Wednesday, January 18, 2012

West Coast Consortium - Looking Back - The PYE Anthology



REQUEST
For Fifo

Bass, Trombone, Vocals – John Barker (3)
Compiled By – John Reed
Drums – John Podbury
Guitar [Additional] – Billy Mangham (tracks: 13 to 16)
Guitar [Lead], Organ, Mellotron, Vocals – Geoff Simpson
Guitar [Rhythm], Vocals – Brian Bronson
Lead Vocals – Robbie Fair



West Coast Consortium (later just known as Consortium) was a British pop/rock group that evolved through several incarnations in the mid-'60s, before finally achieving some chart success at the tail end of the decade. The band initially coalesced under the name Group 66, with Robbie Fair on lead vocals, Geoff Simpson on lead guitar and backing vocals, Brian Bronson playing rhythm guitar, John Barker on the bass, and John Podbury playing drums. They were a fairly nondescript band, doing nothing but covers of current rock & roll hits -- by sheer luck, they were trying to do their own rendition of the new Four Seasons hit "Rag Doll" and discovered that they could harmonize better than they could play. A similarly successful attempt at performing the Beach Boys' "I Get Around" proved to the quintet that vocals were their strong point and could set them apart from most of their rivals, especially as they had their instrumental skills nailed. By 1967, Simpson had started writing songs and the group was actively seeking a recording contract. They were signed by Pye Records, who put them together with Tony Macaulay, who had just joined the company and was not yet a name in the business -- he, in turn, brought them into the orbit of his writing/producing partnership with John MacLeod. It was also Macaulay who insisted that the group -- which had changed its name to the gimmicky monosyllabic Xit -- had to get another name. In the interest of emphasizing an American cultural connection (still a mark of quality in England in those days), they arrived at West Coast Consortium. 

The group's original sound was on the lightweight side, rooted in high harmonies and midtempo songs, much closer to the Ivy League than to, say, the Hollies. Their first two singles failed to chart, as did a 45 released under the name "Robbie," focusing on Fair's persona. They subsequently lost the services of Macaulay, who turned his attentions increasingly to the Foundations, and picked up Jack Dorsey as producer. The band generated one poppish freakbeat single, "Colour Sergeant Lilywhite," filled with phased guitars and drumming and an outsized vocal performance from Fair, which didn't chart but went on to become a minor classic of British psychedelia. Amazingly, during this period, the group was given the chance to record an entire LP, despite not having had a hit, and rehearsed for a time but then decided to abandon the project. According to Simpson in David Wells' excellent annotation to the anthology CD Looking Back, the bandmembers thought albums weren't that important at the time, especially as there wasn't an obligation to do one based on any chart hit that had to be exploited. It also seemed like a lot of work would go toward creating a 12" disc that, without a single to exploit, had little chance of selling or being widely heard. Ironically, the surviving song demos -- released in 2003 -- show the beginnings of what could have been a magnificent album and, even as is, makes for delightful listening, recalling elements of Beach Boys-style psychedelia.

Fate next took a hand in a very unexpected way, as the group suddenly found a new fan in the form of the head of Pye Records, the legendary producer/bandleader Cyril Stapleton. A revered figure on the British music scene, Stapleton was like a cross between Norrie Paramor and George Martin, with the recognition of the former and the open-mindedness and some ability akin to the latter -- he chanced to attend a performance by the band and was so taken with them that he decided to give them his personal attention on their next record. At the time, they'd cut a version of Simpson's "All the Love in the World" that wasn't coming out right with Dorsey, and, astonishingly, the label chief violated all corporate protocol by agreeing. Dorsey was taken off producing the band and, at his behest, the existing recording was junked. They started over with Stapleton himself producing; they also shortened their name to the simpler and more mysterious Consortium. The result was their strongest record to date, a glowing piece of sunshine pop with an unpretentious orchestral accompaniment and the best vocal performance by Fair or the rest of the group on record to date; what's more, the B-side, another Simpson song, "Spending My Life Saying Goodbye," was every bit as good, a stripped-down, peculiarly soulful pop number that sounded as though it had come out of the Motown orbit. "All the Love in the World" was also their first hit, reaching number 22 on the U.K. charts in the course of a surprising nine-week run. 

The chart hit, the name change, and the interest of Stapleton did get the group a fresh round of music press coverage, along with better gigs and more time and money for their sessions. As it was, their credibility on-stage was daunting, as the group was able to re-create their harmonies and the full Mellotron and organ-based sound in concert without slighting the guitar and rhythm section's contributions. And from this point on, their records were amazing -- "When the Day Breaks" was a glorious piece of West Coast-style pop, with a an understated yet powerful performance by the band around a memorable melody, with beautifully tasteful accompaniment (especially the reeds) to their superb work. Its B-side, "The Day the Train Never Came," became a major work on-stage and was a stunning record, high harmonies over shimmering, reverb-laden guitars and a larger-than-life rhythm section, and "Cynthia Serenity," with its haunting melody, compelling beat, and falsetto harmonies, was virtually a late-'60s follow-up to the Beach Boys' "Girl Don't Tell Me." Everything worked on those and the singles that followed, including the gorgeous "I Don't Want Her Anymore" -- featuring the debut of sixth member Billy Mangham (guitar) -- yet there was no chart action from them. It was around this time that they were shifted over to a custom label, Trend, set up by MacLeod and Macaulay.

