Friday, December 31, 2010

Merry Christmas! С Новым Годом! Happy New Year!





OUR DEAR FRIENDS !!!

We wish you happiness, good luck and prosperity on New Year!
May all your dreams come true!
Happy days to you and your family! 
Good health
 and 
much happiness throughout the year.
Have a good holydays !
With Christmas Greetings and all 
Good Wishes for the New Year.


Jancy and Dmitrich













Excuse me for the long silence but I have urgent business in another city.
See you next year.
Dmitrich

Thursday, December 30, 2010

Connie Francis - Christmas in my Heart


Here's wishing you more happiness
Than all my words can tell,
Not just alone for New Years Eve
But for all the year as well.



JANCY and DMITRICH
***
01 - White Christmas
02 - Winter Wonderland
03 - The Christmas Song
04 - I'll Be Home for Christmas
05 - The Twelve Days of Christmas
06 - Have Yourself A Merry Little Christmas
07 - Adeste Fideles
08 - The Lord's Prayer
09 - Silent Night
10 - O Little Town of Bethlehem
11 - The First Noel
12 - Ave Maria



Sunday, December 19, 2010

The Hollies - Carnival Show In Mainz feb 23rd 1982



Mainz is a city in Germany and the capital of the German federal state of Rhineland-Palatinat.The Hollies played a big carnival show in Mainz on Feb 23rd 1982. It was one of the very first Hollies shows with Alan Coates.



The Hollies 23.2.1982 Mainz SWF3 Fassnacht Festival

CD1
01 - I Can't Let Go
02 - Just One Look
03 - Another Night
04 - Sandie
05 - Bus Stop
06 - Draggin My Heels
07 - Write On
08 - Something Ain't Right
09 - Medley
10 - Take My Love And Run
11 - King Midas In Revers
12 - Too Young To Be Married
13 - On A Carousel
14 - Carrie Ann
15 - The Air That I Breathe

CD2
01 - Soldier Song
02 - He Ain't Heavy
03 - Blowin In The Wind
04 - Johnny B. Good
05 - Long Cool Woman



The Kinks - BBC Chronicles


"The Kinks' truly live performances for the BBC between 1964-77; although many more songs were aired, these were usually the studio records with maybe re-recorded vocals. The years covered span the peak of their career from an artistic point of view, and most of their big hits from the time "


The heart of the Kinks beats hardest in brothers Ray Davies and Dave Davies, founder members and creative drivers. They formed the band in 1963 with Peter Quaife and Mick Avory and it took only three single releases until they released the seminal “You Really Got Me”: a noisy, rousing anthem for a generation. Their fourth single “All Day and All of the Night”, proved that this band were a keeper. Their first album was The Kinks, released in 1965.
****
They toured extensively and wildly, managing to get themselves banned from the US in 1965. This marked a change in Davies’ writing style, resulting in “Sunny Afternoon”, the landmark hit single in 1966 from The Kink Kontroversy album. Face to Face continued the progression of the band’s style, and Something Else by the Kinks (1967) was hugely acclaimed. They went one better with the concept album Village Green Preservation Society, a nostalgic look at the traditional values of the English countryside, which was loved by critics even though it didn't sell well.
In 1969 Peter Quaife was replaced by John Dalton, and the band released another classic album, the rock opera Arthur (Or the Decline and Fall of the British Empire). Also in this year, the US ban was lifted and they were finally able to tour in America.

http://pitchfork.com/reviews/albums/4459-bbc-sessions-1964-1977/

The album Lola Versus Powerman and the Money-Go-Round, Part One was their most commercially successful so far, and their popularity in the US soared. Although a new five-album deal with RCA failed to help them recapture their earlier glories, they were sufficiently successful to maintain their momentum in the US and the UK.
The early 70s saw the Kinks dabble in rock opera with Preservation Act 1 (1973),Preservation Act 2 (1974), Soap Opera (1975) and The Kinks Present Schoolboys in Disgrace (1976).
In 1976 the band returned to rock and released Sleepwalker and MisfitsLow Budget(1979) was their hardest rocking LP yet and led to their biggest US success to date.
By 1984 the bubble had burst and the band entered a period of decline, although they continued to release albums. A revival of interest was sparked in the mid 90s, though this was more to do with the influence that their early years had on new generations of musicians.
***

01 - You Really Got Me
02 - All Day And All Of The Night
03 - Tired Of Waiting
04 - See My Friends
05 - This Strange Effect
06 - Well Respected Man
07 - Till The End Of The Day
08 - Where Have All The Good Times Gone
09 - Autumn Almanac
10 - Sunny Afternoon
11 - Mr. Pleasant
12 - Susannah's Still Alive
13 - David Watts
14 - Love Me Till The Sun Shines
15 - Death Of A Clown
16 - Good Luck Charm
17 - Got My Feet On The Ground
18 - All Aboard

Monday, December 13, 2010

Beach Boys - Christmas Album (1964)



While it may seem rather incongruous for the definitive voices of summertime to tackle the music of the holiday season, The Beach Boys' Christmas Album succeeds brilliantly; Brian Wilson's pop genius is well suited to classic Yuletide fare, and the group delivers lush performances of standards ranging from "Frosty the Snowman" to "White Christmas" as well as more contemporary material like "The Man With All the Toys" and "Blue Christmas."  
The Musicians
Al Jardine - guitar, vocals
Mike Love - vocals
Brian Wilson - bass guitar, vocals
Carl Wilson - guitar, vocals
Dennis Wilson - drums, vocals 

The Beach Boys' Christmas Album is a Christmas album by The Beach Boys, released on November 16, 1964. Containing five original songs and seven standards, the album proved to be a long-running success during subsequent Christmas seasons, initially reaching #6 in the US Christmas album chart in its year of release and eventually going gold.
Of the original songs, "Little Saint Nick" was already famous, having been a hit single the year before. "The Man with All the Toys" was another hit during Christmastime 1964. "Christmas Day" is noteworthy for being the first Beach Boys song to feature a lead vocal from Al Jardine.
While leader Brian Wilson produced and arranged the "rock" songs, he left it to Dick Reynolds (an arranger of The Four Freshmen, a group Wilson idolized) to arrange the orchestral backings on the traditional songs to which The Beach Boys would apply their vocals.



