Thursday, September 30, 2010

Buddy Holly&The Crickets - Words Of Love ~ 28 Classic Songs Plus Rarities & Versions


Buddy Holly is perhaps the most anomalous legend of '50s rock & roll -- he had his share of hits, and he achieved major rock & roll stardom, but his importance transcends any sales figures or even the particulars of any one song (or group of songs) that he wrote or recorded. Holly was unique, his legendary status and his impact on popular music all the more extraordinary for having been achieved in barely 18 months.


Among his rivals, Bill Haley was there first and established rock & roll music; Elvis Presley objectified the sexuality implicit in the music, selling hundreds of millions of records in the process, and defined one aspect of the youth and charisma needed for stardom; and Chuck Berry... Read More...

Buddy Holly - 28 Classic Songs

01 - Words of Love
02 - That'll Be the Day
03 - Peggy Sue
04 - Think It Over
05 - True Love Ways
06 - What to Do
07 - Crying. Waiting. Hoping
08 - Well... All Right
09 - Love's Made a Fool of You
10 - Peggy Sue Got Married
11 - Valley of Tears
12 - Wishing
13 - Raining in My Heart
14 - Oh, Boy!
15 - Rave on
16 - Brown Eyed Handsome Man
17 - Bo Diddley
18 - It's So Easy
19 - It Doesn't Matter Anymore
20 - Maybe Baby
21 - Early in the Morning
22 - Love Is Strange
23 - Listen to Me
24 - I'm Gonna Love You Too
25 - Learning the Game
26 - Baby I Don't Care
27 - Heartbeat
28 - Everyday

Buddy Holly - Rarities & Versions

01 - Because I Love You
02 - Dearest (Um Um)
03 - Wait Till The Sun Shines Nelly
04 - Gone
05 - Rip It Up
06 - Honky Tonk
07 - Ain't Got No Home
08 - Holly Hop
09 - Mailman Bring Me No More Blues
10 - Not Fade Away
11 - Take Your Time
12 - Smokey Joe's Cafe
13 - Slippin' And Slidin' (fast version)
14 - Learning The Game (first version)
15 - Crying, Waitin, Hopin (first version)
16 - Dearest (version)
17 - Your'e The One
18 - Girl On My Mind
19 - That'll Be The Day (slow version)
20 - It's Too Late
21 - Think It Over
22 - Dearest (demo)
23 - Maybe Baby (first version)
24 - Because I Love You (first version)

...This is one of the finest collection of Buddy Holly you will ever find.

With all the classics you will find Peggy Sue, True Love Ways, Peggy Sue Got Married, Raining in My Heart, Oh Boy!, Rave On, Heartbeat & Everyday.

Then there is some of the lesser known ones which are What to Do, Valley of Tears, Early in the Morning, Love is Strange, I'm Gonna Love You Too & Learning the Game.

This is a classic collection which should be treasured for life... ~   W. Taylor

The Alan Bown! - Outward Brown Plus (1968)


The Alan Bown Set later known as The Alan Bown! or just Alan Bown, were a British band of the 1960s and 1970s whose music evolved from jazz and blues through soul and rhythm and blues and ended up as psychedelia and progressive rock. The band achieved limited chart success and is best known the for the role it played in developing the careers of numerous musicians including Mel Collins, John Helliwell, Robert Palmer, Jess Roden and Dougie Thomson.


Alan Bown made an improbable rock star -- though it could be argued that he was never really a "star." With the trumpet as his instrument, he wasn't even a terribly likely rock & roll bandleader, but he definitely was that, and for a lot of years. And if his bands' recordings had been as successful as their live shows, he'd likely have been a star and then some.