The new label didn't help their sales, and in 1970 the original group's history effectively ended as Simpson quit, unwilling to leave his wife or their recently born twins for a six-week tour of Italy. He went into the less travel-demanding field of songwriting, enjoying success in the 1970s, while the rest of the band soldiered on, in one form or another, for the rest of the decade, and even existed for a time in the 1980s. By that time, the Consortium had a much louder sound, very far removed from their Four Seasons/Beach Boys-inspired roots.



Re-mastered at The Town House.
Tracks 17 to 27 previously unissued studio demo.


West Coast Consortium can be lumped in with bands like the Ivy League, the Bystanders, and the groups that pop up on soft British psychedelic pop collections. They combine lush Beach Boys/Four Seasons vocal harmonies with lush, string-filled backing to create a uniquely English style of '60s pop. Looking Back is a 27-track collection of the band's output for Pye between 1967 and 1970. Actually, only a little more than half of the record was released; the last 11 tracks are demos. And to make things confusing, the band had several different names. One single was released under the name Robbie (after the lead singer Robbie Fair), two singles were released as West Coast Consortium, and the rest were released as Consortium. They finally settled on Consortium because their one semi-hit, the incredible rich and Baroque almost to the point of a joke "All the Love in the World," came under that name. The rest of their songs never came close to breaking but they had quite a few goodies hidden away, like "Indigo Spring," the pounding "The Day the Train Never Came," the bubblegum soul-sounding "I Don't Want Her Anymore," and the pastoral "Copper Coloured Years." The demos, unlike many that are tacked onto sets like this, actually measure up quite well against the officially released tracks. The studio sheen that is sacrificed is made up by the energy that band brings to the tracks. Best of the lot are the tough "Willow Wood," the Kink-y "Live and Let Live," and the funky "What Are They Singing About Today." It's a shame the band didn't get a chance to take these songs into a studio and polish them up, but it's nice that they are here for fans of British psych-pop to enjoy. The whole set is quite enjoyable and serves to firmly install Consortium at the summit of the style.




Barry McGuire and the stars from The New Christy Minstrels - Star Folk (1963) 2007


REQUEST
For Fifo 

The New Christy Minstrels began with Randy Sparks, a singer/guitarist who starte Fd out in the late '50s mixing folk and folk-style songs with Broadway material. He was leading his own trio by the start of the new decade, and saw the possibility of putting together an ensemble of ten voices, big enough generate a major sound but retaining the basic texture of a folk trio. He combined his own trio with the Inn Group -- which included a young Jerry Yester -- and added four more members, including Dolan Ellis and also Art Podell, who had been part of the duo Art & Paul. The group name came from Christy's Minstrels, a 19th century performing institution founded by Edwin Pearce Christy (1815-1862). 

Their debut album, Presenting the New Christy Minstrels: Exciting New Folk Chorus, was released by Columbia Records in 1962. It won a Grammy Award and peaked at number 19 in a two-year run on the Billboard charts. The group also scored a minor hit that same year with Woody Guthrie's "This Land Is Your Land." With help from two new managers, George Greif and Sid Garris, the group was booked onto The Andy Williams Show for the 1962-1963 season. And it was then that the original lineup deconstructed -- fully half the group left, and the first round of replacements arrived, including Barry McGuire and Barry Kane; jazz-pop vocalist Peggy Connelly (soon replaced by Gayle Caldwell); singer/banjo man Larry Ramos; and Clarence Treat on upright bass. This version of the New Christy Minstrels immediately won over critics and audiences alike, beginning with an engagement at the Troubadour in Los Angeles in the summer of 1962. 

The new lineup made its recording debut with the concert album In Person. In the spring of 1963, the group recorded an album, Ramblin', which was highlighted by a McGuire/Sparks collaboration called "Green, Green." McGuire had originated the song, which was completed with Sparks' help, and the recording was embellished by the presence of a memorable 12-string guitar riff provided by Nick Woods. It was the performance by Barry McGuire on lead vocals, however, that seemed to most capture the public's interest, and "Green, Green" peaked at number three, the first hit single by the group. 

Sparks, Greif, and Garris were earning huge amounts of money. The other Christys were all on salary, however, and while that did rise with the burgeoning concert work, the members realized that they could only earn a fixed amount. Ironically enough, the first member to exit was Randy Sparks himself, who bowed out of performing on-stage with the Christys in May of 1963. His exit precipitated the next break in the ranks, when he chose McGuire as de facto leader on-stage. This decision rankled Ellis, who quit soon after. Gene Clark, later of the Byrds, passed through the group's lineup in 1963-1964. Meanwhile, Jackie Miller and Gayle Caldwell left to form the duo Jackie & Gayle, before Caldwell went solo. They were replaced by Karen Gunderson and Ann White, and Clark was succeeded by Paul Potash, Podell's ex-partner in Art & Paul. 

The group's Live from Ledbetter's album, recorded in 1964, showed a still vital ensemble, even as the folk music world around it was moving in a more confrontational direction under the influence of figures such as Bob Dylan and Phil Ochs. The group carried on successfully, with an extended engagement on the ABC folk music showcase Hootenanny, which got the Christys their own summer replacement series. 

