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Brian Auger and the Trinity was a British band led by keyboardist Brian Auger. His duet with Julie Driscoll, the Bob Dylan/Rick Danko–penned "This Wheel's on Fire", was a number 5 hit on the 1968 UK Singles Chart.[1]
The song also reached number 13 in Canada.[2]
Brian Auger and the Trinity and Driscoll's joint album, Open, billed as Julie Driscoll, Brian Auger and the Trinity, reached number 12 in the UK Albums Chart the same year.[1] 1969's double LP Streetnoise was also credited to the same Driscoll/Auger/Trinity group name.
The group and Driscoll opened for Led Zeppelin at the Rose Palace in Pasadena, California on 2 and 3 May 1969.[3]
Year | Title | Label | Date recorded | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
November 1967 | Open[5] | Marmalade/ Polydor |
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1968 | Don't Send Me No Flowers | Marmalade/ Polydor |
January 1965 | Sonny Boy Williamson with Brian Auger & The Trinity, Jimmy Page, Joe Harriot and Alan Skidmore |
March 1969[6] | Definitely What! | Marmalade/ Polydor |
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July 1969 | Streetnoise | Marmalade/ Polydor/ Atco |
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1969 | Jools & Brian | Capitol/ MFP[7] |
1965–1967 | Compilation of early UK singles: 5 Parlophone titles by Julie Driscoll, and 6 Columbia titles by Brian Auger & The Trinity |
1970 | The Best Of Julie Driscoll, Brian Auger & The Trinity | Polydor | Compilation | |
1970 | Befour | RCA Victor |