Any musical aspirations that he harbored were invisible until he completed a stint in the Royal Air Force at the outset of the 1960s. He found a music scene that was booming throughout England with an important extension to Germany, and which encompassed not only rock & roll but also blues, R&B, and jazz. The latter two areas were where Bown's interest lay, and he was soon a member of a group called the Embers that was booked into the Star Club in Hamburg, Germany, working on the same bills as such Liverpool-based artists as Tony Sheridan, the Beatles, the Undertakers, et al. He returned to England after the extended engagement and joined the John Barry Seven, led by the trumpeter/arranger John Barry. He was actually more involved with the group than Barry, whose burgeoning careers as a record producer and film music composer were taking off in a big way and keeping him busy outside of performing. When Barry disbanded the group in 1964, Bown picked up the pieces and formed an outfit of his own -- his proposed name was ABC, standing for Alan Bown Community, but at the behest of his manager he chose the Alan Bown Set instead. The sextet was an immediate success as a live act, and it became an audience and critical favorite in London.
Oddly enough, Bown and company never even thought about a recording contract, intending the band as a vehicle for steady work for themselves, doing what they enjoyed. It wasn't until a couple of years into their history that Tony Reeves (the future member of Colosseum), an A&R man for Pye Records, spotted the Alan Bown Set and got them under contract, which resulted in a string of 45s and half of an LP called London Swings that included part of their live show, in tandem with Jimmy James & the Vagabonds. The Pye contract ended in late 1967, and the group was then signed to the British division of MGM Records, to an imprint called Music Factory. By this time, they'd modified their image and sound -- the interest in R&B and soul was fading somewhat in the London clubs, even as psychedelic music was starting to become all the rage. And so, for its MGM/Music Factory releases, a somewhat longer-haired and more flamboyant version of Bown's band was seen, and in lieu of the Alan Bown Set, the group was simply known as the Alan Bown!, complete with exclamation point. They cut a song called "We Can Help You," which had originated with the British band Nirvana -- and the Alan Bown version started to make a splash in England in terms of exposure.
But on the week of the record's actual release, disaster struck on both sides of the Atlantic simultaneously. A strike at the plant where the record was pressed and due to ship from prevented its release, at precisely the moment when it had to be in stores. And MGM Records chose to abandon the Music Factory label -- though the Alan Bown! would remain with the company on the MGM label proper, this also meant that the company abandoned all promotional and distribution efforts involving the Music Factory releases. "We Can Help You," despite a string of promotional appearances by the band on its behalf (including the television show Top of the Pops), was left to die and rot on the vine, and the accompanying LP, called Outward Bown, was ignored. A pair of singles that followed, "Toyland" b/w "Technicolour Dream" and "Story Book" b/w "Little Lesley," both failed to chart. The album included the group's psychedelic pop version of Bob Dylan's "All Along the Watchtower," which the Alan Bown! had been doing in their live shows as well -- the record label would never consider it for a single release, but Jimi Hendrix (who apparently knew their version) was more successful with his own Track Records label and got a hit single out of the same song.
A contract with Deram Records, the progressive rock imprint of English Decca, followed, along with a pair of singles and a self-titled LP, and there was also a lineup shift that, for a time, brought Robert Palmer into the group as its lead singer. But despite a lot of touring and television exposure, and the reconstituting of its sound and image in a much more progressive rock vein, the group's moment had clearly passed by the start of the new decade. Even a signing to the Island label failed to re-ignite their commercial prospects, though Bown did keep a version of the band -- including Mel Collins on saxophone -- together for touring purposes as late as 1972. After that last tour, Bown himself -- following a short stay in a band called Jonesy -- moved on to a producer's spot with British CBS Records, where he was one of those involved with the signing of Mott the Hoople and Sailor. By the 1980s, he had long since abandoned performing in favor of the business side of the music business, and started his own production and publishing company. Thanks to the continued reissue of his '60s-era recordings, however, he remains a much-loved and fondly remembered figure as a performer, from the British beat era into the psychedelic period.

Personnel:

Alan Bown – Trumpet
Stan Haldane - Bass, Vocals
Jeff Bannister - Keyboards/Vocals
John Helliwell – Sax
Robert Palmer – Vocals
Vic Sweeney – Drums
Tony Catchpole – Guitar
Jess Roden – Vocals
Gordon Neville – Vocals
Andy Brown - Bass, Vocals
Albums:
Outward Bown (Music Factory MF 12000) 1967
CD: See For Miles SEECD490, 1998
The Alan Bown (Deram DML/SML 1049) 1968
CD: Universal, Japan, POCJ-2835, 1999
Listen (Island ILPS 9131) 1970
Stretching Out (Island ILPS 9163) 1971
CD: Listen/Stretching Out, Edsel EDCD362, 1993
+ CD: Emergency 999 - singles and previously unreleased tracks, Castle NEMCD483, 2000
45s:
Can't Let Her Go/I'm The One (Pye 7N 15934) 1965
Baby Don't Push Me/Everything's Gonna Be Alright (Pye 7N 17084) 1966
Headline News/Mister Pleasure (Pye 7N 17148) 1966
Emergency 999/Settle Down (Pye 7N 17192) 1966
Gonna Fix You Good (Everytime You're Bad)/I Really Really Care (Pye 7N 17256) 1967
We Can Help You/Magic Hankerchief (Music Factory CUB 1) 1967
Toyland/Technicolour Dream (MGM 1355) 1967
Story Book/Little Lesley (MGM 1387) 1968
Still As Stone/Wrong Idea (Deram DM 259) 1969
Gypsy Girl/All I Can (Deram DM 278) 1969
Pyramid/Crash Landing (Island WIP 6091) 1971
Rockford Files/I Don't Know (CBS 3721) 1975



 01.Toyland (2:36)

02.Magic Handkerchief (3:20)

 03.Mutiny (3:06)

04.Little Lesley (2:14)

05.All Along The Watchtower (3:11)

 06.Sally Green (3:21)

 07.Penny For Your Throughts (3:42)

 08.Story Book (3:17)

09.Technicolour Dream (2:57)

10.We Can Help You (2:30)

 11.Love Is A Beautiful Thing (3:36)

 12.Violin Shop (3:04)

 13.You're Not In My Class (3:36)

 14.My Girl The Month Of May (2:44)

15.Technicolour Dream (single version) (2:57)

16.Toyland (single version) (2:54)

Barry Ryan - The Singles


1. Eloise (5:44)

2. Love Is Love (4:54)

3. My Mama (3:53)

4. The Colour Of My Love (2:49)

5. The Hunt (3:02)

6. Magical Spiel (3:55)

7. Kitsch (4:20)

8. Give Me A Sign (3:05)

9. We Did It Together (3:04)

10. Today (2:43)

11. It Is Written (3:45)

12. Red Man (3:24)

13. Canґt Let You Go (3:00)

14. Zeit macht nur vor dem Teufel (2:49)

15. Sanctus Sanctus Hallelujah (4:26)

16. Iґm Sorry Susan (2:30)

17. Donґt Bring Me Your Heartaches (2:44)

18. Have Pity On The Boy (2:36)

19. I Love Her (2:30)

20. I Love How You Love Me (2:50)

21. Have You Ever Loved Somebody (2:52)

22. Missy Missy (2:41)

23. Keep It Out Of Sight (2:48)

24. Claire (2:13)

Friday, September 24, 2010

Barry Ryan - Love Is Love


The son of pop singer Marion Ryan, Ryan and his twin brother Paul began to perform at the age of 16. In 1965 they signed a recording contract with Decca and, under the name of "Paul & Barry Ryan", brought out singles such as "Don't Bring Me Your Heartaches" (1965), "Have Pity on the Boy" (1966) and "Missy Missy" (1966)
When it turned out that Barry's brother, allegedly on the verge of a nervous breakdown, was unable to cope any longer with all the stress connected with show business, the two brothers decided on a new division of labour: Paul would write the songs which Barry would then interpret as a solo artist. Their greatest success as a composer-singer duo, now for MGM Records, was "Eloise" (1968), melodramatic and heavily orchestrated. Later singles included "Love Is Love" (also 1968), "The Hunt" (1969), "Magical Spiel" (1970), and "Kitsch" (1970).

