Wednesday, April 27, 2011

Beat...Beat... Beat... movie



Beat...Beat... Beat... movie part 4
Beat Beat Beat - vol. 4 

01 - Intro
02 - Info
03 - Girl, Those Where The Good Old Days / Sten & Stanley
04 - Nur der Silbermond
05 - Needle In A Haystack / Tawney Reed
06 - Wiggy Woggy / Sten & Stanley
07 - I've Got A Feeling / Tawney Reed
08 - Info
09 - Run For Your Life / Freddie & The Dreamers
10 - You Were Made For Me
11 - Baby, Baby, Baby / Pete Lancaster
12 - I'm Telling You Now / Freddie & The Dreamers
13 - If You've Got A Minute, Baby
14 - Stupidity / Pete Lancaster
15 - Info
16 - Love Potion No. 9 / The Searchers
17 - Sweets For My Sweet
18 - C.C. Rider / Jenny Take A Ride

Sunday, April 24, 2011

The Wailers - Out Of Our Tree (1966)


The Wailers' final album for Etiquette, Out of Our Tree was a somewhat confused effort. It was torn between covers of mid-'60s hits and original material, usually in their R&B-soaked raunchy style, though with touches of influences from British Invasion groups and the emerging American garage rock scene. Certainly its highlight was the title track (eventually included on the Nuggets box set), with its grinding sub-"Satisfaction" riff. But other original numbers on the record were frenetic yet undistinguished rewrites of '50s-style rock & roll numbers, though "Hang Up" was a pretty fair tough garage rocker. And there were too many covers of well-known hits -- "Hang on Sloopy," the Beatles' "I'm Down," "Unchained Melody," "Mercy Mercy," "Summertime" -- that neither matched better-known prior versions or added much to them, though the screaming white-soul vocal on Hank Ballard's "Little Sister" is pretty harrowing. If the whole album had been on the level of "Out of Our Tree" and "Hang Up," this would be a notable slice of wired, edgy mid-'60s garage rock




Gary Lewis & The Playboys - Everybody Loves A Clown (1965) She's Just My Style (1966






Gary Lewis & the Playboys' albums are inevitably a less than satisfying experience -- Lewis' vocal abilities were good enough that, with Snuff Garrett, Leon Russell, and a cadre of L.A.'s top session musicians surrounding him and the best possible tunes to work with, he could generate hit singles. Putting together a dozen good songs at a time, however, was beyond anyone's ability where Lewis was involved. This, his third album, is highlighted by some halfway decent covers of familiar fare such as "Tossin' and Turnin'," Don Everly's "('Til) I Kissed You," "My Special Angel," and "Sha La La," all of which are more memorable as songs than the title track, a number of which Lewis is embarrassingly proud to have co-authored. "Sha La La" is the best track on the album, and the only one that requires no apology -- it wouldn't make the members of Manfred Mann lose any sleep, but it is a smooth and very appealing number. And the closing track, "Dreamin,'" is a positively catchy, upbeat number with Lewis exploiting the hooks magnificently. Of course, Lewis put another original in between these two numbers just to make sure no body takes any of the music making here too seriously -- "Time Stands Still," a slow ballad that only refocuses the listeners on the limitations of his voice. Not that this was too much of a concern for the people buying this album, the playing was enthusiastic and the arrangements occasionally inspired ("Sha La La," "Dreamin'"), but Lewis' voice was so limited that it is difficult to get through this album in one sitting.


The title track on this, Gary Lewis & the Playboys' fourth album, is so fine a piece of pop/rock that it would automatically elevate the value of any LP on which it appeared. Leon Russell's guitar solo by itself on that track is almost worth the price of admission on its own terms, and, in this case, the title track heralded a new sound for the group, as is evident throughout this, their best original LP. This time out, Lewis, producer Snuff Garrett, and all concerned evidently decided that they were going to do an album that people enjoyed hearing more than once, and they delivered it. She's Just My Style is much more of a rocking album than its predecessor, with a leaner sound and more upfront presence on the guitars and bass, and a pretty fair choice of covers (including a pair of Lennon and McCartney songs), all of them solid as rock & roll numbers. Playboys guitarist Tommy Triplehorn even turned up his amp to capture the raunchy side of Jeff Beck's fuzz-tone part on "Heart Full of Soul" and gets a cool, "dirty" sound on Lewis' cover of the Beatles' "Run for Your Life." The group gives "You Didn't Have to Be So Nice" an even more lyrical reading (with more bells, too) than the Lovin' Spoonful's original. What's more, even Lewis' one co-authored original here, "I Won't Make That Mistake Again," is more than adequate to fill a slot on this first-rate pop/rock album, the high point of the group's LP output.



The Wailers - Wailers Everywhere (1965)

  
Continuation...

For their first LP recorded after the onset of the British Invasion, the Wailers wrote most of the material themselves. It was a change from previous Wailers efforts, as the sound usually reflected the influences of the Beatles and other early British Invasion stars like the Dave Clark Five, as well as some of the harmony rock of the Beach Boys and the Four Seasons. This was a farsighted strategy as far as career survival went, but fell down on its shortage of good original songs. For the most part it had tepid British Invasion-like harmony rockers, sounding very much like strained attempts to adapt their R&B-frat rock sound 
01 - You Better Believe It
02 - Do You Wanna Dance
03 - The Wailer
04 - Tomorrow's Another Day
05 - Just A Little Bit Louder
06 - Hold Back The Dawn
07 - Tears
08 - Since You Been Gone
09 - How Do You Feel
10 - I Think Of You
11 - Don't Take It So Hard
12 - Ya Ya