McGuire exited the Christys in early 1965, and that marked the end of the original conception of the group. Garris and Greif now saw the Christys as more of a variety act, doing pop tunes and even comedy. The members who came aboard now included the comic duo of Skiles & Henderson, whose skits became part of the act. Nick Woods left in September of 1965, and Larry Ramos quit in January of 1966 to join the Association, and was replaced by Mike Settle. A later round of replacement members included Kenny Rogers, Kim Carnes, and Karen Black. When Settle unsuccessfully tried to move the group back toward a folk sound, he and fellow members Terry Williams and Thelma Lou Camacho, along with Rogers, quit to form the First Edition. Black later emerged as an actress, while Carnes became a major pop/rock star in the '80s. 

The group became inactive in 1971, but by 1978 a new version of the Christys was working at resort hotels. In the intervening years, some ex-members retired from music and a few, including Woods and Clark, passed on, but the appeal of the group lingered. Sparks moved to Northern California with his second wife, the former actress Diane Jergens, and wrote plays, ran his song publishing business, and worked with his fellow postwar folkie Burl Ives for a long time as well. He licensed the name from his ex-partners and went out leading a version of the New Christy Minstrels. The Christys' early-'60s image also provided part of the inspiration for some of the humor in the 2003 Christopher Guest movie A Mighty Wind. Sparks was part of two reunion events involving the surviving classic Christys members, which led to the recording of the album Recycled: What's Old Is New! As of 2010, Sparks was still leading a version of the group, which included Dolan Ellis.


First time on CD for this collection of early Folk recordings from Barry 'Eve Of Destruction' McGuire and other members of The New Christy Minstrels, originally recorded in 1963 for the Horizon label, a short lived American Folk label whose most prominent artist at the time was Hoyt Axton. McGuire recorded a number of tracks for the label in the company of Karen Gunderson , Art Podell, Paul Potash, Barry Kane, all members of the New Christy Minstrels. These were collected together as Star Folk volumes 1 and 2 . The material is for the most part originals by McGuire and his contemporaries such as Hoyt Axton, Art Podell, Rod McKuen. These classic American Folk recordings have not been available since the mid '60s and include many standout recordings including 'Greenback Dollar', 'Town And Country' and 'So Long Stay Well'. 24 tracks. RPM.

****
Wow! This CD is a totally unexpected find from out of left field in just about every way that it's possible for a compact disc to be, in part because it's not really (or entirely) a Barry McGuire release. If you look closely, it's by "Barry McGuire (and the stars from the New Christy Minstrels)," but it's not a New Christy Minstrels collection, either. For starters, this is a folk revival CD from a reissue label (RPM) that's hardly known for its commitment to the latter musical genre -- in terms of content, this CD might have seemed more likely coming out of Sundazed or Rhino. For another, it is, indeed, folk music -- Barry McGuire as a solo artist is most closely associated with either the folk-rock sounds of "Eve of Destruction" or the religious music of his later career, but this is from earlier than either of those periods. And finally, it isn't entirely a Barry McGuire collection, though he is the dominant and most prominent personality on it. Rather, this 24-song collection is made up of the releases of Horizon Records, a small label owned by West Coast folk music impresario Dave Hubert, who had the foresight to record McGuire, Karen Gunderson, Art Podell, Paul Potash, and Barry Kane -- all future members of the New Christy Minstrels -- in various solo and ensemble settings (sometimes in association with Rod McKuen, leading an impromptu gathering of folkies called the Keytones). The result is amazingly close to what the New Christy Minstrels created, especially on numbers such as "Town and Country," the haunting "So Long, Stay Well," "Midnight Train" (the latter actually done by the Sherwood Singers, featuring Gunderson), and "Gold Wedding Ring." In terms of the listening, it amounts to a lost treasure trove of Christys-style music, originally issued on the Ember label under the generic "Star Folk" name, and in stunning sound. Indeed, one would very much want to hear more of the Sherwood Singers, based on their material represented here, but no fan of the Christys is going to complain about this collection. The McGuire material is very solid and a good rival for his best work with the New Christy Minstrels, and shows off that stunning voice in its youthful glory to magnificent effect, and one can hardly complain about the guitar and banjo accompaniments. The annotation by Peter Doggett does a fair job of sorting out the varying origins of the 24 songs. ~ Bruce Eder, Rovi 

The Rolling Stones - Big Hits (High Tide and Green Grass) 1966 US/UK editions


 Big Hits (High Tide and Green Grass)



Big Hits (High Tide and Green Grass) is the first official compilation album by The Rolling Stones, released on 28 March 1966, on London Records in the United States and on 4 November 1966, by Decca Records in the United Kingdom. The two releases featured different cover art and track listing. The front cover for the American release was used for the rear photo on the UK edition.



The UK Big Hits (High Tide and Green Grass) includes tracks released after the American edition appeared. The Rolling Stones' debut 1963 single, a cover of Chuck Berry's "Come On", was included, but its more successful follow-up, "I Wanna Be Your Man" - composed by rivals (although in reality as friends) Lennon/McCartney - was left off the album.


In August 2002 this US edition of Big Hits (High Tide and Green Grass) was reissued in a new remastered CD and SACD digipak by ABKCO Records. The re-release contains stereo mixes of "(I Can't Get No) Satisfaction", "Time Is on My Side", "It's All Over Now", and "Heart of Stone".

The British version was again made available to the public as part of a limited edition vinyl box set, titled "The Rolling Stones 1964-1969", in November 2010. It was also re-released digitally via iTunes.

