Although Germany had its place in rock & roll's evolution in the 1960s, it was primarily as an incubator for British bands playing grueling stints in Hamburg, not for homegrown talent. The Lords were about the best of a weak scene, populated by bands that could never seem to shake themselves free of stodgy Central European oom-pah folk traditions. Quite popular in their own country, the Lords made no impression in the English-speaking world until a couple of decades later, when reappreciation of '60s beat and garage music became so intense that collectors began to investigate the strange and wonderful world of Continental '60s rock.
The Lords are one of those groups that have to be heard to be believed. Although they had the requisite moptop haircuts, their repertoire was surprisingly anachronistic at times, drawing heavily from not only German drinking songs, but American folk tunes, Lonnie Donegan's skiffle, and the pre-Beatle British rock of Johnny Kidd & the Pirates. Whatever they covered -- "Greensleeves," "Shakin' All Over," "Poison Ivy," "Tobacco Road," "Que Sera," "Sing Hallelujah" -- they made their own with frantically fast tempos, heavily accented Teutonic vocals (virtually all of their material was in English), and heavy overuse of tremelo guitar lines with mucho reverb, whammy bar, and Lesley organ-like effects. They also wrote some interesting material of their own that drew from the more contemporary influences of Merseybeat and English mod pop. The Lords were not brilliant musicians or composers, but they were fun, and they had the hearts of true rockers, although some modern listeners will find their approach too hammy and sloppy.
Between 1964 and 1968, the Lords were very prolific, issuing five albums and over a dozen singles. Unfortunately, there has yet to be a Lords compilation that truly focuses upon their best material, although a couple of their later albums have been reissued in Germany. As the group was pretty erratic (nobody wants to hear their singalong drinking tunes these days), a well-chosen anthology is necessary to appreciate their virtues; the North American listeners lucky enough to hear the group's best stuff have usually done so via tapes made by other collectors..
Albums;
The Lords - 1965 - In Black And White - In Beat And Sweet
The Lords - 1966 - Shakin All Over II
The Lords - 1967 - Some Folks By The Lords, Plus
The Lords - 1968 - Good Side Of June
The Lords - 1969 - Ulleogamaxbe
The Lords - 1970 - Shakin All Over 70
The Lords - 1971 - Inside Out
The Lords - 1971 - New Lords
The Lords - 1979 - Birthday Album
The Lords - 1980 - Singles 74-85
The Lords - 1984 - Stormy
The Lords - 1986 - Live (2 Cd's)
The Lords - 1988 - Back To The Roots
The Lords - 2001 - Singles, Hits & Raritaten (1964-69)
Link;
https://workupload.com/file/f44cuLNsfyJ
Awsome post, indeed! Many thanks.
ReplyDeleteThank you!
ReplyDeleteFantastic, thank you. Do you have Albums from the Rattles?
ReplyDeleteostias que melenas,asi se llama la atencion...
ReplyDeleteThank you. Looking for Ariola Star-club. Rattles too.
ReplyDeleteAny chance?
Hello,
ReplyDeleteCould you please make the Lords' sixties albums available for download again? Thanks!
could you upload The Lords, 14 Albums again please. i missed out on getting them.
ReplyDeleteHello DoYouRemember, is there any chance to repost the fantastic Lords? Thank you for all your work. Best wishes, Tom.
ReplyDeletePlease,link is dead
ReplyDeleteDimitry prosím o link. Je mrtvý. Ďakujem
ReplyDeleteToto je kolekcia DoYouRemember. Nestiahol som si to, pretože mám kolekciu od Jancy a celkom mi vyhovuje. Preto vašu otázku prepošleme na DoYouRemember...
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