The Wailers - Tall Cool One (also The Wailers And Company) 1964


Continuation of  Topic

Here's a reissue of the Wailers' Imperial album from the early '60s, after the original version of "Tall Cool One" on Golden Crest had charted once again. Frustrated with their deal with the New York label, the group went into the studio, recut their hit, and packaged it with a brace of loose instrumental workouts and a trio of vocals. One of those vocals is the original Northwest cut of "Louie Louie," featuring an inspired vocal by the legendary Rockin' Robin Roberts, being the version that inspired the Kingsmen and launched a million frat bands worldwide. Another chapter in the history of this very important and influential Northwest rock & roll band.
01 - Tall Cool One
02 - Seattle
03 - Hokey
04 - Louie Louie
05 - Doin' The Seaside
06 - We're Going Surfin'
07 - Frenzy
08 - Shakedown
09 - Party Time U.S.A.
10 - Tough Walk
11 - Isabella
12 - Mashi

The La De Das - The La De Das (1966 - 1967)


Aside from Ray Columbus & the Invaders, the La De Das were New Zealand's most popular rock group of the '60s. As big fish in a very small pond, their work doesn't hold up to scrutiny in the company of the era's top American and English acts. But they did record some fine garage/pop numbers in the spirit of the Rolling Stones in the mid-'60s. A few of these ("How Is the Air Up There?" and "All Purpose Low") were big N.Z. hits, and they reached the Top Ten with covers of John Mayall's "On Top of the World" and a version of Bruce Channel's "Hey Baby." In 1968, they recorded a psychedelic-tinged children's concept LP, The Happy Prince; which bears resemblance to modern twee. After a failed attempt to crack the British market, the group soldiered on for quite some time with pedestrian hard rock that -- like even the best of their early work -- was very derivative of overseas trends.



The Easybeats - Absolute Anthology 1965 -69 (2 CD)



The Easybeats occupy a unique place in the pantheon of 1960s British rock acts. For starters, they were Australian, except that they really weren't -- they met in Sydney alright, and being based in Australia with the talent they had gave them a leg-up over any of the local competition. But lead singer Stevie Wright originally came from England (although he'd been in Australia for some years), and bassist Dick Diamonde hailed from the Netherlands, as did guitarist Harry Vanda, while the others, guitarists George Young and drummer Gordon "Snowy" Fleet, were recent arrivals from Scotland and England -- most significantly, Fleet was Liverpool born and raised, and had been a member of the Mojos, one of that city's more promising bands of 1963 and 1964. They all had talent, but he had a sense of style and an idea of what worked in rock & roll; it was Snowy Fleet who came up with the name "the Easybeats," and the sharp image for the early group, which made them a piece of authentic Brit-beat right in the heart of Sydney, 13,000 miles from Liverpool and as precious there as water on a desert.



After honing their sound and building a name locally around Sydney in late 1964, the group was signed to Albert Productions who, in turn, licensed their releases to Australian EMI's Parlophone label. Ted Albert, their producer, seemed to recognize what he had in a group of talented, newly-transplanted Englishmen and Europeans -- the real article, and a rare musical commodity in Australia. The band was signed up with 20 original songs already written, and as they sounded fresh, he simply let the band cut them, merely making sure the music came out right on vinyl. Working from originals primarily written by Stevie Wright, by himself or in collaboration with George Young, the group's early records (especially the albums) were highly derivative of the Liverpool sound, which was fine by all concerned. What made it special was the sheer energy that the quintet brought to the equation -- they were highly animated in the studio and on stage, they looked cool and rebellious, and they sang and played superbly.

"For My Woman," their debut single, issued in March of 1965, was an ominous garage punk bolero, featuring Stevie Wright in an agonized lament, accompanied by brittle, bluesy rhythm and lead guitar parts that called to mind the early Kinks. "She's So Fine," their second single, brought out two months later, shot to number one in Australia and was one of the great records of its era -- musically, it flew out of the gate like a rocket, a frantic, hook-laden celebration of female pulchritude from the point of view of an unrequited male admirer that grabbed the listener and wouldn't let go, across two minutes of raw excitement. Their debut album Easy, issued the following September, was a bit more influenced by the Hollies (and especially by Tony Hicks' playing) and, to a lesser degree, the Beatles and any number of lesser known Merseybeat acts, but whatever it lacked in originality, they made up for with an attack on their instruments that, coupled with Wright's searing, powerful lead vocals, made them one of the best British rock & roll acts of the period and Easy one of the best of all British Invasion albums (though it took more than 30 years for it to be released officially outside of Australia).

In Australia, they were the reigning kings of rock & roll from the summer of 1965 onward, assembling a string of eight Top Ten chart hits in a year and a half, including an EP that managed the unusual feat of making the singles chart. Their second album, It's 2 Easy, was a match for their first, a genuinely exciting collection of British Invasion-style rock & roll whose only fault -- assuming that this was a fault -- was that it seemed a year out-of-date in style when it was released in 1966. That, however, pointed to the fundamental bind that the band faced; they'd conquered Australia and could do no wrong by keeping their sound the same, as the changes taking place in rock music filtered only very slowly across the Pacific. By George Young's own account, the band could have gone on writing and playing the same kind of songs for years in Australia and nobody would have minded, but he had ideas for more complex and daring music. By mid-1966, the Wright/Young songwriting team had become history, but in its place Vanda and Young began writing songs together. Additionally, the group had become so successful, that it was inevitable that they'd try to expand their audience, and that didn't mean side trips to New Zealand. In the fall of 1966, the Easybeats were ready to make the jump that no Australian rock & roll act had yet done successfully, and headed for England.