"Love Is Love", written by Barry himself, and released in the United Kingdom during February 1969 was not a great success in his own country. However combining sales from Germany, Austria and the Netherlands, "Love is Love" sold a million copies by August 1969, the second million-seller for Ryan.



Ryan was also very popular in Germany. Promoted by BRAVO, the German youth magazine, Ryan also recorded a number of songs in German, for example "Die Zeit macht nur vor dem Teufel halt" ("Time Only Stops at The Devil").

Ryan stopped performing in the early 1970s. There were rumours that Ryan had had an accident in the recording studio. Supposedly he suffered serious burn wounds in the face and could no longer appear in public. However, he made a comeback in the late 1990s when a two CD set with his, and his brother's, old songs was published. Ryan was also part of the 'Solid Silver 60s Tour' of the UK in 2003, singing "Eloise" backed by The Dakotas.
.

Barry Ryan - Love Is Love (Hit History )

01 - Eloise

02 - Sanctus, Sanctus Hallelujah
03 - Loneliest Night of the Year
04 - Magical Spiel
05 - It is written
06 - The Hunt
07 - Love is Love
08 - Who puts the lights out
09 - Give me a sign
10 - Its a wild world
11 - i'm sorry Susan
12 - We did it together
13 - Can't let you go
14 - Today
15 - The color of my love
16 - Kitsch
17 - Goodbye ( Spectrum 554 117 )  1968
18 - Zeit macht nur vor dem Teufel halt ( Polydor 2001 207 )  1971


Bee Gees - This Is Where I Came In (2001)



Every time the brothers Gibb make another LP, the word is that they are going to return to the brilliant, crystalline pop with which they began in 1962-1972. It does make for a tasty proposition: Masters of early-'60s Merseybeat and late-'60s psych-pop, the Aussie teen sensations returned to their native England and wrote and recorded 12 indelible rock/pop hits from 1967-1972, all with fantastic three-part harmonies, as well as seven inspired LPs. So when one notes this album's title and the cover photo of the Bee Gees as teens, it's clear what the Gibbs intend, but they come up woefully short. Probably the best LP they've given in three decades, since Trafalgar and To Whom It May Concern, but that still says so pitifully little.


 It's shot down by '90s/'00s overproduction and Barry Gibb's penchant for oversinging; even when he writes a whimsical little "When I'm 64"/"Honey Pie" dance-hall pop tune such as "Technicolor Dreams," he still can't stop himself from trilling with all that bogus, phony air, where once he nailed such material with his natural voice. Worse, the LP is sabotaged by limpid, edge-less, polite production, so sanitized and squishy and mushy it's like aural wallpaper. The guitars have no bang, the keyboards are facile, the drums too mechanical, the bass too relegated to the background. In short, it's so over-stylized, there's no longer any there there. This is too bad, because their old songwriting knack isn't entirely absent. There's no "World," "Lemons Never Forget," or "Please Read Me," but the highlight title track racked up some deserved adult contemporary play (and some great, vintage singing from Robin Gibb), and the verses of "She Keeps on Coming" and "Walking on Air," and the choruses and bridges of "Wedding Day" and "Man in the Middle" are fine -- showing that with less sappy production, less overdramatizing, and/or a younger, grittier backing band, these three nice men might have been justly hailed again for something more than being has-been heritage artists. They can still sing instinctive harmonies like few others, and they can still write, but this is just another bad Bee Gees record.

01 - This Is Where I Came In
02 - She Keeps on Coming
03 - Sacred Trust
04 - Wedding Day
05 - Man in the Middle
06 - D?©j?  Vu
07 - Technicolor Dreams
08 - Walking on Air
09 - Loose Talk Costs Lives
10 - Embrace
11 - The Extra Mile

Bobby & Laurie - Bobby & Laurie (Go!!) & Hitch Hiker (1965-66)

The Paupers - Ellis Island (1968)


Formed 1965 in Toronto, Ontario, Canada
The Paupers were originally formed as the Spats in 1965 by lead guitarist Chuck Beale, bassist Denny Gerrard, guitarist Bill Misener and vocalist Skip Prokop. In 1966, Adam Mitchell replaced Misener and in 1968 bassist Brad Cambell joined the band after Gerrard departed. After two albums recorded in the late '60s, Magic People and Ellis Island, the Paupers broke up in 1969. Adam Mitchell went on to release a solo record in 1979, Redhead in Trouble, for Warner Bros..


