Today, Rafferty is best known for the songs "Stuck in the Middle with You," "Right Down the Line," and "Baker Street." (You might not recognize the title "Baker Street," since it's only mentioned once in the song, but I'll bet you recognize the saxophone riff. Weirdly, the song didn't reach Number One in the U.S. despite being a massive hit in 1978, but it stayed at Number Two for six weeks!) But he was a very talented singer and songwriter who deserves to be known for a lot more than just those three songs. (I use the past tense, because he died in 2011 at the age of 63.)
In 1969, Rafferty joined the band the Humblebums. The band had already existed for a few years, and was led by Billy Connolly. Connolly wouldn't have great success as a musician, but he would transition to becoming a world famous comedian and actor. When Rafferty joined, the Humblebums split between songs written and sung by Connolly and songs written and sung by Rafferty. The songs here generally are the Rafferty ones. By Connolly's own admission, Rafferty was leagues ahead of him musically, while Connolly excelled in comedic stage banter, which is missing here.
The Humblebums split in 1971. That same year, Rafferty put out his first solo album, "Can I Have My Money Back?" It was largely ignored due to poor record company support, but got good reviews. However, by the end of 1971, Rafferty joined another band, Stealers Wheel. This was a collaboration with singer-songwriter Joe Egan, with both of them writing and singing songs. I'll have more songs from Stealers Wheel in Volume 2. But for now, that band is represented by the last seven songs on this album.
The songs here come from a variety of BBC sources, all of them unreleased. The first nine songs come from four different BBC radio shows in 1970. Four of those songs have "[Edit]" in their titles due to the common problem of BBC DJs talking over the music. As I usually do, I used the UVR5 program to wipe the talking while keeping the music.
Track 10, "Can I Have My Money Back," is from an appearance on the "Old Grey Whistle Test" in 1971. Tracks 11, 12, and 13 are from an appearance by Stealers Wheel on a BBC "In Concert" radio show, though they only performed these three songs. Then the last four tracks are from an appearance on the "Top Gear" BBC radio show in early 1972.
Two songs, "A Little of Your Time" and "Oh No," have been bumped down to mere bonus track status, due to poor sound quality. Both of those are from the same BBC studio session in 1970.
This album is 54 minutes long, not including the bonus tracks.
UPDATE: On December 5, 2025, only about a week after I first posted this album, I updated the mp3 download file. A person named Alick who downloaded it noticed that it was missing a BBC session, and sent that session to me. That makes up tracks 11, 12, and 13.
01 Rick Rack [Edit] (Humblebums)
02 Everybody Knows That [Edit] (Humblebums)
03 Mother [Edit] (Humblebums)
04 Please Sing a Song for Us [Edit] (Humblebums)
05 Mary of the Mountains (Humblebums)
06 Cruising (Gerry Rafferty)
07 Keep It to Yourself (Gerry Rafferty)
08 My Singing Bird (Gerry Rafferty)
09 All the Best People Do It (Humblebums)
10 Can I Have My Money Back (Gerry Rafferty)
11 I Get By (Stealers Wheel)
12 Please Sing a Song for Us (Stealers Wheel)
13 Steamboat Row (Stealers Wheel)
14 We're on the Right Track (Stealers Wheel)
15 Jose (Stealers Wheel)
16 Mary Skeffington (Stealers Wheel)
17 I Get By (Stealers Wheel)
A Little of Your Time (Humblebums)
Oh No (Humblebums)
https://pixeldrain.com/u/94k7gsff
alternate:
https://bestfile.io/en/lpYbzyUDi14ovYR/file
The cover photo was taken in Amsterdam, Netherlands in 1972. The original was in black and white, but I colorized it with the use of the Kolorize program.

Thanks for this and glad that you've cleaned up some of the tracks. I have a 9 song set just marked 'live 1970' from the Humblebums, with an awful background hum that spoils the music. It might be retrievable with software (I can't do it). There's also a SW BBC session from December 71 on a (dodgy?) reissue and a GR Peel session from January 73 if you don't have them, and 3 songs from GR and Joe Egan (Maverix and Fifth Column) from the 60s.
ReplyDeleteI think I heard the Humblebums thing you speak of, and deemed it unusable. But I'd be interested in the other stuff, just to be on the safe side, in case I don't have them. My email is thompson22 @ runbox.com (remove the spaces). Thanks.
DeleteHi, regarding the comment about the sax solo in 'Baker Street', performed by the late Raff Ravenscroft. Have a listen to 'Half a Heart' by Steve Marcus from 1968, you can find it on Youtube. Does the sax sound just slightly familiar?! The previous decade to 'Baker Street'! Did Mr R ever acknowledge hearing Mr M's tune?! I suspect not.
ReplyDeleteIt does sound quite similar. But I don't know for sure if it was nicked from there. Sometimes the same things are discovered independently, and there are differences.
DeleteYes, it has a similar 'feel' but it probably wouldn't stand up in court. Similar to the Led Zeppelin/Spirit case, the money would mainly end up with expert lawyers.
ReplyDelete