VA - A Christmas Gift for You from Phil Spector


“A Christmas Gift for You From Phil Spector stands as inarguably the greatest Christmas record of all time. Spector believed he could produce a record for the holidays that would capture not only the essence of the Christmas spirit, but also be a pop masterpiece that would stand against any work these artists had already done. He succeeded on every level, with all four groups/singers recording some of their most memorable performances. This is the Christmas album by which all later holiday releases had to be judged, and it has inspired a host of imitators.” 



Featuring Phil Spector's "Wall of Sound" in its prime and his early stable of artists, the Ronettes, Crystals, Darlene Love, and Bob B. Soxx & the Blue Jeans, A Christmas Gift for You From Phil Spector stands as inarguably the greatest Christmas record of all time. Spector believed he could produce a record for the holidays that would capture not only the essence of the Christmas spirit, but also be a pop masterpiece that would stand against any work these artists had already done. He succeeded on every level, with all four groups/singers recording some of their most memorable performances. This is the Christmas album by which all later holiday releases had to be judged, and it has inspired a host of imitators.

1. Darlene Love - White Christmas (2:56)
2. The Ronettes - Frosty the Snowman (2:20)
3. Bob B. Soxx & The Blue Jeans - The Bells of St. Mary (2:59)
4. The Crystals - Santa Claus Is Comin' to Town (3:28)
5. The Ronettes - Sleigh Ride (3:06)
6. Darlene Love - Marshmallow World (2:27)
7. The Ronettes - I Saw Mommy Kissing Santa Claus (2:41)
8. The Crystals - Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer (2:34)
9. Darlene Love - Winter Wonderland (2:30)
10. The Crystals - Parade of the Wooden Soldiers (2:58)
11. Darlene Love - Christmas (Baby Please Come Home) (2:50)
12. Bob B. Soxx & The Blue Jeans - Here Comes Santa Claus (2:07)
13. Phil Spector and Artists - Silent Night (2:10)

Brenda Lee - Rockin' Around the Christmas Tree


Brenda Lee's Rockin' Around the Christmas Tree includes the festive title track and a mix of classic holiday tunes, including "Winter Wonderland," "Silver Bells," "White Christmas," and "Santa Claus Is Coming to Town." Unique Christmas and winter tunes like "Christy Christmas," "A Marshmallow World," "Strawberry Snow," and "I'm Gonna Lasso Santa Claus" round out this happy holiday collection.




If Brenda Lee had not recorded "Rockin' Around the Christmas Tree" in 1958, the holidays would not quite be the same. But for those who think that Lee's Christmas repertoire begins and ends with that beloved tune, they need to put this disc on their wish list. The Decca Christmas Recordings is a charming collection of Lee's holiday work, both known and obscure. And the range is fairly compelling. Moving from the lovably offbeat sentiments of the bayou-influenced "Papa Noel" and the angry child's take on the fat man "I'm Gonna Lasso Santa Claus" to more somber fare such as "Christmas Will Be Just Another Lonely Day," and the peculiar "Strawberry Snow," Lee's unforgettable vocal style leaves a perfect imprint. Her little hiccup-tinged singing voice is a hallmark of the season, making this 18-track set a true gift. --Martin Keller



Helen Shapiro - Tops with me(1962)



In 2000, BGO released 'Tops' With Me/Helen Hits Out, which contained two complete albums -- 'Tops' With Me (1962, originally released on EMI) and Helen Hits Out -- by Helen Shapiro on one compact disc.


Helen Shapiro is remembered today by younger pop culture buffs as the slightly awkward actress/singer in Richard Lester's 1962 debut feature film, It's Trad, Dad. From 1961 until 1963, however, Shapiro was England's teenage pop music queen, at one point selling 40,000 copies daily of her biggest single, "Walking Back to Happiness," during a 19-week chart run. A deceptively young 14 when she was discovered, Shapiro had a rich, expressive voice properly sounding like the property of someone twice as old, and she matured into a seasoned professional very quickly. 

She grew up in London's East End and was performing with a ukulele at age nine as part of a school group -- supposedly called Susie & the Hula Hoops, whose members included a young Mark Feld (aka Marc Bolan) -- that used to sing their own versions of Elvis Presley and Buddy Holly songs. She subsequently sang with her brother Ron Shapiro's trad jazz turned skiffle outfit at local clubs before enrolling in classes at Maurice Burman's music school in London. Burman was so taken with Helen Shapiro's voice that he waived the tuition to keep her as a student. He later brought her to the attention of Norrie Paramor, then one of EMI's top pop producers (responsible for signing Cliff Richard & the Shadows). Shapiro's voice was so mature that Paramor refused to believe from the evidence on a tape that it belonged to a 14-year-old until she came to his office and belted out "St. Louis Blues." She cut her first single, "Please Don't Treat Me Like a Child," a few weeks later and broke onto the British charts in 1961. 