In November of 1966, with legendary producer Shel Talmy (of Who and Kinks fame) managing their recordings, the group scored its first U.K. hit with "Friday on My Mind." A product of Vanda and Young's songwriting, the song embodied all of the fierce kinetic energy of their Australian hits but was written at a new level of sophistication, with an amazing number of musical "events" taking place in its three minutes: An opening two-note staccato figure (backed by a cymbal crash) blooms into a pseudo-Arabesque quotation on the guitar, rising higher while the singer intones a frantic tale of work, fun, and escape, covering the days of the work week (in a manner vaguely reminiscent of "Rock Around the Clock"'s trip around an idealized 24 hours in a teenager's life, and also declaring working class defiance in the manner of "Summertime Blues"); a chorus chimed in at an even higher register, notching up the tension even as the tempo quickens and also broadening the tonal palette, in a manner akin to the early psychedelia of the period. With all of that activity and excitement within the context of a three-minute pop song, and two catchy hooks, it was impossible to get tired of "Friday on My Mind," in any language. It rose to the Top Ten not only in England but across Europe and much of the rest of the world, and reached the Top 20 in the United States as well where, for the first time, Americans became aware of the Easybeats.

The group spent seven months in England, writing new, more ambitious songs and also performing before new audiences, most notably in Germany, where they were greeted with an enthusiasm rivaling their appearances in Australia, and left behind a notable series of live television appearances. The band's return to Australia in May of 1967 for a national tour marked the high point of their history. Unfortunately, it would be the last unbridled success that they would know -- the group moved their base of operations to London, where the Vanda/Young songwriting team began composing ever more complex songs, in keeping with the flourishing psychedelic era. Some of the songs were superb, but the same charmed existence that the group had led up to that point seemed to desert them in 1967-1968 -- their single "Heaven and Hell" was banned from the radio in England for one suggestive line, and a six-month lag for a follow-up cost them momentum that they never reclaimed. Additionally, they lost some cohesiveness in their sound as the members began indulging in the chemical and other diversions at hand in still swinging London -- they worked in the studio, making some extremely complex recordings during late 1967 and early 1968, and the songs, including "Falling Off the Edge of the World" and "Come in You'll Get Pneumonia," were as good as anything being written in rock at the time. The Easybeats, however, were no longer as exciting a group to listen to or see, when they actually did perform. By mid-1969, the band had receded to a mere shadow of itself, and their music had regressed to a form of good-time singalong music, similar to the work of the Tremeloes, pleasant enough but nothing like the kind of work they'd been generation just two years before. Their final grasp at international success came with the single "St. Louis," which managed to scrape the very bottom of the American Hot 100.

The band decided to call it quits following a return to Australia for one final tour, after which Harry Vanda and George Young became full-time songwriter/producers, helped organize AC/DC (featuring Young's siblings Angus Young and Malcolm Young), and generated the 1973 hit "Evie" for Stevie Wright. Their string of successes has stretched into the new century -- "Friday on My Mind" remains in print in dozens of editions throughout the world, as recorded by the Easybeats and others; and in 2001, their late '70s disco hit "Love Is in the Air" (primarily associated with John Paul Young), was licensed for use in two different commercials for two separate products (a car and a credit card) running simultaneously on American television. Meanwhile, the Easybeats' complete output has been issued on CD through the Repertoire label (making their 1965-1966 Australian sides widely available around the world for the first time), and anthologies of their work are in print in England and America. Such was the demand for their music in the late 1990s, that Australia's Raven Records has also issued Live, Studio and Stage, the first full-length collection of live recordings by the group, assembled from across their history.

Tuesday, April 19, 2011

V.A. - Das Zundet - Tanzmusik fur junge Leute (1968)


Surf from GDR
AMIGA label


A1
Theo Schumann Combo–
Nachtzug
 Written-By – Schumann* 
A2
Evgeni Kantschev Quintett–
Sonnenbrand
 Written-By – Peters* 
A3
Horst Krüger Sextett–
Erwartung
 Written-By – Düwelt* 
A4
Berlin Dixies–
Der Minirock
 Written-By – Krüger* 
A5
Günther Fischer Quartett–
Das Schloss
 Written-By – Fischer* 
A6
Studio-Sextett Erfurt–
Party-Zeit
 Written-By – Naue* 
A7
Satelliten Gera–
Herbstwind
 Written By – Thomä 
A8
Klaus Lenz Sextett–
Greensleves
 Written-By – Traditional


B1
Günther Fischer Quartett–
Vorspann
 Written-By – Fischer* 
B2
Theo Schumann Combo–
Korallenriff
 Written-By – Schumann* 
B3
Studio-Sextett Erfurt–
Du Bist Meine Liebe
 Written By – Sondermann 
B4
Horst Krüger Sextett–
Leopard
 Written-By – Anders* 
B5
Evgeni Kantschev Quintett–
Dragia
 Written-By – Traditional From Bulgaria* 
B6
Berlin Dixies–
Warum Muss Die Liebe Vorbeigehn?
 Written-By – Petersen* 
B7
Klaus Lenz Sextett–
Bunte Bilder
 Written-By – Fischer* 
B8
Satelliten Gera–
Unheimliche Nacht
 Written By – Thomä/Erhardt 

Thanks for Yarrost (yarrost.livejournal.com)
and
 music.tonnel.ru

Monday, April 18, 2011

Drafi Deutscher - Marmor, Stein Und Eisen Bricht


He was born Drafi Franz Richard Deutscher in Berlin. His best known song was the 1965 Schlager "Marmor, Stein und Eisen bricht" ("Marble, Stone and Iron Breaks") which sold over one million copies, and was awarded a gold disc.[2] It later featured in the 2006 film Beerfest, during the Oktoberfest scene. Between 1964 and 1966 Deutscher had a lot of hits in Germany, for example Shake Hands (1964 # 1), Keep Smiling (1964 # 7), Cinderella Baby (1965 #3), Heute male ich dein Bild, Cindy-Lou (1965 # 1)[3] After his 1965 hit Marmor, Stein und Eisen bricht, his career in Germany was in full swing until shaken by a 1967 verdict for public indecency (Erregung öffentlichen Ärgernisses) after he had urinated from a balcony while drunk, in plain view of a group of schoolchildren watching him from street level.
He also composed several worldwide hits for Boney M, Nino de Angelo and Tony Christie. In the 1980s he achieved success with his duo, Mixed Emotions, together with Oliver Simon. Deutscher also worked with Christopher Evans Ironside, collaborating with him in the band named Masquerade, and on their co-written hit "Guardian Angel".



