
Artist
Love
Love is a psychedelic rock artist from Los Angeles, USA formed in 1965. 21 releases are catalogued on Riffiter.
Psychedelic Rock · Los Angeles, USA · Best psychedelic rock albums
- 21
- Releases
- 1966–2019
- Active years
- 1965
- Formed

Artist
Love is a psychedelic rock artist from Los Angeles, USA formed in 1965. 21 releases are catalogued on Riffiter.
Psychedelic Rock · Los Angeles, USA · Best psychedelic rock albums

Most popular
Four Sail
1969 · 10 tracks

Love
1966

Da Capo
1966

Out Here
1969

False Start
1970

Studio/Live
1982

Alone Again Or
2019

Forever Changes (2015 Remaster)
2015

Black Beauty
2014

Found Love: The Lost '71 Sessions
2013
Love Lost
2009

The Blue Thumb Recordings
2007

Definitive Rock: Love
2007

The Forever Changes Concert (Live)
2007

Forever Changes - the Concert (Live)
2007
Trilogy: Three Classic Albums
2005

The Best Of: Love
2003

Forever Changes: Expanded and Remastered
1999
Reel to Real
1974

Forever Changes: Alternate Mix and Outtakes
1967
Forever Changes
1967
An American psychedelic rock group formed in Los Angeles in 1965. They were led by singer, songwriter and guitarist Arthur Lee (March 7, 1945 - August 3, 2006) and the group’s second songwriter, guitarist Bryan MacLean (September 25, 1946 - December 25, 1998). One of the first racially diverse American pop bands, their music reflected a remarkable array of influences, combining elements of rock and roll, garage rock, folk, showtunes and psychedelia. Other members included John Echols, Johnny Fleckenstein, Don Conka, Alban Snoopy Pfisterer, Ken Forssi, Tjay Cantrelli, Michael Stuart, Jay Donnellan, Gary Rowles, Frank Fayad, and George Suranovich. Love grew out of the Los Angeles garage band The Grass Roots, changing their name in 1965 to avoid confusion with the P.F. Sloan-managed band of the same name. The band lived communally in Bela Lugosi’s former LA residence The Castle, and the house forms the background to the cover of their first two album sleeves. Love released their eponymous début album in July 1966. This was followed later the same month by the single “Seven and Seven Is/No. Fourteen”, neither side of which was included on the album, and which gave the band their o…