That record was an extraordinary effort for a 14-year-old. Shapiro's voice showed the maturity and sensibilities of someone far beyond their teen years; her depth of emotion, coupled with the richness of her singing, made her an extraordinary new phenomenon on the British pop scene. She surprised everyone once again with her second single, a slow ballad called "You Don't Know," which managed to appeal to listeners across several age groups and hit number one in England. This was followed by the greatest recording of her career, "Walking Back to Happiness," which scaled the top of the charts with far greater total sales. Ironically, she'd never wanted to cut it; she felt it sounded hopelessly corny and old-fashioned, but her singing invested the song with such depth that it transcended any limitations in the writing. 

This was to be the last time Shapiro would top the charts. Her next record, "Tell Me What He Said" (written by Jeff Barry) was held out of the top spot by the Shadows' "Wonderful Land." In April of 1962, Shapiro made her movie debut in Lester's It's Trad, Dad, but her single of "Let's Talk About Love" (featured in the movie) never broke the Top 20. Shapiro next turned back to the songwriting team of John Schroeder and Mike Hawker, who had written "Walking Back to Happiness" and "You Don't Know," for what proved to be her last Top Ten record, "Little Miss Lonely." She made the charts once more with "Keep Away From Other Girls," the first song by Burt Bacharach to make the British Top 40. During this period, Shapiro also got the opportunity to record Neil Sedaka's "Little Devil," and the two later became friends when Sedaka toured England. 

Listening to Shapiro's records nearly 40 years later, it's amazing to think that her hit-making career lasted only two years. She was equally at home belting out "The Birth of the Blues," imparting a surprisingly blues-influenced feeling to "A Teenager in Love," or oozing pre-feminist defiance in "Walking Back to Happiness," and by rights should have been able to find a niche on the charts well into the middle and late '60s. The incongruity of a 15-year-old who might usually be spending her time in high school doing a song like "Walking Back to Happiness" was lost in the more innocent era in which she worked.



Shapiro wasn't remotely as soul-influenced as Dusty Springfield (though Shapiro's Helen in Nashville album from 1963 does sort of anticipate Dusty in Memphis), or a raspy shouter like Lulu, and there wasn't much of the cool teenager in her in the style of Sandie Shaw or the wounded teen softness of Lesley Gore. Rather, Shapiro was much more of a female pop/rock crooner, almost a distaff Bobby Darin with a style all her own, and should have been able to cut a path for herself well into the '60s in the music marketplace. 

It wasn't to be, however. After appearing in her second movie, Play It Cool, which starred Billy Fury, Shapiro faded from the charts, although she didn't disappear from the British musical consciousness. She still headlined tours in the United Kingdom and in early 1963, she made the acquaintance of a support act that had been newly signed to EMI: the Beatles. She headlined the Beatles' first national tour of England and Shapiro and the group enjoyed each other's company. At 16, she was much more the seasoned professional than the older Liverpool quartet, who loved her voice and her unassuming manner. She sang with them on the bus, advised them to make "From Me to You" their next record after "Please Please Me," and they, in turn, wrote "Misery" for her. Astonishingly, EMI -- not yet sensing the golden touch that the Beatles (who had yet to cut their first LP) would soon reveal -- declined to give Shapiro the chance to record a Lennon-McCartney tune, costing her the chance to become the first artist to cover a Lennon-McCartney song just at the point when the Beatles were about to sweep all before them in the pop charts. 


There's no telling what Shapiro, with her rich intonation, could have done with that downbeat little diamond in the rough in the early Lennon-McCartney song bag. Shapiro had another chance at an even more promising song later in 1963 when she went to cut an album in Nashville. In a session backed by the likes of Grady Martin and Boots Randolph, she cut the very first recording of "It's My Party." And again, EMI failed to get behind the single, sitting on its release until a virtual unknown named Lesley Gore got her rendition out first on Mercury and topped the U.S. charts. Shapiro's career at EMI ended in 1963 and her periodic attempts to resume recording at Pye, DJM, and Arista over the next decade failed to generate any chart action. 

Shapiro has busied herself over the years very successfully as an actress, appearing as Nancy in Lionel Bart's musical Oliver and appearing on British soap operas as well. She has remained an attraction on the cabaret circuit over the decades and was well-known enough as a pop culture figure to justify the release of a best-of CD in Japan in the early '90s. She also cut albums devoted to the music of Duke Ellington and Johnny Mercer.
1. 01 Little Devil (2:32)
2. 02 Will You Love Me Tomorrow (3:25)
3. 03 Because They're Young (3:36)
4. 04 Day The Rains Came (2:38)
5. 05 Are You Lonesome Tonight (2:51)
6. 06 Teenager In Love (2:24)
7. 07 Lipstick On Your Collar (2:21)
8. 08 Beyond The Sea (3:32)
9. 09 Sweet Nothin's (2:40)
10. 10 You Mean Everything To Me (2:37)
11. 11 I Love You (2:21)
12. 12 You Got What It Takes (2:45)

Friday, December 03, 2010

Please - Seeing Stars (1969)


Please were a late-period UK psych outfit, better-known for the bands their members went on to join, notably Peter Dunton, who was playing in T2 within a year of this material's recording. The difference between the two bands is startling; Please have a sound that really predates their era, being more early than late psych, with much Farfisa, whereas T2 were definitely proto-prog, although both bands actually sound rather dated these days. I don't believe Please actually released anything much (at all?) at the time, so I presume Seeing Stars is your typical demos and outtakes collection. It seems to be quite highly rated by some psych fans, but to my ears, it falls between too many stools to really cut it all these years later.