thanks for Yrrost (yarrost.livejournal.com)


OTHER :


Tommy James and the Shondells - The Psychedelic Years


Tommy James & the Shondells -- the very mention of their name, even to someone who doesn't really know their music, evokes images of dances and the kind of fun that rock & roll represented before it redefined itself on more serious terms. And between 1966 and 1969, the group enjoyed 14 Top 40 hits, most of which remain among the most eminently listenable (if not always respected) examples of pop/rock. The group was almost as much of a Top 40 radio institution of the time as Creedence Clearwater Revival, but because they weren't completely self-contained (they wrote some, but not all, or their own hits) and were more rooted in pop/rock than basic rock & roll, it took decades for writers and pop historians to look with favor upon Tommy James & the Shondells. 


Tommy James was born Thomas Jackson on April 20, 1947, in Dayton, OH. He was introduced to music at age three, when he was given a ukulele by his grandfather. He was an attractive child and was working as a model at age four, which gave him something of a taste for performing. By age nine, he'd moved to the next step in music, taking up the guitar, and by 1958, when he was 11, James began playing the electric guitar. In 1960, with his family now living in Niles, MI, 13-year-old James and a group of four friends from junior high school -- Larry Coverdale on guitar, Larry Wright on bass, Craig Villeneuve on piano, and Jim Payne on drums -- got together to play dances and parties. This was the original lineup of the Shondells, and they became good enough to earn decent money locally, and even got noticed by an outfit called Northway Sound Records, who recorded the quintet in a Tommy James original entitled "Judy" in 1962. That single didn't make much noise beyond their immediate locale, but in late 1963, the group came to the notice of a local disc jockey starting up a new label called Snap Records. They cut four sides, two of which were issued and disappeared without a trace on their first Snap single. 

The second Snap label release, "Hanky Panky," was golden, at least in the area around Niles. A Jeff Barry/Ellie Greenwich song that the couple had already recorded under their nom de plume, the Raindrops, as a B-side that James and company had heard done by a rival band, "Hanky Panky," had become part of James' group's stage act. It was enormously popular on-stage, and the Snap single took off locally in Niles and the surrounding area, but it never got heard any further away. James and company picked up their marbles and went home, abandoning aspirations for a recording career in favor of pursuing music part time -- the singer/guitarist took a day job at a record store and confined his music efforts to the nighttime hours. The two years that ensued, from early 1964 until 1966, saw the original Shondells break up, as members left music or were drafted. This didn't seem to make much difference until a day came when James got an urgent request from a promoter to do a concert in Pittsburgh, PA. 

Considering that the group had never even played there, he was puzzled. He soon found that the Snap Records single, "Hanky Panky," recorded back in 1963 and overlooked in Chicago and Detroit at the time, had suddenly broken out in Pittsburgh. A promoter, having found a copy of the Snap single in a used-record bin, had liked what he heard and gotten the record played locally at dances. In one of those fluky instances that made the record business in those days a complete marvel, people suddenly started requesting "Hanky Panky," and in response to the demand, bootleggers began producing it, attributed to various labels -- some sources estimate that as many as 80,000 copies were sold in Pittsburgh before the smoke cleared. 

James saw what he had to do, but he no longer had a band and was forced to recruit a new group of Shondells. The lucky winners were the Raconteurs, a local Pittsburgh quintet. They became the Shondells, with Joe Kessler on guitar, Ron Rosman on keyboards, George Magura on sax, Mike Vale on bass, and Vinnie Pietropaoli on drums; Peter Lucia and Eddie Gray, respectively, replaced Pietropaoli and Kessler, and Magura and his saxophone didn't last long in the lineup. 

From near-total obscurity, this version of Tommy James & the Shondells went to playing to audiences numbering in the thousands, and were being courted by Columbia Records and RCA-Victor. It was Morris Levy and Roulette Records, however, who outbid everybody and won the group's contract, and got a number one national hit with "Hanky Panky," in the version cut by the original group nearly three years earlier. 

Tommy James & the Shondells, revamped, revised, and reactivated, spent the next three-and-a-half years trying to keep up with their own success. "Say Am I," their second Roulette single and the first by the extant group, only got to number 21, but it was accompanied by a pretty fair Hanky Panky LP, showing off the group's prowess at covering current soul hits by the likes of the Impressions, James Brown, and Junior Walker & the All-Stars. A third single, "It's Only Love," reached number 31, but the fourth, "I Think We're Alone Now," issued in early 1967, got to number four, and the fifth, "Mirage," was another Top Ten release. The latter record was truly a spin-off of the previous hit in the most bizarre way -- according to James, "Mirage" was initially devised by playing the master of "I Think We're Alone Now" backwards. Those recordings were the work of songwriter and producer Ritchie Cordell, who became a rich source of material for the group for the remainder of their history. 

Tommy James & the Shondells were lucky enough to be making pop-oriented rock & roll in an era when most of the rest of the rock music world was trying to make more serious records and even create art (often even when the act in question had no capacity for that kind of activity). They were at a label who recognized the need to spend money in order to make money, and didn't mind the expense of issuing a new LP with each major single, despite the fact that Roulette was mostly a singles label where everything but jazz was concerned. The group members themselves were having the time of their lives playing concerts, making personal appearances, and experimenting with advancing their sound in the studio. Audiences loved their work and their records, and it only seemed to get better. 