It was released once more in 2011 by Universal Music Enterprises in a Japanese only SHM-SACD version.
***
"Большие хиты (Высокая вода и зеленая трава)" - первый официальный сборник The Rolling Stones, вышедший в конце 1966 года на Decca Records в Соединенном Королевстве и на London Records в США. Причем в Великобритании альбом издали на семь месяцев позже, чем в Америке. Эти издания по обе стороны Атлантики отличаются как обложками, так и составом песен. Фотография группы с лицевой стороны американского издания на задней стороне обложки британской версии.

В британском варианте включена кавер-версия песни Чака Берри "Come On", но исключен один из популярнейших хитов Стоунз "I Wanna Be Your Man", сочиненный для них Ленноном и Маккартни. Big Hits (High Tide and Green Grass) достиг 4-го места в UK charts.

В США Big Hits (High Tide and Green Grass) добрался до 3-го места, оставался в хит-параде два года и считается одной из лучших ретроспектив группы. Американский вариант альбома значительно короче - 36:29 (британский = 42:40).

БРИТАНСКАЯ ВЕРСИЯ:

Авторы всех песен  Mick Jagger & Keith Richards, кроме указанных в скобках:

SIDE ONE:
"Have You Seen Your Mother, Baby, Standing in the Shadow?" – 2:30
"Paint It, Black" – 3:10 
"It's All Over Now" (Bobby Womack/Shirley Jean Womack) – 3:20
"The Last Time" – 3:33
"Heart of Stone" – 2:49
"Not Fade Away" (Norman Petty/Charles Hardin) – 1:48 
"Come On" (Chuck Berry) – 1:49

SIDE TWO:
"(I Can't Get No) Satisfaction" – 3:43 
"Get off of My Cloud" – 2:52
"As Tears Go By" (Mick Jagger/Keith Richard/Andrew Loog Oldham) – 2:45 
"19th Nervous Breakdown" – 3:50
"Lady Jane" – 3:06
"Time Is on My Side" (Norman Meade) – 2:50 
"Little Red Rooster" (Willie Dixon) – 2:55

АМЕРИКАНСКАЯ ВЕРСИЯ

SIDE ONE:
"(I Can't Get No) Satisfaction" – 3:43 (stereo on 2002 Abkco CD) 
"The Last Time" – 3:40 
"As Tears Go By" (Mick Jagger/Keith Richards/Andrew Loog Oldham) – 2:45 
"Time Is on My Side" (Norman Meade) – 2:58 (stereo on 2002 Abkco CD) 
"It's All Over Now" (Bobby Womack/Shirley Jean Womack) – 3:26 (stereo on 2002 Abkco CD) 
"Tell Me (You're Coming Back)" – 3:46

SIDE TWO:
"19th Nervous Breakdown" – 3:56 
"Heart of Stone" – 2:50 (stereo on 2002 Abkco CD) 
"Get Off of My Cloud" – 2:55 
"Not Fade Away" (Norman Petty/Charles Hardin) – 1:48 
"Good Times, Bad Times" – 2:31 
"Play With Fire" (Nanker Phelge) – 2:13

***
*****
The Rolling Stones - Big Hits (High Tide and Green Grass)   US version




The Rolling Stones - Big Hits (High Tide and Green Grass)   UK version





Monday, January 16, 2012

Merrell and the Exiles - The Early Years 1964-1967


Merrell Wayne Fankhauser (b 23 December 1943, Louisville, Kentucky) is an American singer, songwriter and guitarist who was most active in the 1960s and 1970s with bands including the Impacts, Merrell & the Exiles, HMS Bounty, Fankhauser-Cassidy Band, and MU. In addition, 12 songs recorded by Merrell & the Exiles were later released under the group name Fapardokly, even though that group never actually existed.
After moving to San Luis Obispo, California in his teens, he began playing guitar, and got his first break playing in movie theaters and talent shows. In 1960, after one of these shows, he joined a local band called The Impacts as lead guitarist. Their Ventures-influenced sound developed a strong following at the start of the surfing scene. In 1962 they recorded an album which was later released, without the band's knowledge, by Del-Fi Records, and which included a tune "Wipe Out" which Fankhauser suggests later provided the (uncredited) basis of the hit by the Surfaris, although his view is contested [1]
Fankhauser left the band and moved to inland Lancaster, California. There he met Jeff Cotton (later of Captain Beefheart's Magic Band), and in 1964 they formed The Exiles. The band - which also included John "Drumbo" French - had some regional success with songs including "Can't We Get Along", but then broke up. Fankhauser moved back to the coast, formed a new band, Merrell and the Xiles, and had a minor hit with "Tomorrow's Girl" in 1967. An album followed which included old Exiles songs and newer psych folk material. For the album the band was credited as Fapardokly, taking its name from the surnames of the original members - Fankhauser, Dan Parrish (bass), Bill Dodd (guitar) and Dick Lee (drums). Despite its later cult acclaim, the album was not a success. Fankhauser and Dodd then formed another, more overtly psychedelic, band with Jack Jordan (bass) and Larry Meyers (drums), naming it HMS Bounty. They won a recording deal with Uni Records, and their self-titled album was released in 1968, followed by the single "Tampa Run". However, success was again thwarted, by personal and record company problems, and the band split up.
Reuniting with Jeff Cotton in 1970, Fankhauser then formed the group MU. In 1971 their first album was released and became a radio hit. Increasingly fascinated by legends of the lost continent of Mu, Fankhauser then relocated to the Hawaiian island of Maui in Feb. 1973. Material for a second MU album was recorded on Maui in 1974, but not released until the 1980s on the two LPs "The Last Album" (Appaloosa, Italy 1981) and "Children Of The Rainbow" (Blue Form, US 1985). Mu disbanded in 1975. Fankhauser recorded a solo album, "Maui", issued in 1976, before returning to California in the late '70s. All his 1970s recordings have been reissued repeatedly in the CD format.
Fankhauser continued to record, occasionally with friends including John Cipollina and more recently Ed Cassidy of Spirit, as well as producing new surf albums credited to The Impacts. Fankhauser has also produced radio and TV shows.



