The Yardbirds - Roger the Engineer (1966)
Tracklist
Songs written by Chris Dreja, Jim McCarty, Jeff Beck, Keith Relf, and Paul Samwell-Smith (Dreja and McCarty's last names are misspelled as "Drega" and "McCarthy" on the labels of the US album).
Side one
1. "Lost Woman" 3:16
2. "Over Under Sideways Down" (Rechanneled) 2:24
3. "The Nazz Are Blue" 3:04
4. "I Can't Make Your Way" 2:26
5. "Rack My Mind" 3:15
6. "Farewell" 1:29
Side two
7. "Hot House of Omagararshid" 2:39
8. "Jeff's Boogie" (Rechanneled) 2:25
9. "He's Always There" 2:15
10. "Turn into Earth" 3:06
11. "What Do You Want" 3:22
12. "Ever Since the World Began" 2:09
US release
Side one
1. "Lost Woman" 3:16
2. "Over, Under, Sideways, Down" 2:24
3. "I Can't Make Your Way" (Mono version includes opening beat missing from stereo version) 2:26
4. "Farewell" 1:29
5. "Hot House of Omagararshid" (Beck's lead guitar differs noticeably between the two mixes) 2:39
Side two
6. "Jeff's Boogie" 2:25
7. "He's Always There" (Longer fadeout and extended vocals at the end of the mono version) 2:15
8. "Turn into Earth" (12-bar drum opening on mono version, 8-bar opening on stereo version) 3:06
9. "What Do You Want" 3:22
10. "Ever Since the World Began" 2:09
Roger the Engineer (originally released in the UK as Yardbirds and in the US, Germany, France and Italy as Over Under Sideways Down) is an album by English rock band the Yardbirds. Recorded and released in 1966, it is the only Yardbirds album with guitarist Jeff Beck on all tracks and contains all original material. It was produced by bassist Paul Samwell-Smith and manager Simon Napier-Bell.
Although the British edition is still officially titled Yardbirds by authoritative chart sources, such as Official Charts Company, it has since been referred to, first colloquially, then semi-officially, as Roger the Engineer, a title stemming from the cover drawing of the record's audio engineer Roger Cameron by band member Chris Dreja.
It is the only Yardbirds album to appear in the UK Albums Chart, where it reached number 20. In the US, it reached number 52 on the Billboard 200 album chart. The album's best-known song, "Over Under Sideways Down", was released as single in May 1966, two months before the album.
The album is included in Robert Dimery's 1001 Albums You Must Hear Before You Die. In 2012, the album was ranked number 350 on Rolling Stone's list of the 500 greatest albums of all time.