Their songs ran almost counter to the trend among serious rock artists. "Mony Mony," a number three hit coming out in the midst of Vietnam, the psychedelic boom, and just as rock music was supposed to be turning toward higher, more serious forms, was a result of the group looking for a perfect party record and dance tune; even the name was sheer, dumb luck, a result of James spotting the Mutual of New York (MONY) illuminated sign atop their building in midtown Manhattan at a key moment in the creative process. The group did grab a piece of the prevailing style in late 1968 with "Crimson and Clover," an original by James and drummer Peter Lucia that utilized some creative sound distortion techniques. A number one hit that sold five million copies, it was the biggest single of the group's history, and yielded a highly successful follow-up LP as well -- ironically, the latter album included liner notes by Vice President Hubert Humphrey, who had gotten to know the band in the course of their performing at some of his campaign events during his 1968 run for the presidency. 

James and company were among the top pop/rock performers in the world during 1969, with two more major hits, "Sweet Cherry Wine" and "Crystal Blue Persuasion," to their credit. Indeed, their presence on the Crimson and Clover album, in addition to the title cut, helped loft that record to a 35-week run on the charts, an extraordinary achievement not only in the history of the band but also -- for a non-greatest hits album -- for Roulette Records, who weren't known as a strong album label. They also began experimenting more with new sounds during this period, most notably on their next album, Cellophane Symphony. The latter record, whose release was delayed for four months because of the extraordinary sales of Crimson and Clover, had its share of basic rock & roll sounds but also plunged into progressive/psychedelic music with a vengeance, most notably on "Cellophane Symphony," a Moog-dominated track that sounds closer to Pink Floyd than anyone ever imagined possible. Cellophane Symphony sold well without breaking any records by its predecessor, and proved in the process that Tommy James & the Shondells could compete in virtually any rock genre. The only miscalculation made by the band was their declining an invitation to perform at Woodstock; the mere credit, coupled with perhaps an appearance in the movie or on the album, might have enhanced their credibility with the counterculture audience. 

The end of the Shondells' history came not from any real decision, but simply their desire to take a break in 1970, after four years of hard work and a lot of great times. The moment also seemed right -- James was getting involved in other projects and moving in other directions, including writing and producing records for acts like the Brooklyn-based band Alive and Kicking, whose "Tighter and Tighter" got to number seven, and his own solo recordings. The Shondells continued working together for a time as well, under the name Hog Heaven, cutting one album for Roulette before withdrawing back to the Pittsburgh area where they'd started. 

James went through a lot of different sounds on his own records, including country (My Head, My Bed & My Red Guitar) and Christian music (Christian of the World), and charted in the Top Ten one last time in 1971 with "Draggin' the Line," although he also saw more limited success for another two years with records such as "I'm Comin' Home" and "Celebration." 

In the mid-'70s, he made a jump from Roulette Records, where he'd based his career for nearly a decade, to Fantasy Records, and he later recorded for Millennium Records. Following his 1980 Top 20 hit, "Three Times in Love," he resurfaced as a concert artist playing his old hits as well as new songs, although some of these shows were marred by reports of late arrivals and less-than-ideal performances; he has since reestablished a record as a serious crowd-pleasing act, cutting records anew with Cordell and even releasing a live hits collection in 1998. 

Tommy James & the Shondells have even achieved something that they saw relatively little of in their own time -- respect. In the years 1966-1970, they were regarded as a bubblegum act and part of the scenery by the few discerning critical voices around, but in the '80s, their music revealed its staying power in fresh recordings (and hits) by Joan Jett, Billy Idol, and Tiffany, with "Crimson and Clover," "Mony Mony," and "I Think We're Alone Now," respectively; indeed, in one of those odd chart events that would have seemed more likely in the '60s, in 1987, Tiffany's version of "I Think We're Alone Now" was replaced at the number one spot after two weeks by Billy Idol's rendition of "Mony Mony." Rhino Records' reissue of the Crimson and Clover and Cellophane Symphony albums, in addition to greatest-hits collections and a survey of James' solo recordings from the decade 1970-1980, also seemed to speak for the group's credibility, and a 1997 Westside Records double-CD, It's a New Vibration, offering unreleased songs from the '60s as well as all of the key single tracks, confirmed the level of seriousness with which the group was perceived. 

Tommy James was no Mick Jagger or Jim Morrison, to be sure, and his songwriting -- which was usually not solo, in any case -- lacked the downbeat, serious tone or the little mystical touches of John Fogerty. He's usually put more comfortably in the company of such figures as Paul Revere & the Raiders' Mark Lindsay, or with Johnny Rivers or Tommy Roe, in the middle or early part of the '60s. But from 1968 through 1970, when artists like Jagger, Fogerty, and Morrison were in their heyday, Tommy James & the Shondells sold more singles than any other pop act in the world, many of them written, co-written, or at least chosen by James. The mere fact that he released a concert DVD in the fall of 2000 is loud testament to the power and impact of his work four decades into his career.




TOMMY JAMES &THE SHONDELLS 
 Crystal Blue Symphonies: The Psychedelic Years




Dave Berry - Greatest Hits


Briefly a big star in Britain in the mid-'60s, Dave Berry faced the same dilemma as several other British teen idols of the era: R&B was obviously nearest and dearest to his heart, but he needed to record blatantly pop material to make the hit parade. It was also obvious that Berry was in fact much more suited toward pop ballads than rough-and-tumble R&B, regardless of his personal preferences. At his peak, his output was divided between hard R&B/rockers and straight pop. Help from ace session players like Jimmy Page and John Paul Jones notwithstanding, his smooth voice was frankly ill-equipped to deliver the goods with anything close to the same panache as Mick Jagger or Eric Burdon on the bluesier items. He made a rather good go of it, on the other hand, with romantic pop/rock ballads, hitting the British Top Ten with "The Crying Game" (1964), Bobby Goldsboro's "Little Things" (1965), and the excruciatingly sentimental "Mama" (1966). "This Strange Effect," written by Ray Davies (though not released by the Kinks), was a huge European hit for him in 1965 as well. 