The Bee Gees - The Early Years


The Bee Gees  - Brilliant From Birth 2CD

At last, a comprehensive collection of everything the group recorded in their "Australian years," from 1963 to 1966, before their move to England and rapid ascent to international stardom. These two CDs -- an entirely different package from the similarly titled, but much shorter, compilation 1963-1966: Birth of Brilliance -- include 63 songs, some of which are quite familiar to Bee Gees fans via numerous reissues, but some of which were hard to find outside of Australia, or indeed anywhere. Actually, this turns out to be a mixed blessing, since the rarer tracks are usually way less interesting than the numerous fine Beatlesque ones (such as "Peace of Mind," "Wine and Women," "I Want Home," "All of My Life") that have been pretty easy to acquire on U.S. repackages. There are, for instance, a bunch of fairly horrible MOR pop and country covers, presumably dating from circa 1963. Although it has sometimes been claimed that the Bee Gees sounded like the Beatles by coincidence because they grew up in Manchester, on the basis of this evidence, it seems unquestionable that they deliberately revamped their sound into a Fab Four vein after the Beatles became huge. There are some cool rarities like the moody, folk-rockish "Lonely Winter" and good quality TV broadcasts of Beatles, Lovin' Spoonful, and Dave Clark Five covers (their take on the DC5's "Can't You See That She's Mine" is surprisingly good). It's also good to have comprehensive (and typo-filled) liner notes covering the Australian period, but the utter lack of specific recording/release dates and sources for any of the tracks is exasperating.


AND

Barry Gibb&The Bee Gees - Sing And Play 14 Barry Gibb Songs (1965)
(only 128 kb )


The Bee Gees Sing and Play 14 Barry Gibb Songs is the Bee Gees' debut LP (1967's Bee Gees' 1st was the international debut album), released under the artist title "Barry Gibb & the Bee Gee's ''''". It was released in November 1965 on the Australian Leedon label.

It is basically a compilation of most of the Gibb brothers' singles that had been released over the previous three years (only in Australia), which accounts for the many different styles of music on it. Earlier tracks like "Peace of Mind" "Claustrophobia", and "Could It Be" are in the Merseybeat vein that was popular throughout 1964, while later singles like "Follow the Wind" and "And the Children Laughing" reflect the more folky sounds of the summer of 1965. Of the three new tracks that were recorded specifically for the album, "To Be or Not To Be" was probably the biggest departure, being a blues-based hard rocker.

This album has never been released in CD format, as reflected in the track listing below, and original vinyl copies of the LP are very hard to find. Despite this, not all of the songs on the album are rare, with many being found on various Bee Gees compilation records. Finally, all tracks were released on the official rarites compilation Brilliant from Birth, in 1998, which also includes outtakes from this period of the Bee Gees' career.

Основная информация

Owen B - Owen B (1970)


* Tom Zinser - Bass, Vocals, Piano, 12 String Guitar
* Bob Tousignant - Drums, Vocals, Conga
* Jim Krause - Harmonica, Vocals, Percussion
* Terry Van Auker - Guitars, Steel, Vocals

Owen-B started as a band called "The Wildlife" in the Mansfield, Ohio area. They were one of several garage bands from central Ohio that formed around the time close to the end of the first British invasion (1964-1966). Members in the original group included Bob Ross (bass), Charlie Barker (drums), Terry VanAuker (lead guitar), and John Kinkle (rhythm guitar).

John Kinkle left the band shortly after formation to attend college and was replaced by Tom Zinser. Bob Ross and Charlie Barker had played together in an earlier band called "The Amboy Dukes" (no relation to the nationally known band of the same name). Terry VanAuker was from an earlier group called "The Collegiates" and Tom Zinser came from a group called Tommy Z And The Sleepers. The group also added Louie Basso as front man and lead singer. After less than a year of playing together in 1967, the group was signed to Columbia Records, but Columbia executives insisted the band drop Louie Basso as a contract contingency. He was replaced with Jim Krause, a former member of Tommy Z And The Sleepers.

The band had one notable release called "This Is What I Was Made For" written by P.F. Sloan. The song achieved some regional success and charted #15 on the Columbus, Ohio radio station WCOL. After two more releases, the band left the Columbia label. In late 1969. Tom wrote "Mississippi Mama", a simple straight ahead rock and roll tune that the band decided to produce and record on their own dime, and then try to market it to a label. Wes Farrell, a fairly well known New York producer, offered to buy it and put it out on Janus Records. It reached #81 on the Cashbox chart in March of 1970.

The follow up single "Never Goin'Home" also reached #1 locally and was even championed by Billboard magazine which stated "With the feel and flavor of the Credence Oearwater Revival hits, Owen-B should soon find himself high on the charts with this compelling and infectious rhythm outing. First rate performance and material combine to make this a sure hit". Despite this flirtation with major success, certain members of the band wished to pursue a more personal approach by releasing an album of originals.

