less generous to Ted Nugent and Stranglehold.
what was the question?
Yum.
Yuck. 
I'm So Glad - Cream {#Cheesygrin}
 tgapen wrote:
HA! Looking at this I was thinking it looked like somebody made a mock-up of a retro rock poster, as if Spirit would be playing at the Grande on July 19, 2021.
Grew up listening to Spirit but didn't see this gig. But went to the old Grande Ballroom for many others who used to play there a lot including the Stooges, Frigid Pink, Seger, SRC and MC5.
Fantastic place!

jagdriver wrote:


1968: 'Twas a great concert!
 
See, now you're the toothless old guy saying "I saw all the GREAT bands, sonny..." but that's cool.


 


I haven't heard this playing in my house in,,,  damn...  nearly 24 hours! Spirit is one of those "soundtrack of your life" bands.
 bachbeet wrote:
"A terrific example of Randy California's guitar chops."

I think there was some kind of connection between Jimi and Randy but I don't remember what it was.  I just remember hearing of something like Randy jamming with Jimi. etc.

 
Jimi asked a very young Randy to play with him.  Jimi already had another player named Randy who was from I think Texas?  So Randy became Randy California.  Jimi wanted Randy to go to London with him, but I think his folks/someone else figured he was too young.  I think he was 15 or something. 


 bachbeet wrote:
clipped  I think there was some kind of connection between Jimi and Randy but I don't remember what it was.  I just remember hearing of something like Randy jamming with Jimi. etc.
 
According to some sources, Jimi wanted Randy in the band but was overruled by his (Mr. Hendrix's) manager.  Mr. California died in 1997 at age 45, saving his then-12-year-old kid from a riptide off the Molokai coast.
The late great Randy California on guitar.  Love how he got his nom du guitar.
Utter shit, never been happier for the PSD button.
raw, beautiful - bit like the beatles.
TEN.
This group did not recieve the notice it was very deserving of !
This ain't make me glad...
Thank you my Family!
Love to you all!!! 
wow. i love this.
NICE.
HA! Looking at this I was thinking it looked like somebody made a mock-up of a retro rock poster, as if Spirit would be playing at the Grande on July 19, 2021.
Grew up listening to Spirit but didn't see this gig. But went to the old Grande Ballroom for many others who used to play there a lot including the Stooges, Frigid Pink, Seger, SRC and MC5.
Fantastic place!

jagdriver wrote:


1968: 'Twas a great concert!
 


"A terrific example of Randy California's guitar chops."

I think there was some kind of connection between Jimi and Randy but I don't remember what it was.  I just remember hearing of something like Randy jamming with Jimi. etc.
Man, this feels real good right now.

Thanks.


1968: 'Twas a great concert!
A terrific example of Randy California's guitar chops.
Randy California, Jay Ferguson and Ed Cassidy are gods. Love this record. Silky Sam got a line on me, for sure.

"I'm So Glad" ripoff....haha...

10
The post below is classic. Read that 1 instead of this post. Yeap, this song is fun and i am Glad i caught it!
Hippy trippin to the cosmic wave of perpetual light waves coming off that crazy guitar riff in my mind... love it... {#Cool}
By accident, I met Ed Cassidy, the drummer for this band while having breakfast at a diner in Arroyo Grande, CA.
Very cool guy
 
Wow, does this take me back. Thanks for the jolt from the past!
 annie_fannie wrote:
i don't know exactly why, but i really love the album cover.
 
Maybe you have a thing for cheap motels ?

i don't know exactly why, but i really love the album cover.
If you weren't around when a band like Spirit was in its heyday, you only hear the same 1-2 chestnuts of their work on FM radio. I only knew Spirit from "I Got a Line On You" and "Nature's Way." This is really fun!  
 unclehud wrote:
A Spirit album I don't have, and a tune that's not on the two compilations I have.  Learn something new every day, thanks, Bill!

PS:  The Cream song must be the reply in their clever trans-oceanic collaboration:  "Aren't you glad?"   "I'm so glad!  I'm glad, I'm glad, I'm glad!"
 

I always kinda thought that, too.  That was part of what made the time and music actually fun back then.  I'm sure I heard them played back to back at least a couple of times back in the day in the wee hours, when there were no playlists and the DJ's could f*ck with your mind in a playful way.

It was and still is all about the segue. 
Such an awesome album - I listened to it over and over and over when I was 11 and 12. Remember when I moved to LA, one of the first things I noticed while driving down Sunset Blvd was the hotel where the album cover was shot.


Wow, i had to get up to see, who is this?! Very nice tune!

 just_me wrote:

I think that was "I'm So Glad", but they do sound a little similar.
 
Cream indeed performed "I'm So Glad" on their debut album, Fresh Cream. The song was written by bluesman Skip James around 1930. There used to be a CD around called, at least as I recall, Roots of Rock'n'Roll with "I'm So Glad," "When the Levee Breaks" by Kansas City Minnie and Memphis Joe, "Rollin' and Tumblin'" and others.

 FrankMc wrote:
You must be a Brit. "Spirit have been..."

MinMan wrote:  
The release of this tune preceded Nugent's Stranglehold by 8 years.
Spirit have been the inspiriation for many others too.
Nope - but close - "third culture kid" due to 6 years in north London during 1970's.
A Spirit album I don't have, and a tune that's not on the two compilations I have.  Learn something new every day, thanks, Bill!