Ronn 'Skip' Prokop (drums)
Denny Gerrard (bass)
Bill Marion [aka Bill Misener] (guitar)
Adam Mitchell (guitar; replaced Misener)
Chuck Beal (lead guitar)
Brad Campbell (bass; replaced Gerrard and was replaced by Gerrard)
Mel O'Brien (replaced Gerrard)
John Orde (keyboards)
Roz Park (drums; replaced Prokop)
Wally Cameron (drums; replaced Park)
Peter Sterback (organ; replaced Orde)
James Houston (drums; replaced Prokop)
Bill King (drums; replaced Park)


***

Following the tepid response to their 1967 debut LP Magic People, and the near-mythical meltdown at the Monterrey Pop Festival that followed it, the Paupers went back to Toronto to regroup. Essentially broke, travel-weary, and on the verge of break-up - bassist Denny Gerrard was given the boot for his constant drug use and errant absenteeism, and co-leader Skip Prokop even considered bailing - the band played an impressive set at CNE Stadium in support of the Soft Machine and the Jimi Hendrix Experience. After shelving three tracks cut in Nashville, the lads headed to New York in early May to record that "difficult second album" as it were, with producer Elliot Mazer bringing in Al Kooper on keyboards for the sessions.


The result, despite the former Blood Sweat and Tears member's best efforts, was an unfocused, patchy affair that lacked the occasional brilliance of their first. The menacing acid guitar of opener 'Southdown Road' seems to portend great things to come, but from there Ellis Island fragments into a bit of an incoherent mess. The choice of Adam Mitchell's folksy ballad 'Cairo Hotel' as the single is baffling to say the least. Ditto for the inclusion of flimsy ballads like 'Another Man's Hair on My Razor' and the country-tinged 'Can't Go On'. Still, when the Paupers choose to rock, as on the aforementioned lead-off track and the frighteningly electric 'Numbers', the results are occasionally gripping, if not exactly stellar. But pair that with the cheesy AM-fare of 'Juliana' and the lethargic 'Ask Her Again', where drummer Prokop curiously plucks the Japanese koto (a gift from Peter, Paul and Mary after a tour of Japan), and it is easy to see how Ellis Island would ultimately sound the band’s death knell.

Prokop left soon after, while guitarists Mitchell and Chuck Beal, saddled with $40,000 in debts, dutifully carried on for a year or so before jumping ship themselves. As for the talented Prokop, he would emerge the following year stronger than ever, later leading his soul-brass behemoth Lighthouse into the charts on both sides of the border with the likes of 'One Fine Morning' and 'Sunny Days' ~ http://www.canuckistanmusic.com/index.php?maid=178

1. The Paupers - South Down Road (8:21)

2. The Paupers - Cairo Hotel (4:07)

3. The Paupers - Cant Go On (3:29)

4. The Paupers - Another Mans Hair On My Razor (4:03)

5. The Paupers - Numbers (5:28)

6. The Paupers - Oh That She Might (4:47)

7. The Paupers - Yes I Know (6:07)

8. The Paupers - Ask Her Again (4:13)

9. The Paupers - Julliana (2:36)
 
llis Island, the second album by the Paupers, contains a front cover color photo of the four bandmembers inserted on a Sgt. Pepper-style collage by Ollie Alpert. Inside the LP is a very psychedelic black-and-white picture of the group, which also features 16 single photos of Cambell, Mitchell, Prokop, and Beale -- photos which you can cut out to make a flick book. Like a trendy flicker ring with more sustain, you can see the musicians move in the optical illusion if you follow the instructions. Problem with this concept was that there was no Andy Warhol to splash his name on the cover and get the idea some attention à la the famous banana cover. If Verve had difficulty understanding the Mothers of Invention and the Velvet Underground, where the Paupers fit in was anybody's guess. Adam Mitchell takes seven of the nine lead vocals as the band touches on a variety of psychedelic styles, beginning with "South Down Road." This opening track plays like Procol Harum battling the Electric Prunes -- it's eight and a half minutes of acid blues on an interesting album by an interesting crew. Mitchell's originals, four co-written with Skip Prokop, are an odd bunch. It seems Procol Harum won the war on the first song because "Cairo Hotel" sounds like they've now taken on Kaleidoscope U.K. in a battle of the bands. The intellectual display quickly disappears when the country comedy of "Another Man's Hair on My Razor" brings side one to a close. OK, it's amusing, but despite all the Sgt. Pepper trappings, there's no "Lucy in the Sky" in these grooves. Al Kooper guest stars on keyboards, and maybe they should have taken his "This Diamond Ring" and jumped the gun on Frijid Pink by reinventing that pop classic with a wall of distortion. Side two's opener, "Numbers," could be "Eight Miles High" meets Simon & Garfunkel's "Fakin' It." "Numbers," with its Strawberry Alarm Clock guitars and Janis Joplin bassist-to-be Brad Campbell singing lead, is jarring, but that's the rule on this album. Campbell would go on to track I Got Dem Ol' Kozmic Blues Again Mama! and Pearl with Joplin, as well as Joplin in Concert. That live album was collected and assembled by Elliot Mazer with some of the tracks recorded by Fred Catero, both men involved with the Paupers' Ellis Island project. Interesting to note the credible resumés involved in this esoteric project. Skip Prokop's one solo composition is also his one vocal. The man who would perform on Live Adventures of Al Kooper and Mike Bloomfield and create the band Lighthouse does an off-key Keith Moon-style vocal over a dreamy track, the Small Faces phase shifting meets...you guessed it...Procol Harum. This track is minus the fuzz guitars, instead employing the strings, piano, and effects, giving the listener some breathing room. Adam Mitchell takes the vocals back from here on out -- it's a dramatic "Yes I Know" written by Campbell, Prokop, and Mitchell, six minutes and 23 seconds of more psychedelic blues. This music would've been a blessing for the latter-day Blues Magoos and Electric Prunes, groups who moved away from these types of sounds, much to the chagrin of their fans. Without the hit singles those groups enjoyed, the Paupers' Ellis Island never got the attention it kind of deserved. It is both vintage and obscure, which could make it quite collectable at some point in time.~ Joe Viglione, All Music Guide

