Built on stones laid down by John Lee Hooker, Tony "T.S." McPhee's The Groundhogs were labeled “post-blues” by the rock & roll press of the late '60s and '70s. The band was farther out than Cream, and they tapped into an end-of-flower-power darkness like a less disdainful The Doors, and shared the medieval attitude of Ladbroke Grove bands like Deviants, Pink Fairies, or Hawkwind. but their journey to Inner Space reflects entirely unique concerns . . .
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