1.Seeing Stars 2.Words to Say 3.Before 4.Time Goes By 5.The Road 6.Rise and Shine 7.Still Dreaming 8.Secrets 9.Who You Know 10.But 11.Steal Your Dreams

Completely different track listing than their other release, "1968 / 69". Please was a UK psych band that, well I think they had a lot going them, musically. The eleven cuts on Seeing Stars had never even seen the light of day until this CD was put out by Acme. Members of Please were apparently later in a couple of other bands, Bulldog Breed and T2. Some of these tracks remind me of early Pink Floyd, pretty much because of the keyboard arrangements, like "Words To Say", "Before", the wailing "Still Dreaming" (possibly the disc's best tune), "Secrets", "Who You Know" and "But". I thought "Time Goes By" had the characteristics of perhaps an early unreleased King Crimson B-side. Seeing Stars has nicely-done vocals, soaring mellotron, fluid guitar work and cleverly constructed songs to offer it's listeners. It's so good that on the first listen you'll fully understand as to why ' true psychedelia' has never really died, if you don't already.Truly great early British psych that gets better with each play. Line-up: Peter Dunton - keyboards, lead vocals & drums, Bernie Jinks - bass & backing vocals and Nick Spenser - drums. Should appeal to fans of early Floyd, Tomorrow, The Move, Yes, solo Syd Barrett and The Doors.

Monday, November 29, 2010

Please - Please (1968-69)


Line-up
- Peter Dunton (drums, vocals)
- Bernard Jinks (bass)
- Nick Spenser (guitars)


Please were formed by Peter Dunton and Bernie Jinks in late 1967. They had just returned to Britain from Germany where they had played with Neon Pearl, which also included their third member Jurgen Ermisch. The fourth original member Adrian Gurvitz later co-founded Gun. Unfortunately this line-up left no vinyl legacy or unreleased recordings that have been located behind it. They disbanded in May 1968 when Peter Dunton joined The Flies for whom he wrote both sides of their Magic Train 45. When The Flies split up at the end of 1968, Dunton reformed the band (line-up 'B'). Rob Hunt had also been in The Flies. They recorded all the cuts compiled on this album. Please split again in April 1969 when Peter Dunton joined Gun. The remaining members recruited a new drummer and renamed themselves Bulldog Breed. They later cut the Made In England album. In the Autumn of 1969, Peter Dunton quit Gun to reform Please with Bernie Jinks and Nick Spenser (ex-Neon Pearl). This incarnation was relatively short-lived as they had difficulty recruiting a suitable keyboard player. In early 1970 Dunton, Jinks and a later Bulldog Breed member Keith Cross joined forces to form T2, who were responsible for the excellent It'll All Work Out In Boomland album. One of T2's tracks, No More White Horses also crops up in a radically different form on Please's 1968/69 retrospective.
(taken from "Tapestry Of Delights")

01. We Aim To Please (2:51)
02. No More White Horses (3:21)
03. Paper Anne (3:15)
04. Seaweed (5:10)
05. Break The Spell (3:17)
06. Strange Ways (3:21)
07. Man With No Name (3:27)
08. Watching (2:11)
09. You're Still Waiting (2:05)
10. Breakthrough (3:23)
11. The Story (2:24)
12. Folder Man (2:24)

The Scarlets - The Scarlets complete 1963-1971 (3 CD)


The Scarlets, one of Denmarks most famous and successful artists in the sixties.




The Scarlets were formed in Copenhagen in mid 1963 as a backing-group for Johnny Reimar, who had just left the Clifters. The members were: John Friis (el-b, vo) Kaj Christensen (p, org, vo) Steen Larsen (lead-g) Jan Pedersen (dm).
The Scarlets made their debut at Geels Kro, 20th July 1963. Scarlets quickly became more than just a backing-froup, and had two parallel carreers both on stage and on album: The Scarlets with or without Reimar. Scarlet played rocknroll inspired by Johnny & The Hurricans, which can be heard on their first recording “Bondeorgelet”, which served as the opening-vignette to the radioprogram “Musik for Teenagere”. The B-side “Prinsesse Toben” was a huge hit på “Ti Vi Ka Li” in September 1963. Johnny Reimar & The Scarlets were a popular liveband that toured extensively in Denmark and Sweden. On a lot of the recordings Reimar used Bertrand Bechs Orkester as his backing-group. Scarlets were the first band that played on Hit House, on 1.9.1964, and at the Star Club. In late 1965 The Scarlets and Reimar split, and Johnny Reimar began his solo-career. 

CD1. Bondeorglet 2. Prinsesse Toben 3. Winterset 4. If You Wanna Dance 5. Nevada 6. Pimpernel 7. Dytten-Batten 8. Let Us Dream 9. Let's Go 10. Tambourine Shake 11. The Girls Of Copenhagen 12. I Do Not Wanna Cry Anymore 13. Chattanooga Choo Choo - Shake 14. Scarlet Tune 15. Little Things Live 16. She Taught Me How Yodel 17. Bondeorglet 18. I Love The Way You Love 19. The House Of The Rising Sun 20. Scarlet Tune 21. Tambourine Shake 22. I Do Not Wanna Cry Anymore 23. Waiting On The Corner 24. Wishing To Kiss You 



CD-3: 1. She Taught Me How To Yodel 2. Kansas City Star 3. Michelle 4. Stop, Mens Legen Er God 5. Yesterday Man 6. These Boots Are Made For Walkin' 7. Stop The Music 8. You Were On My Mind 9. Barbara Ann 10. Blue Turns To Grey 11. Dedicated Follower Of Fashion 12. I Can't Let Go 13. A Little Lovin' Somethin' 14. Sweet Talkin' Guy 15. Remember When 16. Only You 17. Molak Molak Mak Mak Mak 18. Mens Manden Var Ud'Efter Ol 19. So Do I 20. I Want You Tell Me 21. Long Long Time 22. I Want You To Tell Me 23. Rhythm Of The Rain 24. Opus 17 25. Man Klarer Alting Med Et Smil 26. Hele Verden Snurrer Rundt 27. One Way Ticket 28. Wichita Lineman 29. Carpet Man 30. My Way Of Life 