The Ugly Ducklings - Somewhere Outside (1967)



Along with the Haunted, the Ugly Ducklings were probably the best Canadian rock group of the mid-'60s. Like the Haunted, they drew heavily from the Rolling Stones -- as well as bits of the Kinks and Pretty Things -- for their raunchy R&B/rock sound, but had the edge over the Haunted in that they wrote stronger original material. Scoring a national hit with "Nothin'," the Toronto band recorded an album in 1966 and a few singles in 1966 and 1967, perhaps gaining their greatest international exposure when their "Just In Case You're Wondering" made it onto one of the Pebbles compilations.

Nineteen sixty-six was the year pop's voice cracked, when its squeaky clean Beatles complexion broke out in the pimply scruff of garage rock all over North America. From the Chocolate Watchband out in San Jose and the 13th Floor Elevators in Texas to the Unrelated Segments in Detroit and the Remains in Boston, a plethora of scrawny kids fumbled with chords on their used Telecasters while aping Mick's already affected snarls. Canada had its share of garage/psych bands whose discs now orbit the stratosphere in collectors' values. And whereas Montreal's the Haunted can lay claim to both the coolest single (the local smash '1-2-5') and the priciest vinyl (four figures for their 1967 album), the Ugly Ducklings emerge as the better of the two, scoring hits on Toronto's legendary CHUM-AM radio station with their debut platter, 'Nothin', eventually reaching number 18 in 1966, and 'Gaslight', peaking even higher the following year.


The Duckies, surfing on the success of 'Nothin', even opened for the Rolling Stones at (Toronto's hockey shrine) Maple Leaf Gardens in front of 15,000, no doubt providing them with fodder for a lifetime of middle-age boasts on their local pub nights.

In 1965, however, the Ugly Ducklings were little more than a teenage Stones cover band with the cheeky monicker the Strolling Bones (for what its worth, perhaps a more apt name for Mick and crew these days), but a year later they had changed their names and begun penning their own songs. They struck both chords and pose well, especially with rhythm-guitarist Glynn Bell's blond mophead making him the spitting image of Brian Jones and no doubt upping his groupie cachet a few notches.

Released in early 1967 but containing the band's three 1966 singles, Somewhere Outside skirts the cusp of '66 r'n'b and '67 psychedelia. The LP opens with 'Nothin' and its prototypical garage riff, allegedly recorded on a two-track machine for $300 and pushed into regular rotation just a few weeks later by local deejays. Other tracks, such as the revved-up 'She Ain't No Use to Me' and the searing 'Just in Case You Wonder', their third single, capture on vinyl the hegemony of cool the Ducklings had over the Yorkville scene in Toronto at the time. Still other tracks, like the Rascalesque, harmonica-tinged 'Not for Long', add a quieter balance, while the closer 'Windy City (Noise at the North End)', an acid-blues rave-up, echoes Paul Butterfield's excursions of the same year.

The Ugly Ducklings regrouped in 1980 on the wave of punk to release the humdrum Pain is Alright on Razor records. An eponymous long-player (with a brutally unimaginative cover) that same year compiled the essential tracks on Somewhere Outside along with miscellaneous tracks and their final singles 'Gaslight' and 'Epilogue'. But it wasn't until 1998 that Unidisc mercifully reissued this sweetly remastered CD with its original artwork, front and back, as a low-price disc - no bonus tracks, no added filler - thus making skeets out of all those previous bootleg versions. ~  http://www.canuckistanmusic.com/index.php?maid=9

1. Ugly Ducklings - Nothin' (2:28)

2. Ugly Ducklings - Postman's Fancy (2:24)

3. Ugly Ducklings - Windy City (5:58)

4. Ugly Ducklings - Do What You Want (2:45)

5. Ugly Ducklings - She Ain't No Use To Me (3:03)

6. Ugly Ducklings - Just In Case You Wonder (2:28)

7. Ugly Ducklings - Not For Long (2:57)

8. Ugly Ducklings - I Ain't Gonna Eat Out My Heart Anymore (3:00)

9. Ugly Ducklings - Mama Keep Your Big Mouth Shut (3:01)

10. Ugly Ducklings - 10:30 Train (2:29)

11. Ugly Ducklings - Just A Thought (2:41)
 
The Ugly Ducklings were probably the best known Canadian garage rock group of the mid-'60s. Formed in famed Toronto's Yorkville area in 1965, the band flourished in the many coffeehouses around the Yorkville district as a Rolling Stones cover band before becoming the Ugly Ducklings and attracting the attention of the local Yorkville Records label. The band recorded a single, Nothin', that became a Canadian hit and opened for the Rolling Stones in 1966 when the band played Toronto's Maple Leaf Gardens. The band members were quickly becoming local heroes and in 1967 the album Somewhere Outside was released on the small independent Yorkville label. The album contained nine original compositions as well as two cover songs. The band drew heavily from the Rolling Stones, the Kinks, and the Pretty Things style with a raunchy R&B/rock sound. The album sold well in the Toronto area but due to lack of national distribution the band failed to break out across the rest of the country. It wasn't until many years later, after the band broke up, that the album became a collectors item and now original pressings of the Somewhere Outside on the Yorkville label fetch hundreds of dollars between collectors. The popularity of the album has lead to it being bootlegged in many European countries over the years but most versions suffer from poor sound. This legitimate reissue by Unidisc has been digitally mastered for superb sound quality and is available at a budget price complete with the original album graphics.~ by Keith Pettipas

