20 Granite Creek is the rock band Moby Grape's fifth album.
The album title refers to an address near Santa Cruz, CA but there is no record that any band member ever lived there.
Reviewing for Rolling Stone in 1971, music critic Richard Meltzer found the album remarkable and said that it "proves that without an audience and with all the members of the original Grape aboard ship they can outdo Truly Fine Citizen with their eyes closed.
"[3] By contrast, Robert Christgau of The Village Voice found it drab and marred by kotos,[4] but warmed to the album over time; in Christgau's Record Guide: Rock Albums of the Seventies (1981), he said Moby Grape sounds intense and hopeful for a band in decline: "You can hear the country undertone now, but you can also hear why you missed it—at their most lyrical these guys never lay back, and lyricism is something they're usually rocking too hard to bother with, though their compact forms guarantee poetic justice.
"[2] Additional personnel Album – Billboard[citation needed]