CD-3: 1. Bama Lama Bama Loo 2. The World Through A Tear 3. De Larte Os At Jodle 4. Bedre Dag For Dag 5. Gimme Dat Ding 6. Teddy Boy 7. Que Sera Sera 8. Ta' En Lille Sang 9. Sommer Og Sol 10. Gor Det Sa Godt Du Kan 11. San Quentin 12. Sing A Traveling Song 13. Southwind 14. Jesus Was A Carpenter 15. This Town 16. Face Of Despair 17. Flesh And Blood 18. I'm Gonna Try To Be That Way 19. This Side Of The Law 20. See ruby Fall 21. Starkville City Jail 22. Hungry 23. 'cause I Love You 24. Route Nos. 1, Box 144 25. Come Along And Ride This Train 26. What Is Truth

Thanks for  remarkablewilly 



Sunday, November 28, 2010

Johnny Reimar - The Complete (1963 - 1965)


REQUEST
Johnny Reimar – The Complete 1963 – 1965 
This is volume 7 in the great series “Dansk Pigtrеd”. Johnny Reimar was, with or without his equally famous backing-group The Scarlets, one of Denmarks most famous and successful artists in the sixties. He originally started out in The Clifters before joining The Scarletts. Like most artists of that era he did mostly cover-songs along with some of his own tunes. He has also had a very successful solo-career as a perfomer and an actor. The biographies are taken from danskefilm.dk and tinpan.fortunecity.com/mccartney/95/dksca.htm. They have been (poorly) translated into English by me.

The Scarlets were formed in Copenhagen in mid 1963 as a backing-group for Johnny Reimar, who had just left the Clifters. The members were: John Friis (el-b, vo) Kaj Christensen (p, org, vo) Steen Larsen (lead-g) Jan Pedersen (dm).

The Scarlets made their debut at Geels Kro, 20th July 1963. Scarlets quickly became more than just a backing-froup, and had two parallel carreers both on stage and on album: The Scarlets with or without Reimar. Scarlet played rocknroll inspired by Johnny & The Hurricans, which can be heard on their first recording “Bondeorgelet”, which served as the opening-vignette to the radioprogram “Musik for Teenagere”. The B-side “Prinsesse Toben” was a huge hit pе “Ti Vi Ka Li” in September 1963. Johnny Reimar & The Scarlets were a popular liveband that toured extensively in Denmark and Sweden. On a lot of the recordings Reimar used Bertrand Bechs Orkester as his backing-group. Scarlets were the first band that played on Hit House, on 1.9.1964, and at the Star Club. In late 1965 The Scarlets and Reimar split, and Johnny Reimar began his solo-career.

Johnny Reimar Kristensen played in the school orchestra at Korslшkkeskolen in his youth and later won an amateur-competetion at Fyns Tivoli. He made his debut as a “pigtrеdsinger” (beat/rocknroll-singer) in 1958 at Allesш Hallen in Fyn. In 1960 he moved to Copenhagen and graduated in art directing and drawing while joining the rocknroll band The Clifters in 1959. He had has breakthrough in 1961, when he made his recording debut with The Clifters and changed his name to Johnny Reimar at the same time. In October 1961 “How Wonderful To Know” was released. In 1963 Johnny Reimar left The Clifters and joined the equally popular The Scarlets, who reached the top of the charts in 1963. The Clifters disbanded in 1963, but re-united in 1987. In 1964 Reimar took the step away from english-singing rocknroller to a more mainstream danish solo artist when he recorded ”Lille Fregnede Lousie”. Lille Louise gave Johnny his first silver-album after selling more than 50.000 copies. In 1969 he performed at Vin & Шlgod with the song “ Du burde kшbe dig en tyrolerhat”. With the song he secured his second silver-album. The Tyrolerhat song has been Johnnys trademark song ever since. The next year Johnny released his popular “Party” series, which was a huge hit. He quickly became known for his popular, folksy, down to earth style, and for the next 25 years he played to sell-out crowds with his “Party” band. He had other hits in 1972 with “Sikken fest vi har haft I natt” og “Ole det var I Spanien”. He has also done a lot of work in the recording industry and television.
CD1:
01 - Down In Napoli
02 - Don't You Forget It
03 - I've Got That Sad And Lone
04 - The Boy's Night Out
05 - Early In The Morning
06 - Whatcha Gonna Do
07 - Too Young
08 - Kisses Sweeter Than Wine
09 - All Week Long
10 - Tell Laura I Love Her
11 - Plain Jane
12 - That's All
13 - Them There
14 - Are You Lovesome Tonight
15 - What Do Ya Say
16 - Make Me Forget
17 - Whatcha Gonna Do (Live).
18 - Lazy River (Live).
19 - Tell Laura I Love Her (Live)
20 - Down In Napoli (Live)