V.A.- Brum Beat


1. The Senators - She's a Mod (2:10)

2. The Cescendos - Gandy Dancer (1:57)

3. The Snakes - Silvery Moon (2:33)

4. The Sinners - Sleepwalk (1:55)

5. Frankie Williams & The Highcards - The Lady is A Tramp (2:02)

6. The Fortunes - Cygnet Twitch (2:12)

7. Mark Stuart & The Crestas - St. Louis Blues (2:37)

8. The Grashoppers - In Love (2:17)

9. The Two Corvettes - Runaway Guitar (2:33)

10. The Solitares - Over You (2:51)

11. The Congressman - The Shuck (1:52)

12. Roy Everett & The Climbers - I Believe (2:36)

13. The Renegades - Hungarian Mod (2:12)

14. Cal Denning & The Cimmarons - Pretend (2:31)

15. The Strangers - What Away (2:44)

16. The Mountain Kings - You Left Me Alone (2:04)

17. Dave Lacey & The Corvettes - Clap Your Hands (2:02)

18. The Blue Stars - I Saw You Yesterday (2:23)

19. The Kaven Four - So Glad (2:15)

20. The Mountain Kings - Don't You Know (1:40)

21. The Kaven Four - Stop Your Crying Little Girl (2:04)

22. The Blue Stars - Your's Forever (1:47)

23. The Mountain Kings - There'll Be Times (2:28)

24. The Strangers - It's Not to Late (2:20)

25. 25 - The Blue Stars - School Day

26. 26 - The Kaven Four - I Want Too Dance

27. 27 - The Strangers - Bye Bye Johnnie

28. 28 - Dave Lacey & The The Corvettes - Unlicky Am i

29. 29 - The Strangers - Return To Mary

30. 30 - The Mountain Kings - Can't You See

Wednesday, September 22, 2010

Thee Midniters - Greatest Hits (2003)


Indisputably the greatest Latino rock band of the '60s, Thee Midniters took their inspiration from both the British Invasion sound of the Rolling Stones and the more traditional R&B that they were weaned on in their native Los Angeles. Hugely popular in East Los Angeles, the group, featuring both guitars and horns, had a local hit (and a small national one) with their storming version of "Land of a Thousand Dances" in 1965.

Much of their repertoire featured driving, slightly punkish rock/R&B, yet lead singer Willie Garcia also had a heartbreaking delivery on slow and steamy ballads. In the manner of other local phenomenon's like the Rationals (from Detroit), they were equally talented at whipping up a storm with up-tempo numbers and offering smoldering romantic soul tunes. After a few albums and an interesting detour into social consciousness with the single "Chicano Power," the group split in the early '70s, though their legacy is felt in later popular L.A. Latino rock acts like Los Lobos.
01 - Land Of A Thousand Dances (2:27)

02 - Whittier Blvd. (2:31)

03 - That's All (3:09)

04 - Empty Heart (2:35)

05 - I Need Someone (3:04)

06 - Giving Up On Love (2:49)

07 - Sad Girl (2:53)

08 - Brother Where Are You (4:10)

09 - It'll Never Be Over For Me (3:24)

10 - Love Special Delivery (2:16)

11 - Are You Angry (2:16)

12 - Don't Go Away (2:49)

13 - Everybody Needs Somebody To Love (2:46)

14 - Dreaming Casually (3:07)

15 - Never Knew I Had It So Bad (2:36)

16 - Making Ends Meet (2:38)

17 - Welcome Home Darling (2:20)

18 - The Town I Live In (3:22)

19 - Jump, Jive And Harmonize (2:31)

20 - Chicano Power (2:59)
Before the release of this 2003 compilation, the absence of a Thee Midniters CD collection was one of the most egregious omissions in the catalog of 1960s rock on compact disc. This 20-track anthology happily rectifies that situation, including everything from the fine 14-song 1983 Rhino LP Best of Thee Midniters, and adding half a dozen other worthy selections.
All of the band's very best cuts are here, whether it's the soul covers ("Land of a Thousand Dances," "Sad Girl," "Giving Up on Love," "The Town I Live In," "It'll Never Be Over for Me"); raucous bluesy garage rock ("Whittier Blvd.," "Jump, Jive and Harmonize," "Love Special Delivery," "Empty Heart"); or tasty romantic soul-pop originals ("Dreaming Casually," "Making Ends Meet"). There are, too, a few songs that sample the unpredictable directions into which the group occasionally flew, like the ghostly cover of jazz singer Oscar Brown, Jr.'s "Brother Where Are You?" and the Latin jazz-rock fusion of "Chicano Power." Audio purists might regret that some surface noise can be heard as the music was mastered from the best vinyl sources possible, rather than the original tapes, but really the vinyl noise is very faint and not a significant hindrance. It's also too bad that enjoyable oddities-rarities from the Thee Midniters discography like the psychedelic "Breakfast on the Grass," the Spanish ballad "Tu Despedida," and the searing instrumental "Thee Midnite Feeling" didn't make the cut. But given a 20-track cutoff point, it's hard to argue with the selection on this worthy summary of one of the finest 1960s American rock bands never to have a big national hit. ~ Richie Unterberger




The Phinx - Sometimes (1968)


Unknown 60s garage band, who were once believed to be the Gants in disguise.