Berry's voice was not exactly teeming with character and he never made the slightest impression on the U.S. market, but the best of his material is quite pleasant period fare. He remains well regarded in his homeland, where the Sex Pistols unexpectedly covered his toughest track, "Don't Gimme No Lip Child." Even more unexpectedly, "The Crying Game" brought Berry's voice to his biggest international audience ever in 1992, when it was used as the theme song for one of the year's most successful films.



1. This Strange Effect (2:29)
2.  Little Things (2:23)
3. Baby It's You (2:27)
4.  Memphis Tennessee (2:24)
5.  Go On Home (2:04)
6.I'm Gonna Take You There
7. If You Wait For Love
8. The Crying Game
9. Diddley Daddy
10. St. James Infirmary
11. My Baby Left Me
12. You're Gonna Need Somebody
13. Hoochie Coochie Man
14. Don't Gimme No Lip Child
15. Now
16. One Heart Between Two


Munetaka Inoue & His Sharp Five - Haru No Umi (1968)


 Japan Eleki/Surf/Instrumental Rock

"Sharp Five were an instrumental eleki / psychedelic garage combo from japan. Wicked guitar licks and Ventures-esque surf wah-wah fuzzed-out and psyched-up with an oriental sonic garage back bass. Overall a slightly trippier flavour of eleki . This is generally regarded as their best album..."
JAPANESE ELEKI and the VENTURES INFLUENCE

Japanese Eleki and the Ventures Influence
In May 1962, American instrumental kings, the Ventures, made the first of many tours of Japan.  Japanese teenagers immediately flipped over their sound and started forming instrumental combos in the style of the Ventures.

When the Ventures returned to Japan in January 1965 they had become household names and the impact of their music on Japanese teenagers was enormous. Unhindered by the language barriers inherent in performing American or British vocal music, hundreds of Eleki (Japanese English for "electric," as in electric guitars) combos sprung up all over the country.

Domestic guitar manufacturers such as Guya couldn't keep up with the demand, so companies usually associated with other industries such as Victor (better known as JVC in the U.S.) began producing electric guitars. (Even a manufacturer of wooden clogs got in on the act!)  In 1965 760,000 guitars were made in Japan, a record that has yet to be broken.


Yuzo Kayama and Takeshi Terauchi
Two guitarists of particular note who came out of the Eleki Buumu (Eleki Boom) are Takeshi Terauchi and Yuzo Kayama.

Takeshi Terauchi's style is very Ventures-influenced, but much faster and more frantic with a heavy picking style and liberal use of his Mosrite guitar's whammy bar.  Terauchi is probably Japan's first guitar hero and he's continued recording and touring through the years.

Yuzo Kayama first came to fame in 1961 as the dashingly handsome young star of the "Wakadaisho" ("Young General") series of teen films.  Heavily influenced by the Ventures he formed a backing group, the Launchers and started recording for Toshiba Records.

In Yuzo Kayama's second "Wakadaisho" film, the 1965 feature, "Eleki No Wakadaisho" ("The Young General's Electric Guitar"), Kayama and Takeshi Terauchi perform together backed by the Launchers and they blast the place to pieces!

Two of Yuzo Kayama's best known instrumentals, "Black Sand Beach" and "Yozora No Hoshi," were even covered by the Ventures, who were so impressed with Kayama and the Launchers that they presented him with one of their own signature-model Mosrite guitars!


Munetaka Inoue & His Sharp Five - Haru No Umi (1968)
Munetaka Inoue (drums), Nobuhiro Mine (lead guitar), Osumu Furuya (organ), Hidemasa Yamauchi (rhythm guitar), Masaaki Ito (bass guitar, 1967-69), Akiyama Tsutomu (bass guitar, ?-1967), Maeda Akira (guitar, ?-1967), Sannai Emi (rhythm guitar, ?-1967), Nishizima Makoto (bass guitar, 1969-?)

1. Haru No Umi (6:59)
2.  Rokudan (4:41)
3. Chidori No Kyoku (2:08)
4. Yakkosan (2:13)
5. Etanraku (3:40)
6. Sakura Sakura
7. Gion Kouta
8. Kiyari Kuzushi
9. Sanosa Bushi
10.  Haru No Umi

The La De Das - The Happy Prince (1966)


Aside from Ray Columbus & the Invaders, the La De Das were New Zealand's most popular rock group of the '60s. As big fish in a very small pond, their work doesn't hold up to scrutiny in the company of the era's top American and English acts. But they did record some fine garage/pop numbers in the spirit of the Rolling Stones in the mid-'60s. A few of these ("How Is the Air Up There?" and "All Purpose Low") were big N.Z. hits, and they reached the Top Ten with covers of John Mayall's "On Top of the World" and a version of Bruce Channel's "Hey Baby." In 1968, they recorded a psychedelic-tinged children's concept LP, The Happy Prince; which bears resemblance to modern twee. After a failed attempt to crack the British market, the group soldiered on for quite some time with pedestrian hard rock that -- like even the best of their early work -- was very derivative of overseas trends.
The La De Das - The Happy Prince
Originally Released 1969

Posted in response to request on the Demonoid forum.

The La De Das were a leading New Zealand rock band of the 1960s and early 1970s.

Based on the Oscar Wilde story, The Happy Prince was recorded in Australia and was released to critical acclaim but this did not convert to sales.

Unfortunately as the original tapes of this were not available for reissue so this release has been remastered from vinyl and not terribly well in my opinion - however this is the only version available.