CD2:
01 - Det' Da Ligetil
02 - Kom Sе Gamle Dreng
03 - Lille Fregnede Louise
04 - Gid Det Gеr Dig Godt
05 - En Helt Ny Start
06 - Den Glade Vise
07 - I Lyst Og Nшd
08 - Jeg Gеr Hvorhen Jeg Vil
09 - Jeg Si'r Tillykke Til Mig
10 - Grib Mig Hvis Jeg Falder
11 - Tut Mir Leid
12 - Komm Und Geh Mit Mir
13 - Margit Und Johnny med Heinz Alisch Kor Og Orkester , Angelito
14 - Margit Und Johnny med Heinz Alisch Kor Og Orkester , Weisst Du Was
15 - Sei Wieder Gut
16 - Du Darfst Nicht So Vorьbergeh'n
17 - Rote Lippen Hat Luise
18 - Allein Mit Dir
19 - Tu Das Nie
20 - Michelle
21 - Ingela Brander Og Johnny Reimar , Hand In Hand

ONCE AGAIN 
THANKS FOR REMARKABLEWILLY

V.A. - Heimatliche Klaenge vol.47


Heimatliche Klaenge - Deutsche Schallplatten-Labels 
Native Sounds - German Record-Labels
vol.47   ALCORA

The Dukes

01 - I'm An Unskilled Worker
02 - On The Stage
03 - I Could Be A Sportsman
04 - Hang Him Up
05 - Helena
06 - You Are One Of Them
07 - Look Into The Mirror
08 - Dear Rosa
09 - People Cry
10 - Something's Going Wrong Today
11 - The Dentist
12 - I Need A Band
13 - Leave You, Goodbye
14 - The Rider
15 - Play A Fool
16 - Vera Petruschka
17 - I'll Be True 
18 - The Dentist
19 - That's My Life
20 - I Need A Band
21 - I'm An Unskilled Worker

White Lightning - Strikes Twice (1968-69)


White Lightning - Strikes Twice CD. Grinding with the axe of ex-Litter guitarist Zippy Caplan, White Lightning's current charged Minneapolis from 1968-1971. Proving that lightning does strike twice, the band electrified audiences first as trio and then struck again as they grew into a quintet. Both phases are documented on this hard rockin' 20-track CD .
Zippy Caplan's post-Litter power trio made music close enough to Cream to fool you if you weren't listening hard enough. They later expanded to a quartet and recut some of the earlier tunes, with less than stellar results. It's all here on this ...    Full Description20-track compilation. Caplan's playing sounds so much like period Clapton in spots (program "Bogged Down" first if you're really interested in getting to the nuts and bolts of the thing), it'll actually make you lose your place. But there are also a lot of other elements (country and folk acoustic romps, insane stacked riffing, funky period rhythms, and nice rah-rah liner notes by Doug Sheppard) that fire up the mix, making this a hidden treasure that deserves a wider listen. ~ Cub Koda

White Lightning: Tom "Zippy" Caplan, Ronn Roberts (guitar); Woody Woodrich (bass guitar); Mickey Stanhope, Bernie Pershey (drums).

Additional personnel: Barbara Hess (background vocals).


Friday, November 26, 2010

WANTED !!!







I'm looking for  
 Johnny Reimar The Complete 1963 1965 2CDs Danish 60s
Can you help me ? Any ideas...

Thursday, November 25, 2010

The Everly Brothers - Two Yanks In England (1966)




At first glance, this seems like a cash-in on the British Invasion. Recorded in London in 1966, no less than eight of the 12 songs were written by the Hollies (who released their own versions of many of the tunes). There are also covers of hits by the Spencer Davis Group and Manfred Mann. With a harder rock guitar sound (though not overdone or inappropriate) than previous Everlys discs, the duo's interpretations are actually worth hearing in their own right. The harmonies are fabulous, and indeed, the Everlys improve a few of the Hollies' songs substantially. "So Lonely" and "Hard Hard Year," in particular, have a lot more force, transforming the tunes from decent Hollies album tracks to excellence. Because so much of the material is non-original, this couldn't be placed in the top rank of Everly Brothers recordings. But it is a good effort that shows them, almost ten years after "Bye Bye Love," still at the top of their game and still heavily committed to a rock & roll sound. This was a bold contrast to other '50s white rock & rollers with roots in country, most of who had retreated to tamer country-oriented sounds by the mid-'60s.

1. The Everly Brothers - Somebody Help Me (2:00)
2. The Everly Brothers - So Lonely (2:38)
3. The Everly Brothers - Kiss Your Man Goodbye (2:33)
4. The Everly Brothers - Signs That Will Never Change (3:04)
5. The Everly Brothers - Like Everytime Before (1:55)
6. The Everly Brothers - Pretty Flamingo (2:35)
7. The Everly Brothers - I've Been Wrong Before (2:12)
8. The Everly Brothers - Have You Ever Loved Somebody (2:47)
9. The Everly Brothers - The Collector (2:53)
10. The Everly Brothers - Don't Run And Hide (2:36)
11. The Everly Brothers - Fifi The Flea (2:39)
12. The Everly Brothers - Hard Hard Year (2:56)

LINER NOTES FOR THE EVERLY BROTHERS' TWO YANKS IN ENGLAND
By Richie Unterberger

Of all the American rock stars who began recording in the 1950s, the Everly Brothers were among the most influential on the British Invasion, from the Beatles on downward. And among the great 1950s rock stars, the Everly Brothers were among the ones most influenced by the British Invasion. Too, by the mid-1960s the Everly Brothers were far more popular in the UK than they were in the US, scoring two big hit singles ("The Price of Love" and "Love Is Strange") in Britain in 1965. It made sense, then, to arrange for the Everlys to record an album in London in mid-1966, with mucho help from one of the British Invasion bands most indebted to the Everly Brothers' harmonies, the Hollies. If the resulting album, Two Yanks in England, smacked of a gimmick concept, it wasn't of any great consequence. For the music it yielded was in fact quite good, enduring as one of the duo's betterWarner Brothers 1960s albums.