This lead to Bob Ross leaving the band. He was not replaced and Tom Zinser moved from Rhythm guitar to bass. Shortly before Ross left the band, Charlie Barker decided to go back to school to avoid the draft and was replaced by Bobby Tousignant (Avery), who had played drums for the Ohio based group The Music Explosion. It is at this point where the band personnel were as it appears on the (http://fullsite.kz/music/rock/194320-owen-b-owen-b-1970-remast-2011.html)
***


Doug Fowlkes and The Airdales - Doug Fowlkes and The Airdales (1962)


"...Doug Fowlkes formed Wess & The Airedales in 1961 as the Airedales. In the mid-60s the band ended up in Italy due to a military tour of duty where they added singer and bassist Wess Johnson who took over the band.. It is extremely rare, never released on CD..."

"...Drummer Doug Fowlkes turned up as a producer of Blue Beard . Doug Fowlkes And The Airdales was formed in Key West, Florida - lead singer was Rocky Roberts ...."



Wess Johnson [aka Wess] (bass, vocals), Henry Hooks (saxophone, guitar), Eddy Taylor (saxophone), Jessie King (keyboards), Marvin Glover (drums), James Sampson (saxophone, 1967)






Purple Gang - Purple Gang Strikes ( 1968)


The Purple Gang were more '60s jug band revivalists than they were anything else, but they have sometimes been lumped into the psychedelic scene due to the company they kept. Formed in Stockport Art College in England in the mid-'60s, they found a deal with the British folk label Transatlantic, who referred them to producer Joe Boyd. Though American, Boyd was already a mover and shaker in London as a budding producer (with early Pink Floyd), a representative for Elektra Records, and a co-runner of the legendary underground rock/psychedelic club the UFO. Boyd produced their 1967 single "Granny Takes a Trip," which, despite one word in the title, was not about acid. In reality it was a pleasant jug band tune with a morsel of pop/rock influence. The BBC, however, felt otherwise and banned it from its airwaves. 

This setback contributed to the Purple Gang breaking up after just a couple of singles and one album (which included those singles), Strikes. Actually, much of the LP was standard good-time jug band music, rather reserved even by the standards of '60s jug band revivalism, though it was entirely comprised of original compositions. The only psychedelic thing about the Purple Gang was their milieu. They found their largest audience, for whatever reason, in the underground rock crowd, including the one at the UFO, where the "Granny Takes a Trip" single would often be played. 

The Purple Gang did reorganize in the late '60s in a more electric incarnation, but could not get a record deal. Purple Gang founder Joe Beard re-formed the band in the late '90s with three new members, recording a CD and playing live gigs.



The Purple Gang's sole record is an oddity, not comfortably fitting into any of the scenes -- folk, folk-rock, psychedelia -- with which some historians have associated it. Actually, it's moderately engaging, moderately modernized jug band music, quite mild even compared to the better revivalists of the style in the 1960s, like Jim Kweskin or Dr. West's Medicine Show & Junk Band. There's little hint of electric rock or psychedelia, and one's left with the feeling that you had to be there to get hip to what made them hip, or that they wouldn't have been that interesting even if you were there. Tossing expectations aside and just judging what's on the platter, it's OK jug band revival music, albeit with wholly original material. It's also pretty restrained, almost to the point of gentility, in its fervor and humor. A bit of the hippie acid-folk vibe seeps into one of the better and more mysterious cuts, "The Wizard," which actually does have a trilling electric guitar. A wee bit of British pop-psych bonhomie also colors "The Sheik," "Kiss Me Goodnight Sally Green," and their most famous track by far, "Granny Takes a Trip" (which is still jug band-based, despite the psychedelic implications that some read into the title). Ultimately, though, it's surprisingly tame and ordinary.




Saturday, January 14, 2012

Beat Beat Beat - vol. 14


Beat Beat Beat was a German music programme that ran during the sixties. Not to be confused with the other well known German pop programme Beat Club, Beat Beat Beat was broadcast out of Frankfurt commencing in 1966. The programme ran to 26 episodes between its launch in 1966 and the final programme in January 1969 all of which are still in the German television archives. The shows were eclectic affairs and included performances by artists as diverse as Eric Burdon and the New Animals, The Move, Sam and Dave, Cat Stevens and Barry Ryan to name just a few.This first compilation is an eclectic one featuring Casey Jones and The Governors, Cat Stevens, Easybeats, Hermans Hermits, Chris Farlowe, Barry Ryan, Brian Auger and the Trinity Ft. Julie Driscoll. Hits include two number one hit singles, Chris Farlowe with Out Of Time and Eloise from Barry Ryan. Other hits include Friday On My Mind (The Easybeats), No Milk Today (Hermans Hermits) Matthew and Son (Cat Stevens). A highlight is the rarely seen Brian Auger and the Trinity featuring Julie Driscoll performing Save Me and Road To Cairo.

