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  1. Just for Love is the fourth album by American psychedelic rock band Quicksilver Messenger Service. Released in August 1970, it marks the culmination of a transition from the extended, blues- and jazz-inspired improvisations of their first two albums to a more traditional rock sound.

    • John Palladino
    • August 1970
    • May – June 1970
  2. In his review of the album, for AllMusic, Lindsay Planer writes: "This somewhat uneven effort would sadly foreshadow QMS's journey from psychedelia and into a much more pop-oriented sound on their follow-up, Just for Love (1970). However, enthusiasts of those albums will find much more to revisit on Shady Grove than those who favored ...

    • July−September 1969
    • December 1969
  3. Released in December 1970 and recorded partly at the same sessions that produced Just for Love, the album is the last to feature pianist Nicky Hopkins and the last pre-reunion effort to feature founding members David Freiberg and John Cipollina. Several tracks, including "Baby Baby", "Subway" and "Long Haired Lady" had been played ...

    • John Palladino
    • December 1970
    • May – June 1970
  4. View credits, reviews, tracks and shop for the 1977 Vinyl release of "Just For Love" on Discogs.

    • Japan
    • Capitol Records-ECS-40037
    • Vinyl, LP, Album, Reissue
    • Rock Greatest 1500
  5. Just For Love (Part 1) Lyrics: Just about love, like the wing of some high-flying bird / Of the songs I will sing to you, you can hear every word / That I ever heard come to you / Of the...

  6. 24. Jan. 2024 · Shady Grove went a little higher, at No.25, after which Just For Love peaked at No.27 and What About Me No.26. It was a remarkably consistent run, all achieved by four releases inside a...

  7. 23. Aug. 2012 · On Just for Love, Quicksilver finally was Valenti's backup group (he wrote all but one of the songs), and while this gave them greater coherence and accessibility, as well as their only Top 50 single in "Fresh Air," it also made them less the boogie band they had been. And it meant the band's days were numbered. --- William Ruhlmann, allmusic.com