
"Flowers of Evil" is a potent dose of early 70s hard rock that splits its personality right down the middle, offering both meticulous studio power and electrifying live spontaneity.
Imagine the thunderous, blues-infused riffs of Leslie West's guitar, backed by Felix Pappalardi's seismic bass and Corky Laing's relentless drums, all captured with an analog warmth that feels like a classic muscle car roaring down a desert highway. This album is for those who crave the heavy, the raw, and the unvarnished truth of a band at their peak, equally adept at crafting brooding studio anthems and unleashing extended, fiery jams in front of a roaring crowd. It's an album to own for its historical significance, its undeniable sonic power, and the sheer, unbridled energy that defined an era.
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