Beat Beat Beat - vol. 14 - Original Soundtrack

01 - Intro
02 - Info
03 - I'm So Lonesome / Poor Things
04 - Don't Leave Me Alone
05 - Night Train / Cherry Wainer & Don Storer
06 - Info
07 - Wanting / The Tages
08 - In My Dreams
09 - Info
10 - If You Knew / Ebony Keyes
11 - Every Raindrop Means A Lot / The Tages
12 - Call Me / Cherry Wainer & Don Storer
13 - Info
14 - Shapes Of Things / The Yardbirds feat. Jimmy Page
15 - Happenings Ten Years Time Ago
16 - Sitting In The Rain Ebony Keyes
17 - Info
18 - Over Under Sideways Down / The Yardbirds feat. Jimmy Page
19 - I'm A Man

The Beatles-Last Night in Hamburg(Live)


The Beatles' December 1962 performances at the Star Club in Hamburg, Germany, have been reissued countless times over the years (in the U.S. as well as Europe). Offering 28 of those performances, Last Night in Hamburg is a German release from 1999. There are various reasons why casual listeners should avoid this CD. First, the sound quality is inferior; these recordings were made on a portable reel-to-reel recorder. Second, the Beatles still had some growing and developing to do in December 1962 -- not only as musicians, but also as vocalists and songwriters. Nonetheless, Last Night in Hamburg is fascinating if you're a hardcore Beatles collector. These performances take listeners back to a time when the Beatles were about to become huge; they were still playing small clubs, but it wouldn't be long before the Fab Four started selling out huge sports arenas. This CD is devoted almost exclusively to covers; "I Saw Her Standing There" and "Ask Me Why" are among the few Lennon-McCartney originals. Early rock & roll songs are a major focus, and the Beatles put their stamp on some Chuck Berry classics ("Roll Over Beethoven," "Little Queenie," "Sweet Little Sixteen") as well as Ray Charles' "Hallelujah, I Love Her So" and Carl Perkins' "Everybody's Trying to Be My Baby." But the Beatles also embrace a variety of pre-rock gems, which range from the Johnny Mercer standard "I Remember You" to the English-language version of Conseulo Velázquez's "Besame Mucho." And the group is instantly recognizable whether it is exploring rockabilly or Broadway standards; although the Beatles sound like diamonds in the rough on these performances, they had clearly developed a very distinctive sound. Despite the CD's flaws and shortcomings, historians will find Last Night in Hamburg to be an interesting document of the Fab Four's club days.




The Fortunes - Greatest Hits (1994)


A fairly typical British Invasion quintet inspired by the bouncy, harmony-driven sound of Merseybeat, the Fortunes are probably best-known in the U.S. for their oldies-radio staple "You've Got Your Troubles." Formed in Birmingham, England, in 1963 as the Cliftones, the group was originally a vocal trio consisting of Rod Allen (bass, lead vocals), Glen Dale (guitar, vocals), and Barry Pritchard (guitar, vocals) (born April 3, 1944). However, with the explosion of the Beatles and the Merseybeat sound, the group quickly rethought its direction, adding keyboardist David Carr and drummer Andy Brown, and changing their name to the Fortunes (though their first single, "Summertime, Summertime," was oddly credited to both groups). The group found its niche crafting melancholy, orchestrated ballads similar to Peter & Gordon, the Moody Blues, or the Zombies (and in fact toured with the former two). Their second single for Decca, "Caroline," was adopted as theme music by the famed U.K. pirate station Radio Caroline upon its release in early 1964, yet never charted despite all the heavy airplay. Two more non-charting singles followed, but the group hit its stride in 1965 with "You've Got Your Troubles," which hit the U.S. Top Ten and went all the way to number two in the U.K. Their self-titled debut album was released that year, and the follow-up single "Here It Comes Again" duplicated its predecessor's success in Britain, though not in the States. "This Golden Ring," the follow-up to "Here It Comes Again," was a decent-sized hit in the U.K. (though it didn't reach the Top Ten), but problems set in after that. Glen Dale left the band in the summer of 1966 seeking a solo career, and was replaced by Scottish guitarist Shel McCrae. Unfortunately for the reconstituted band, psychedelia was becoming the dominant sound of British pop music and the squeaky-clean Fortunes were unable to make the transition. A pair of 1966 singles flopped, and the group lost their contract with Decca the following year. They switched over to United Artists and continued recording singles, paying the bills by singing an American Coca-Cola jingle. David Carr elected to leave the band in summer 1968, which continued undeterred as a four-piece. Surprisingly, the group's 1970 single "That Same Old Feeling" (a cover of a Pickettywitch number) hit the lower reaches of the charts in America. The Fortunes switched labels again, this time to Capitol, where they hooked up with producers/songwriters Roger Greenaway and Roger Cook. The Fortunes staged an unexpected comeback in 1971 with the single "Here Comes That Rainy Day Feeling Again," which hit the U.S. Top 20. The follow-up "Freedom Come, Freedom Go" flopped stateside, but returned the group to the British Top Ten, a feat repeated by its follow-up, "Storm in a Teacup." George McAllister made the Fortunes a quintet once again, but no further singles-chart success was upcoming, and the group eventually contented themselves with simply playing the British club circuit. Rod Allen continues to lead a nostalgia-oriented version of the Fortunes featuring guitarist Michael Smitham, drummer Paul Hooper, and ex-Badfinger keyboardist Bob Jackson. Barry Pritchard passed away on January 11, 1999.