    Pseudo-concept albums were in fact nothing new to the Everly Brothers. In 1961, Both Sides of an Evening and Instant Party had both posited themselves as accompaniments to an evening's entertainment, although those records leaned inordinately hard on popular music standards and tunes from musicals. In 1965, the more satisfying Rock'n Soul and Beat & Soul were devoted almost entirely to covers of rock'n'roll oldies and soul hits. In 1963 they'd interpreted country songs on Sing Country Hits, and way back in1958 they'd done something similar, with a more traditional and folk bearing, on Songs Our Daddy Taught Us. Two Yanks in England was a different sort of project, however, in that Don and Phil Everly would opt to record material that was new to both themselves and their public. The main suppliers of that material would be the Hollies, who wrote no less than eight of the twelve tracks, all credited to the collective "L. Ransford" pseudonym used by the Hollies' Allan Clarke, Tony Hicks, and Graham Nash. The Hollies, Phil Everly has recalled, also played on most of the album; it has also been reported that Jimmy Page contributed some guitar as a session musician.

    It was perhaps a bit odd that the Hollies played such a strong role in the album, when there were no doubt other worthy British rock musicians and songwriters who would have been interested in contributing as well. But Don Everly had already met Graham Nash previously in New York, and the Hollies had a bunch of songs already written to submit to the Everly Brothers. It should be noted that most of these tunes were not donated to the Everlys for exclusive use, and that over half of them had already been on Hollies vinyl. The Hollies had just released a couple of them, "Fifi the Flea" and "Hard, Hard Year,"on their US Beat Group! album (and on the nearly simultaneous UK WouldYou Believe LP). "Don't Run and Hide" had just been on the B-side of their classic hit "Bus Stop"; "So Lonely" had first appeared back in the summer of 1965 on the B-side of another classic Hollies hit, "Look ThroughAny Window"; and "Signs That Will Never Change" would come out later on yet another B-side, of 1967's "Carrie Anne." "I've Been Wrong Before" had been issued, with the slightly different title "I've Been Wrong," in late 1965 on the US Hear! Here! and the UK Hollies LPs. "HaveYou Ever Loved Somebody" would become the Searchers' final British chart single later in 1966, with the Hollies placing their own version on their1967 album Evolution. Even "Like Every Time Before" would come out as a Hollies 1968 B-side in Germany and Sweden.

    So no, the Hollies weren't exactly giving Don and Phil Everly the cream of their crop. But although the eight songs might have been a rather haphazard assortment of Hollies B-sides and LP tracks, it shouldn't be assumed that they were inferior for this reason. The Hollies wrote many more fine songs beyond their hit singles than many listeners realize, and the ones chosen by the Everlys were actually quite good. Too, as was par for the brothers when covering songs by others, the Everlys' versions were substantially different thanthe ones waxed by the Hollies. The arrangements, probably in keeping with what the Everlys were seeking by recording in London in the first place, were brasher and more British Invasion-sounding than the mid-1960s sides they'd cut over the past year or two in Nashville and Hollywood, using some fuzz guitar and organ. The dramatically melancholy "Hard, Hard Year"is a particular highlight, as is the longing "So Lonely." "I've Been Wrong Before," in contrast, is as close to Merseybeat as the Everly Brothers came, while the far more delicate "Like Everytime Before," like several Hollies songs of the period, dabbles in bossa nova rhythms. "Signs That Will Never Change" was indicative of the more tender, mature approach the Hollies would move into in the last years of the 1960s.

    Not everything on Two Yanks in England came from the repertoire of the Hollies, or even of Britishartists. Yes, there were two other British Invasion covers in "Somebody Help Me," which had recently topped the UK charts for the Spencer DavisGroup, and "Pretty Flamingo," which had done the same for Manfred Mann (in fact, "Pretty Flamingo" made #1 just two weeks after "Somebody HelpMe" had vacated that position). But there was also the haunting, mysterious"The Collector," credited to Sonny Curtis, who'd written a few tunes for the Everlys in the past, including their big 1961 hit "Walk Right Back." This unusual composition was based on the British novel of the same name(also made into a 1965 film) by John Fowles, which both Don Everly andSonny Curtis had read. (Curtis, incidentally, has said that "The Collector"is really Don Everly's song, despite what the songwriting credits say.) While Don and Phil Everly didn't write as much original material on their mid-1960s LPs as many fans would have liked, they did at least contribute one composition to Two Yanks in England, "Kiss Your Man Goodbye,"which they'd actually written (and previously attempted in the studio) some time earlier.

    Despite its quality, TwoYanks in England didn't sell well, and the Everly Brothers would soonmove in a country-pop direction. Along with many other recordings, however, it proved that the duo could play straightforward rock as well as anyone when the spirit moved them. -- Richie Unterberger





The Everly Brothers - The Everly Brothers & Fabulous Style Of Everly Brothers (1958;1960)






Although the Everlys hadn't quite fully matured as artists, their debut is a fine, consistent effort divided between original material and respectably energetic covers of early rockers by Little Richard, Gene Vincent, and Ray Charles. Besides their first few hits, it includes some superb, underappreciated tracks that are nearly as good, like "Should We Tell Him" and "I Wonder If I Cared as Much." ~ Richie Unterberger, Rovi


The best of their original Cadence albums, packed with hits ("Bird Dog," "All I Have To Do Is Dream," "When Will I Be Loved," "'Til I Kissed You") and other classic tracks ("Devoted to You," "Let It Be Me," "Since You Broke My Heart," "Like Strangers"). Almost all of the songs show up on their greatest hits collections, so it might be a superfluous purchase for all but serious fans, despite its top-drawer quality. ~ Richie Unterberger, All Music Guide


Chad & Jeremy - Distant Shores (1966)






Musical styles were changing and threatening to leave Chad & Jeremy's light, pleasant pop style behind. Distant Shores indicated that they were only beginning to come to grips with the situation: tracks like "The Way You Look Tonight," "Early Mornin' Rain," and "Homeward Bound" (done in an arrangement identical to Simon & Garfunkel's) suggested they were still content to cover pre-rock pop and folk music. But they did contribute three original songs, and manager James William Guercio brought in the title tune, which became their final Top 40 hit. As a result, Distant Shores had "transitional" written all over it, although it wasn't clear what Chad & Jeremy were making a transition to.


