When guitarist
Mike Bloomfield left
the Paul Butterfield Blues Band in 1967, he wanted to form a band that combined blues, rock, soul, psychedelia, and jazz into something new. The ambitious concept didn't come off, despite some interesting moments; maybe it was too ambitious to hold all that weight.
Bloomfield knew for sure that he wanted a horn section in the band, which he began forming with a couple of friends, keyboardist
Barry Goldberg and singer
Nick Gravenites. Although the three were all veterans of the Chicago music scene, the group based itself in the San Francisco area.
Bloomfield,
Goldberg, and
Gravenites were in turn bolstered by a rhythm section of bassist
Harvey Brooks (who had played on some of
Bob Dylan's mid-'60s records) and drummer
Buddy Miles; on top of them came a horn section.
Oddly, before even playing any live concerts,
Electric Flag recorded the soundtrack for the 1967 psychedelic exploitation movie The Trip, which afforded them the opportunity to experiment with some of their ideas without much pressure. Their live debut was at the 1967 Monterey Pop Festival (although they didn't make it into the documentary film of the event; they do appear in the bonus footage on the DVD version), but their first proper studio album didn't come out until the spring of 1968.
A Long Time Comin' was an erratic affair, predating
Blood, Sweat & Tears and
Chicago as a sort of attempt at a big-band rock sound. Calling it an early jazz-rock outing is not exactly accurate; it was more like late-'60s soul-rock-psychedelia that sometimes (but not always) employed prominent horns. Indeed, it sometimes didn't always sound like the work of the same band -- or, at least, you could say that it seemed torn between blues-rock, soul-rock, and California psychedelic influences. The album's success is even harder to judge in light of the facts that
Gravenites really wasn't a top-notch vocalist, and that the bandmembers' instrumental skills outshone their songwriting ones.
There was enough promise on the album to merit further exploration, but it had hardly been released before
the Flag began to droop.
Goldberg left, followed shortly by
Bloomfield, the most important component of the group's vision. A fragmented band recorded an inferior follow-up, but by 1969
Electric Flag had split up. They did reunite (with
Bloomfield) in 1974 for a
Jerry Wexler-produced album that got little notice. ~ Richie Unterberger