As part of his tax-scam activities, the legendary 'crazy cajun' Huey P Meaux reached into his vast vault of Texas '60s recordings and came up with a bunch of demos (?) from an obscure Houston group. Once assumed to be the Gants under an alias, this does feature a Gants cover ("My Baby Don't Care") which is the most garage-sounding thing here, unless you count the amusing "I Feel A Whole Lot Better" with altered, simplified lyrics and a long section where the guitar-break apparently went AWOL. All over a neat slice of circa 1967 organ/guitar teenbeat, given a weird twist by the tax scam angle. None of the tracks can be found anywhere else, and have never been reissued. Mediocre pressing but clean-looking, with a slight warp which does not affect play ~ http://members.tripod.com/lysergia_2/RenaissanceFair/RenaissanceFair_cat.htm



1. The Phinx - you make me feel good (2:29)

2. The Phinx - it takes friends (2:36)

3. The Phinx - sometimes (2:23)

4. The Phinx - mama lou (2:34)

5. The Phinx - feel a whole lot better (2:13)

6. The Phinx - stormy weather (2:20)

7. The Phinx - my baby don't care (2:45)

8. The Phinx - never so right (2:35)

9. The Phinx - eve of destruction (2:16)

10. The Phinx - duke of earl (2:06)

The Guess Who - Shakin' All Over/Hey Ho! /It's Time (3 Classic Albums - 1 Great CD) 2003




Editorial Reviews by amazon.com

Product Description

Aside from the magical garage rock classic of "Shakin' All Over"(originally recorded by Johnny Kidd & The Pirates) by The Guess Who, the other thirty one gems that make up this wonderful new collection are probably being heard for the very first time by many of their fans. In 1965, when the first rudiments of this superstar act were just beginning to soar into the American and Canadian charts with the smash single "Shakin' All Over", three Canadian only released albums would follow over the next few years. Friday Music is proud to be issuing these fantastic three albums on one new compact disc for the first time anywhere for your listening pleasure.


Their debut album Shakin' All Over includes some of the finest musicianship to ever be recorded in their homeland of Canada. Other tracks like "I've Been Away" and "Like I Love You" make this first effort a memorable one. A very pleasing half hour of Canadian Rock 60's style that has stood the test of time. Even to this day, The Guess Who still perform the title track in concert.


Hey Ho (What You Do To Me) continues The Guess Who's sojourn with an almost English Invasion approach, which works extremely well on songs like the harmonica laden "I Should Have Realized" and Randy Bachman's stellar instrumental "Made In England." A nicely balanced album with a surprising rendition of Bruce Johnston's five star ballad "Don't Be Scared." Rescued from vinyl oblivion, Bachman's remastering job really shines on this second effort.

A real find in this collection is the Canadian garage band classic It's Time. This amazing third chapter from this superstar band also introduced the world to the great voice of Burton Cummings. Along with founders Randy Bachman on guitar, the ever talented Jim Kale on bass and jazz rock drum style of Gary Peterson, these four gentlemen delivered some of the finest tunes ever with tracks like "One Day", the bluesy "Clock On The Wall" and the chain gang rock of "Seven Long Days." Never released on vinyl in the States, this newly remastered version should make a lot of Guess Who fans rejoice.

Shakin' All Over / Hey Ho (What You Do To Me) / It's Time were three definitive rocking chapters in the legendary career of The Guess Who. These recordings reveal a snapshot in Canadian musical history, never to be repeated again by anyone, but to be emulated by many. Their music is played on every classic rock and oldies station in the world, and fortunately for all of us, they continue to thrill crowds with their shopping list of number ones from multi-platinum albums recorded over the years. Now, you have your own eighty minute concert to enjoy courtesy of The Guess Who. Play it loud!


SHAKIN' ALL OVER-1965
1. Guess Who - Shakin' all over (2:43)

2. Guess Who - Like I love you (1:59)

3. Guess Who - Till we kissed (where havo you been) (2:37)

4. Guess Who - Shy Guy (2:27)

5. Guess Who - Shot of Rhythm N' Blues (2:07)

6. Guess Who - I want you to love me (2:20)

7. Guess Who - I'd rather be alone (2:10)

8. Guess Who - I've been away (2:08)

9. Guess Who - Tuff E Nuff (2:33)

10. Guess Who - Turn around and walk away (2:30)

HEY-HO 1965

1. Guess Who - Hey Ho (2:09)

2. Guess Who - Don't be scared (2:12)

3. Guess Who - Goodnight Goodnight (2:30)

4. Guess Who - I should have realized (2:05)

5. Guess Who - Hurting each other (2:16)

6. Guess Who - Made in England (3:01)

7. Guess Who - I'll keep coming back (1:52)

8. Guess Who - Stop teasing me (2:35)

9. Guess Who - Could this be Love (2:08)

10. Guess Who - Theme from a Music Box (2:13)


IT'S TIME 1966
1. Guess Who - Alright (2:21)