The Dave Clark Five - Instrumental Album (1966)


Issued in Canada only in mid-1966, this LP is a real oddity in the Dave Clark Five discography, indeed consisting entirely of instrumentals as the title promises. As DC5 fans know, unlike just about every other notable British Invasion band, the group often relied on instrumental filler cuts to help pad out their LPs, and 12 of them are gathered on this release. As every one of them also appears on one of the band's 1964-1966 American long-players, it's of interest only for completist collectors attracted by the rarity and artwork of the physical artifact, especially as the music is neither too good nor typical of what the Dave Clark Five were known for. Indeed, side one in particular has some surprisingly vapid easy listening numbers (sometimes with a Duane Eddy-like twanging guitar), though side two moves into more rocking if undistinguished territory, occasionally with spy movie-like motifs. It should also be noted that the LP somehow failed to include what were far and away the band's three best instrumentals: the menacing "Tequila" update "Chaquita," the weird and vicious "Five by Five," and the early-1966 B-side rave-up "All Night Long."


VA - Chicas - Spanish Female Singers (1962-1974)







ENJOY !!!! ПЛИЗ


The Mojo Men - Dance With Me (1965-1966)


One of the earliest San Francisco rock bands, the Mojo Men had local hits on the Autumn label with "Dance With Me," "She's My Baby," and a cover of the Rolling Stones' "Off the Hook" in the mid-'60s. Their early sides displayed a raunchy but thin approach taken from the mold of British Invasion groups like the Stones and Them. In 1966, after female drummer Jan Errico joined from the San Francisco folk-rock group the Vejtables, they moved to Reprise and pursued folky psychedelic pop directions, and had a Top 40 hit with a Baroque arrangement of Buffalo Springfield's "Sit Down I Think I Love You" in 1967. In their later days, they developed more intricate arrangements and harmonies that reflected the influence of the Mamas & the Papas and Jefferson Airplane, although they weren't in the same league as those groups. Their many singles never fully displayed the band's considerable songwriting and vocal talents, and after changing their name to the Mojo and finally just Mojo, they disbanded in the late '60s.



A ragtag collection, drawn from their first seven singles and a few unreleased tracks. The later tracks, featuring Errico, are much more ornate productions that sound like a somewhat less refined Mamas & the Papas. A wealth of unreleased material (much of it original) that has circulated among collectors shows them to be a much more interesting group than this album would indicate; unfortunately, this anthology (the only one available) focuses on their more simplistic and derivative numbers

VA -Girls Of Texas '60s (1993)



just like that это....

Texas produced an astronomical number of '60s garage bands, so it's not surprising that a few featured female musicians. It may be somewhat surprising, however, that this collection doesn't feature the fuzztone-drenched garage punk that is often associated with the state. Instead, these bands veer closer to blue-eyed soul and blues. The most famous person here is blues-rocker Lou Ann Barton, who is represented by two previously unreleased live performances; other highlights include the Heart Beats' cover of the Mouse and the Traps song "Crying Inside" and the Bombshells' distaff remake of Roy Head's "Treat Her Right." The music is engaging and has historical interest, but most of it is unremarkable. ~ Todd Kristel, Rovi

1. [02:19] The Heartbeats - Crying Inside
2. [02:44] The Heartbeats - Poor Side Of Town
3. [02:36] The Brazen Hussies - Climbing The Wall
4. [02:12] Kay Gramm & The Bandettes - Cross My Heart
5. [03:07] Leisha Brodie - Cross My Heart
6. [06:14] Lou Ann Barton - I Feel Like Breaking Up Somebody's Home
7. [05:22] Lou Ann Barton - He's Gotta Use His Head (To Turn Me On)
8. [03:15] The Heartbeats - Choo Choo Train
9. [02:08] The Heartbeats - Little Latin Lupe Lu
10. [02:34] The Bombshells - Treat Her Right
11. [02:24] The Brazen Hussies - Imitation Me
12. [02:03] The Bad Girls - Santa's Got A Brand New Bag
13. [02:02] The Baxterettes - Why Oh Why Does Barbara Cry
14. [02:18] Friday & The Girls - An Older Boy

thanks Livehanter


The Blue Things - The Blue Things Story (1993)


Along with the Remainsthe Blue Things are serious contenders for the title of the Great Lost Mid-'60s American Band. The Kansas group was extremely popular in the Midwest and Texas, but remained unknown on a national level, despite a deal with RCA. Piloted by the songwriting of singer and guitarist Val Stecklein, the group often sounded like a cross between the Byrds and the Beau Brummels with their melodic, energetic, guitar-oriented folk-rock and haunting harmonies. The group's sole album (Listen & See, 1966) and several singles chart a rapid growth from British Invasion-like material with a heavy Searchers and Buddy Holly influence to full-blown psychedelic efforts with careening guitars, organ, and backward effects. Quite innovative for the time, these 1966 psychedelic singles met with no more than regional success. The group's impetus was derailed by the departure of Stecklein at the end of 1966, although they struggled on for a bit. Stecklein went to California and recorded a disappointing MOR folk album for Dot in the late '60s that reprised some of his Blue Things songs.

1. Baby My Heart
2. Ain't That Loving You Baby
3. Since You Broke My Heart
4. Pennies
5. Silver and Gold
6. So You Say
7. Love's Made a Fool of You
8. Pretty Things-Oh!
9. It Ain't No Big Thing
10. You Can't Say We Never Tried
11. High Life
12. Now's the Time
13. The Girl from the North Country
14. Doll House
15. The Man on the Street
16. La Do Da Da
17. The Orange Rooftops of Your Mind
18. One Hour Cleaners
19. You Can Live in Our Tree
20. Take Seven
21. The Coney Island of Your Mind
22. Twist and Shout