PS:  The Cream song must be the reply in their clever trans-oceanic collaboration:  "Aren't you glad?"   "I'm so glad!  I'm glad, I'm glad, I'm glad!"
I am glad this is playing....
I hear a hint of "Heaven is in your mind" by Traffic.
 spindrift wrote:
Didn't Cream do this?  I like it, no matter who.
 
I think that was "I'm So Glad", but they do sound a little similar.


I just finished "Roomful of Mirrors", the Jimi Hendrix biography that came out a few years ago.

Randy California figures in that story also.
Didn't Cream do this?  I like it, no matter who.
 jagdriver wrote:
Led Zep opened for Spirit on one tour. There are claims that Jimmy P., uh, "borrowed" a Spirit riff to form the basis of Stairway.

I heard this band in the summer of '68 at Detroit's fabled Grande Ballroom. Fever Tree was a support act.
 
I'm reading the new Led Zep book; you can find out what everyone was borrowing back then in all its detail. And a lot of artists did it; but maybe not to the extent that he did.

 MinMan wrote:
 Papernapkin wrote:
This sounds so much like Ted Nugent's 70's song, Stranglehold. I wonder whose came first.
The release of this tune preceded Nugent's Stranglehold by 8 years.
Spirit have been the inspiriation for many others too.
 
Thanks. I doubt Ted will fess up to stealing their riff.
 Jazbo wrote:
Gary MaGaths' basement, Leather drapes, black lites, hooka, Spirit.....Ahh.. 9

 
the DEA is still looking for that MaGath fellow

 swoeller wrote:
Spirit is one of the bands that went missing from my life when I sold all my vinyl in the 80's. RP has reminded me of so many important pieces of my musical life history including these guys. Great sounds and melodies, use of studio tools, etc! thanks RP. sw
 
Funny... I was just thinking about this album the other day and wondering where I could find a copy.  I love this song!

Now why is this following Gave Dixon Band's "And the World Turned". Similar chord progressions on the piano?
Gary MaGaths' basement, Leather drapes, black lites, hooka, Spirit.....Ahh.. 9

Spirit is one of the bands that went missing from my life when I sold all my vinyl in the 80's. RP has reminded me of so many important pieces of my musical life history including these guys. Great sounds and melodies, use of studio tools, etc! thanks RP. sw
very Beatles like!!
wonderful song....
Deserved a higher rating so I gave it an 8.  Always dug Spirit and always dug this song.
I am so glad, I am so glad baby... to be hearing more Spirit on RP!
Led Zep opened for Spirit on one tour. There are claims that Jimmy P., uh, "borrowed" a Spirit riff to form the basis of Stairway.

I heard this band in the summer of '68 at Detroit's fabled Grande Ballroom. Fever Tree was a support act.


 brander wrote:
Lead guitarist Randy California played with and was given his nickname by Jimi Hendrix. RIP Randy.


His guitar work certainly has some Hendrix influence....


always something new to me on here
The first four Spirit CDs are great - and the reissues have bonus tracks!
Lead guitarist Randy California played with and was given his nickname by Jimi Hendrix. RIP Randy.

great band, put on one hell of a concert  not best song on album still a strong one tho
I'd never heard of these guys until now...thanks RP!
The archetypical Spirit tune. Heavy fuzz, bright lead, strong drums, great Jay Ferguson voice. Thanks RP.
You must be a Brit. "Spirit have been..."

I am glad that some still remember and appreciate Spirit. You may have had to have been there, but they really were good.

 MinMan wrote:
 Papernapkin wrote:
This sounds so much like Ted Nugent's 70's song, Stranglehold. I wonder whose came first.
The release of this tune preceded Nugent's Stranglehold by 8 years.
Spirit have been the inspiriation for many others too.
 


Prefer "I Got A Line On You" off this album.
 Papernapkin wrote:
This sounds so much like Ted Nugent's 70's song, Stranglehold. I wonder whose came first.
The release of this tune preceded Nugent's Stranglehold by 8 years.
Spirit have been the inspiriation for many others too.
I was turned on to this album (an original from the sixties which I still own) by my college roomate in 1978. I thought it was brilliant. 30 years on and my original estimation still holds.

sharkartist wrote:
Wow, so cool to hear Bill digging into this record and playing something other than "I Got a Line On You" For those who aren't familiar with this album in its entirety, it's well worth investing in the CD.


Who else but Bill would pull out something like this in 2008? 

Time to dust off some old Spirit albums. Thanks for the reminder.
This sounds so much like Ted Nugent's 70's song, Stranglehold. I wonder whose came first.
xkolibuul wrote:
Look kids, a real Motel 6.
Yeah, and an actual telephone booth complete with a bi-fold privacy door!
Wow, so cool to hear Bill digging into this record and playing something other than "I Got a Line On You" For those who aren't familiar with this album in its entirety, it's well worth investing in the CD.
Look kids, a real Motel 6.
Very cool song. Many, many layers. I must have been living under a rock as this is the first I recall hearing something from Spirit. Got to check it out further.
AREN'T YOU GLAD? Hell yes. More Spirit, please.
I saw Jay Ferguson once. He opened for Alice Cooper back in 1978...
Yow. Haven't heard this in decades. Forgot how good Spirit was....
Whoa! nice!