Narrated by Adrian Rawlins
1. Intro: Narrated By Adrian Rawlins 2:16 
2. Covered In Gold : Narrated By Adrian Rawlins 3:43 
3. Ruby And The Lady: Narrated By Adrian Rawlins 5:50 
4. Come And Fly With Me: Narrated By Adrian Rawlins 3:54 
5. Swallow, Little Swallow: Narrated By Adrian Rawlins 3:13 
6. You Can't Take It With You: Narrated By Adrian Ra… 5:58 
7. Life Is Leaving: Narrated By Adrian Rawlins 3:48 
8. Tales Of The Nile: Narrated By Adrian Rawlins 3:17 
9. Winter Song: Narrated By Adrian Rawlins 4:37 
10. Lullaby: Narrated By Adrian Rawlins 3:46 
11. Civic Pride: Narrated By Adrian Rawlins 3:27 
12. Chant: Narrated By Adrian Rawlins 4:45 

Music Only Version
13. Covered In Gold 3:44 
14. Ruby For The Lady 3:32 
15. Come And Fly With Me 3:28 
16. Swallow, Little Swallow (Edit) 2:34 
17. You Can't Take It With You 4:17 
18. Life Is Leaving (Edit) 2:09 
19. Tales Of The Nile 2:26 
20. Winter Song 2:48 
21. Lullaby 2:47 
22. Civic Pride 2:22 
23. Chant (Edit) 1:03


"Overseen by up-and-coming young producer David Woodley-Page, The Happy Prince was recorded over four weeks in early 1969, and whatever its supposed artistic limitations, it was a fine technical achievement, especially considering that Australia at that time lagged several years behind the UK and USA in its access to the latest recording technology. Although multitrack recorders were in common use overseas—major American pop recordings had been made on 8-track as far back as 1965, but 8-track was still not readily available in Australian commcercial studios. The first 8-track machine installed in a major independent studio was at Armstrong's in Melbourne, in 1970.

Four-track recorders, which were the standard in Australia at that time, had definite limitations, as the Beatles had found when they began creating more complex music in the mid-60s. The process of "bouncing down" -- dubbing a completed 4-track recording onto one track of another tape—demanded skill, care and good equipment, otherwise the buildup of noise on the master tape soon became unacceptable. However, by a neat technical trick, The Happy Prince effectively became Australia's first 8-track recording, a feat Woodley-Page achieved by recording onto on two Scully half-inch, 4-track recorders that were electronically synchronised. This de facto 8-track method provided much greater scope for multitracking and overdubbing and a considerable improvement in overall sound quality.

The band released its magnum opus in April 1969. Hailed as the first Australian concept album, the ambitious LP was a suite of songs co-written by Howard and Wilson. Lead vocals were, for the sake of dramatic consistency, performed entirely by Phil Key. It was lauded by writers such as David Elfick, Molly Meldrum and Brian Cadd, but rave reviews from critics failed to transfer into sales, and the band came close to splitting after its release. The production is excellent and was a breakthrough for the time, although the material has been criticised as being patchy and rather overblown in parts. It was also the album was also marred for some critics by the rather campy tone of the narrated links, which were read by Adrian Rawlins."



The Beau Brummels - Bradley's Barn ( 1968 )


After taking the Beau Brummels to the pop/folk psychedelic edge, producer Lenny Waronker took the band to Nashville, literally. Possibly influenced by the Byrds Sweetheart experiments, the group (now down to just Sal Valentino on vocals and Ron Elliott on guitars) wedded with Nashville's finest, including guitarist Jerry Reed and drummer Kenneth A. Buttrey, both veterans of Dylan's Nashville sessions. These players were not just good musicians, but smart musicians, easily embellishing the Elliott/Valentino duo as if they had been playing with the two for years, not days. The resulting masterpiece, no doubt due to the awesome Brummels original songs (especially "Cherokee Girl," "Turn Around," and "Deep Water"), is a virtual tapestry in country and rock.
1. Turn Around (3:03)
2. An Added Attraction (Come And See Me) (3:02)
3.  Deep Water (2:32)
4. Long Walking Down To Misery (3:14)
5. Little Bird (2:39)
6. Cherokee Girl
7. I'm A Sleeper
8. The Loneliest Man In Town
9.  Love Can Fall A Long Way Down
10.  Jessica
11.  Bless You California

Sunday, April 17, 2011

The Temples - Bei Mir Twist Du Schon (1967)


The Temples - Bei Mir Twist Du Schon 1967 vinil rip
aka
Songs of Solomon Schwartz Et Son Orchestra СD remaster 2004


Загадочная история...Вот только два варианта иследований происхождения этой записи.Какой вам ближе выберайте сами.Что до меня, я думаю,что всё это могло быть сделано и у нас в Союзе в Одессе,скажем. Шутка...,но уж до боли знакомые мелодии.На югах их лабали в каждом ресторане...

Вариант первый :

"За этой пластинкой лихих еврейских твистов стоит не кто-то непонятно кто, а George Siravo, знаменитый американский музыкант, аранжировщик и руководитель оркестра, сотрудничавший с Гленном Миллером, Френком Синатрой и еще большим количеством известных артистов. Позже Сираво основал свой собственный лейбл, Ad Lib, на котором и спродюсировал и выпустил действительно в 1963 году эти самые еврейские мелодии, положенный на отличный твистовый бит. Такие вот дела."




Вариант второй:

В 2004 году независимый московский лейбл "Solnze records" издал СД-диск оркестра Соломона Шварца - Solomon Schwartz Et Son Orchestra – «Jewish Twist» (1963), исполняющий забойные инструментальные композиции из еврейского фольклора в "твистовой" обработке ("Бублички", "Папиросы", "Хава Нагила", "Йозеф Йозеф", "Bei mir bist du schon" («В Кейптаунском порту») и другое). Многие не поверили в то, что эта великолепная и загадочная запись могла быть сделана в 1963 году и восприняли "дату записи" альбома - "1963 год", как "утку", а само существование Соломона Шварца поставили под сомнение, считая, что это работа современных музыкантов или даже некоего неизвестного профессионала - "человека-оркестра", в одиночку записавшего альбом. Авторство, приписывали, например, Олегу Гитаркину (Messer Chups). Альбом поистине вышел великолепный и слушается на одном дыхании. Поиски сведений об альбоме усложнялись ещё и тем, что о самом оркестре и его руководителе нигде не было ни единой информации (ни в Европе, ни в США). Позднее, правда, появились сведения, что изначальный материал (фонограмма) для выпуска СД-диска, была обнаружена главой лейбла «Solnze records» Олегом Тарасовым у старого коллекционера из г.Ейска Краснодарского края - Николая Николаевича Пушкарского (того самого, который организовал и записал концерт А.Северного с анс. "Казачок" в 1979 году), но вот оригинального винилового диска найти так и не получалось. И вот недавно удалось узнать, что московский коллекционер раритетного "винила" Борис Симонов (владелец музыкального магазина "Трансильвания"), наконец-то смог разыскать и приобрести оригинальный старый "винил" с этой самой записью, выпуска 1967-го года (а не 1963), но вот только с той разницей, что на оригинальной виниловой пластинке, точно та же запись (с теми же композициями и в той же последовательности) , но исполнена - ансамблем "THE TEMPLES" (!), и пластинка называется - "BEI MIR TWIST DU SCHÖN" - "THE TEMPLES" (Ad Lib Records - A 225 , Нью-Йорк, 1967 г.) . То есть ныне всем известная запись принадлежит творчеству абсолютно других музыкантов. Вероятно "THE TEMPLES" - это название проекта "сессионных" музыкантов – «Orchestra conducted by George Siravo» - оркестра под управлением George Siravo (Джордж Сираво, 1916 -1983), известного американского джазового музыканта, кларнетиста, альт-саксофониста, аранжировщика и композитора, руководителя эстрадного свинг-оркестра. В 30-е - 40-е годы, Джордж Сираво играл в прославленных оркестрах под руководством Чарли Барнета (Charlie Barnet) и Глена Миллера (Glenn Millers), затем сам руководил оркестром на радио "CBS", а в 50-е - 60-е сотрудничал с такими известными исполнителями, как Фрэнк Синатра (Frank Sinatra) и Тони Беннет (Tony Bennett), работал с популярными певицами Дорис Дэй (Doris Day) и Розмари Клуни (Rosemary Clooney), записывал пластинки на студии "Columbia Records". На конверте пластинки указана лишь фамилия создателя записи - Siravo.

Оказывается, что и "загадочный" Оркестр Соломона Шварца тоже существовал, но этот оркестр играл совершенно другую музыку (никаких "твистовых" обработок и с женским вокалом). Существует виниловый диск Оркестра Соломона Шварца записанный совместно с певицей Emmanuel Fisher (Эммануэль Фишер), под названием - "Sing along simcha, A" – Solomon Schwartz, His Orchestra & The Emmanuel Fisher Singers (London, UK, 1967), с популярными еврейскими песнями на "идиш".

Краткая биография Соломона Шварца: 
Соломон Шварц (настоящее имя Стэнли Блэк - Stanley Black), родился в 1913 году в Англии (Лондон, район "Уайтчейпл"). Жил и работал в Лондоне. Его родители были польскими и румынскими евреями. В возрасте семи лет он начал брать уроки фортепиано. В 12 лет юный Стэнли Блэк уже работал в составе Симфонического Оркестра Радиостанции Би-Би-Си, который исполнял его произведения. В 18 лет, продолжая свои творческие успехи, Стэнли Блэк (Соломон Шварц) выиграл конкурс молодых композиторов... 

По всей видимости, изначально наши коллекционеры просто перепутали названия коллективов или эта "утка" была запущена намеренно, для интриги и "увеличения ассортимента" новых имён. По сведениям, к этой "путанице" мог быть причастен некто старый коллекционер Олег Александрович Андросов (умер в 2004 г.). Андросов был одним их активных коллекционеров, делающих записи со своих редких иностранных пластинок. Но привоз из-за рубежа был в советское время достаточно скудным и иногда приходилось и самому делать записи у своих "коллег", поэтому для "увеличения ассортимента" в своей коллекции записей он и создавал "новые имена". А копий на катушках расходилось по Союзу множество. Заказчики часто находились далеко и не могли увидеть сами пластинки, дабы проверить исполнителя - довольствуясь рукописными трек-листами. До сих пор у многих на катушках лежит этот самый "псевдо-Соломон Шварц", возможно что и коллекционер Николай Пушкарский получил эту запись "по обмену" с заведомо не верным названием, от чего через много лет и пошла вся нынешняя неразбериха.

Так что теперь все домыслы и сомнения разрушены. Данная запись является действительно старой фонограммой, но не 63-го года, как считалось ранее, а 67-го, в исполнении совершенно другого коллектива - ансамбля "THE TEMPLES", а великолепное первоклассное звучание современного СД-издания, объясняется высоко-техничным (экстра-класса) уровнем мастеринга, произведённым на студии "Solnze records", современными московскими специалистами. Можно считать, что"загадка" Оркестра Соломона Шварца разрешена."



Понятно,что особой ясности не добавилось,но это и не главное...Слушайте и получайте удовольствие.
Здесь рип с винила. 



Ну,а CD remaster "Solnze records" можно взять тут:










The Temples - Bei Mir "Twist" Du Schön.
- (1963). Jewish Twist.

01. - Hava Nagila [Twist] (1:59)
02. - Ich Vill Zich Shpielen [I Want To Play] (2:23)
03. - Bei mir Bist Du Schön (2:27)
04. - Yossel, Yossel [Joseph, Joseph] (2:19)
05. - Roshenkes Mit Mandlin [Raisins & Almonds Twist] (2:29)
06. - Tzena, Tzena (2:02)
07. - Mahzel [Good Luck] (1:59)
08. - Oif'n Pripetshok [Twist] (2:34)
09. - Papirossen [Cigarettes] (2:50)
10. - Shein Vi Di L'vone [Like the Moon Above You] (1:52)
11. - Ich Hob Dich Tzufil Lieb [I Love You Much, Too Much] (2:32)
12. - Salty Bublitchki [Twist] (2:02)