The Sons of Champlin formed in 1965. They were led by Bill Champlin, who was the main singer and songwriter. Here's what their Wikipedia entry has to say: "They brought to the late '60s music scene in the Bay Area a soulful sound built around a horn section, Hammond B3 organ, sophisticated arrangements, philosophical themes, Bill Champlin's songwriting and blue-eyed soul singing, and Terry Haggerty's unique jazz-based guitar soloing." Unfortunately, they never made it big. They broke up in 1977. Then Champlin joined the very popular band Chicago a few years later, and stayed with that band until 2009. However, he reformed the Sons of Champlin in 1997, and they continue to perform until today (writing this in 2025).
Here's their Wikipedia entry, if you want to know more:
While getting ready to post this album, I discovered that one reason some people believe the band didn't become more popular is that their concerts were very good, but they didn't fully capture how good they were on their records. So this is a good opportunity to fix that, especially since there are no official albums from them (except for way later reunions), and almost no live bootlegs. This concert took place around the time they released the album "Welcome to the Dance."
This album is 54 minutes long.
01 talk (Sons of Champlin)
02 Day Tripper (Sons of Champlin)
03 No Mo (Sons of Champlin)
04 talk (Sons of Champlin)
05 For Joy (Sons of Champlin)
06 Without Love (Sons of Champlin)
07 Fat City (Sons of Champlin)
08 talk (Sons of Champlin)
09 Welcome to the Dance (Sons of Champlin)
10 All and Everything (Sons of Champlin)
11 talk (Sons of Champlin)
12 Learn How to Swim (Sons of Champlin)
13 talk (Sons of Champlin)
14 Right On (Sons of Champlin)
15 talk (Sons of Champlin)
16 Linda Lou (Sons of Champlin)
17 talk (Sons of Champlin)
18 Lightning (Sons of Champlin)
19 talk (Sons of Champlin)
https://pixeldrain.com/u/9kF9T4Xk
alternate:
https://bestfile.io/en/Z8yvI7et4tSMFmY/file
I had a heck of a time finding a good image for the cover art. It's a sign of how they have mostly been overlooked to not be able to find a single good color photo from their prime years, other than album covers. I did find a good black and white one though. I don't know the year it's from, but I'd guess the early 1970s. I colorized it with the help of the Kolorize program, plus some Photoshop work.
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