Wednesday, November 24, 2010

Peter & Gordon - I Go To Pieces & True Love Ways (1965)


In June 1964, Peter & Gordon became the very first British Invasion act after the Beatles to take the number one spot on the American charts with "A World Without Love." That hit, and their subsequent successes, were due as much or more to their important connections as to their talent. Peter Asher was the older brother of Jane Asher, Paul McCartney's girlfriend for much of the 1960s. This no doubt gave Asher and Gordon Waller access to Lennon-McCartney compositions that were unrecorded by the Beatles, such as "A World Without Love" and three of their other biggest hits, "Nobody I Know," "I Don't Want to See You Again," and "Woman" (the last of which was written by McCartney under a pseudonym). But Peter & Gordon were significant talents in their own right, a sort of Everly Brothers-styled duo for the British Invasion that faintly prefigured the folk-rock of the mid-'60s. In fact, when Gene Clark first approached Jim McGuinn in 1964 about working together in a group that would eventually evolve into the Byrds, he suggested that they could form a Peter & Gordon-styled act. 


Asher and Waller had been singing together since their days at Westminster School for Boys, a private school in London. "A World Without Love" was their biggest and best hit, one that sounded very much like the Beatles' more pop-oriented originals. Their other two 1964 hits, "Nobody I Know" and "I Don't Want to See You Again," were pleasant but less distinguished. Sounding like McCartney-dominated Beatle rejects (which, in fact, they were), the production employed a softer, more acoustic feel than the hits by the Beatles and other early British Invasion guitar bands. "I Don't Want to See You Again" used strings, as would several of the duo's subsequent hits, which became increasingly middle-of-the-road in their pop orientation. 

Some scattered folky B-sides showed that Asher and Waller may have been capable of developing into decent songwriters, but like many of the less talented British Invaders, their lack of songwriting acumen and ability to move with the times would eventually work against them. They did continue to hit the charts for a couple of years, with updates of the oldies "True Love Ways" (Buddy Holly) and "To Know You Is to Love You" (a variation of the Teddy Bears' "To Know Her Is to Love Her"). There was also a Top Ten cover of Del Shannon's "I Go to Pieces," and the brassy, McCartney-penned "Woman." The overtly cute and British novelty "Lady Godiva," though, became their last big hit in late 1966. 

After Peter & Gordon broke up in 1968, Asher became an enormously successful producer, first as the director of A&R at the Beatles' Apple Records (where he worked on James Taylor's first album). Relocating to Los Angeles, in the 1970s he was one of the principal architects of mellow Californian rock, producing Taylor and Linda Ronstadt.

I Go To Pieces (1965)

The duo's third album was a versatile but patchy collection. And there was no getting around it: The best tracks, as was the case in many acts of the era, were the hits -- "I Go to Pieces" and the less well-remembered brassy, pounding "Don't Pity Me." They were at their best when they were at their folkiest, as on their nice cover of the Everly Brothers' "Sleepless Nights" and the decent original "Tears Don't Stop," which wouldn't have sounded out of place in the Searchers' repertoire. But they weren't well-equipped to tackle bluesy rock and folk oldies, as they tried to do with Elvis Presley's "All Shook Up" and "A Mess of Blues," Doris Troy's "Whatcha Gonna Do About It" (done better by the Hollies), and Leadbelly's "Good Morning Blues"). Still, it's a slightly above-average British Invasion pop/rock album. It's included in its entirety as half of the two-for-one package I Go to Pieces/True Love Ways on Collectables, which adds their fourth album, True Love Ways, and their 1967 hit "Sunday for Tea."


True Love Ways (1965)

Peter & Gordon branched further from their initial pop-folky British Invasion harmony sound on their fourth album, with erratic results. There was an increased tilt toward heavy orchestrated ballads, which could work very well at times, as on the title track, a worthy updating of the old Buddy Holly song (and a big hit on both sides of the Atlantic). Their less impressive reworking of "To Know Him Is to Love Him" (retitled "To Know You Is to Love You") made the Top Five in Britain. However, they weren't well-suited to soul covers like "Cry to Me," and on their solo vocal showcases (Gordon Waller on Smokey Robinson's "Who's Lovin' You" and Peter Asher on "Any Day Now"), they overextend themselves without the support of a harmonizing partner. As for the better tracks, their cover of the Everly Brothers' "Crying in the Rain" was a natural choice, and the melodramatically arranged "Hurtin' Is Lovin'" and the folkier "I Told You So" are two of their better originals. Want some dig-deep trivia? The opening notes of their cover of Del Shannon's "Broken Promises" are identical to the opening notes of the subsequent Neil Young composition "Flying on the Ground Is Wrong," done by Buffalo Springfield on their first album. True Love Ways is included in its entirety as half of the two-for-one package I Go to Pieces/True Love Ways on Collectables, which adds their third album, I Go to Pieces, and their 1967 hit "Sunday for Tea."