2. Guess Who - One Day (2:01)

3. Guess Who - Gonna search (2:27)

4. Guess Who -  Guess I'll find a Place (2:24)

5. Hey Ho - And she's mine (2:40)

6. Guess Who -  As (2:23)

7. Guess Who - You know he did (2:03)

8. Guess Who - Baby Feelin' (2:00)

9. Guess Who - Clock on the Wall (3:01)

10. Guess Who - Don't act so bad (3:09)

11. Guess Who - Believe me (2:53)

12. Guess Who - Seven long Years (2:45)

Before the Guess Who became one of the top album rock acts of the '70s, they were a darn good British Invasion-influenced garage band. This set features the three records they made in the mid-'60s: Shakin' All Over, Hey Ho (What You Do to Me), and It's Time for the small Canadian label Quality. Most of the songs on the set are Beatles-inspired but not derivative. Chad Allan and Randy Bachman wrote strong melodies, and the band usually sounds inspired and full of verve. They would have been a fun band to see live, sure to have the kids on the dancefloor. Apart from the Beatles, the band jumps around, hitting all kinds of sounds like rockabilly ("Tuff E Nuff"), surf ("Made in England"), blue-eyed soul ("Hey Ho," "Hurting Each Other"), Motown ("Could This Be Love"), and pop balladry ("Turn Around and Walk Away"). Their version of "Shakin' All Over" is just as good as Johnny Kidd's original, by the way. The third album, It's Time, is the most successful as the band welcomed Burton Cummings into the band and toughened up their sound considerably, drawing more from garage rock than the British Invasion. Cummings' voice adds a new element of a commanding vocal presence on barnburning rockers like "Alright" and "Gonna Search" and moody ballads like "Seven Long Years" and "Clock on the Wall." Bachman wrote some great songs for the record too like the chiming folk-rocker "And She's Mine" and the wonderfully aching "One Day." This record alone makes the set worth purchasing for garage rock aficionados. That you can get all three records together makes it even better. It is a toss up between this and Sundazed's great Shakin' All Over collection. That one probably wins out due to the presence of two unreleased tracks and their fine cover of Buffalo Springfield's "Flying on the Ground Is Wrong." Still, you can't go wrong with either. ~ Tim Sendra, Rovi

Simon Stokes & The Nighthawks - Simon Stokes & The Nighthawks (1968)




Raised by his grandparents in Reading, MA, Simon Stokes was seen by his peers as a loner or solitary child. By the age of ten he had become a sleepwalker. His grandfather would often take Stokes to see the Harry D. Stokes Orchestra, which was his introduction to music. In his teenage years, Stokes became influenced by the blues, often listening to a local DJ named Sid Symphony and attending all-night concerts. Stokes saw Big Mama Thornton and Hank Ballard among countless others, each having an impact on him. After entering a local songwriting contest and winning the top prize, Stokes ventured to Los Angeles in his early 20s. Beginning in 1965, Stokes recorded a number of 45s under names such as the Flower Children and Heathen Angels. At the same time, Stokes became a staff writer at Elektra Records. Forming a band called the Nighthawks, Stokes and MC5 signed to Elektra on the same day.
In 1973, Stokes released his debut album, Incredible Simon Stokes, on Spindizzy Records. The album was a psychedelic blues record in the vein of Captain Beefhart. That same year, Stokes released Simon Stokes & the Black Whip Thrill Band on Spindizzy. The album's cover was reportedly the first banned album cover in the United States. Featuring S&M scenes as well as females being whipped, the controversy created a cult following for the musician, especially among biker groups. In 1977, Buzzard of Love was released. After this album, Stokes basically went underground, releasing no material for nearly two decades. In 1996, he returned to music circles by releasing Right to Fly which he did with '60s counter-culture icon Timothy Leary. In 2002, Stokes released a country-rock album titled Honky. Featuring members of the Bellrays and Wayne Kramer, the album's sound was compared to outlaw singers such as Waylon Jennings and David Allan Coe.
~ Jason MacNeil, Rovi


Simon Stokes (vocals)
Don Senneville (lead guitar)
Randall Keith (guitar)
Bob Ledger (bass)
Joe Yuele (drums)

" ... Саймон Стоукс... Лунатик, одиночка и большой любитель классических фильмов про монстров, которые так любил его дед - руководитель биг-бэнда Гэрри Д.Стоукс.
Еще подростком Саймон увлекся блюзом и ритм-н-блюзом, слушая легендарного ди-джея Симфони Сида. В 1965 Стоукс под именами Flower Children и Heathen Angels записывает в Лос Анджелесе несколько сорокопяток. Затем он образует группу The Nighthawks и получает работу штатного сочинителя песен на фирме грамзаписи Elektra в тот же день, когда Elektra подписала контракты с такими монстрами, как MC5 и The Stooges!
Саймон Стоукс создал этот психо-блюзо-хардроковый альбом в 1968 под влиянием творчества Captain Beefheart и тотчас стал культовой фигурой для всех штатовских байкеров.
Его следующий альбом The Black Whip Thrill Band, на обложке которого красовалась фотография в стиле садо-мазо, и споры о которой не утихают и по сей день, только увеличила число его поклонников. Считается, что это была первая обложка с пластинки, запрещенная в Штатах. Затем последовал альбом 1977 года Buzzard of Love, совместные записи с наркотическим гуру Тимоти Лири, саундтреки к фильмам и знаменитые своими дебошами турне по Америке. А потом Стоукс залег на дно и не записывался почти два десятка лет...
Совсем недавно, в 2002 году, он все-таки вернулся для того, чтобы записать со своими давними поклонниками Уэйном Креймером и группой Bellrays альбом Honky... "

1. Simon Stokes & The Nighthawks - Big City Blues (2:49)
2. Simon Stokes & The Nighthawks - Where Are You Going (2:53)
3. Simon Stokes & The Nighthawks - Jambalaya (On The Bayou) (3:03)
4. Simon Stokes & The Nighthawks - Sugar Ann (2:45)
5. Simon Stokes & The Nighthawks - Southern Girl (2:15)
6. Simon Stokes & The Nighthawks - Which Way (5:43)
7. Simon Stokes & The Nighthawks - Voodoo Woman (2:27)
8. Simon Stokes & The Nighthawks - Rhode Island Red (3:19)
9. Simon Stokes & The Nighthawks - Cajun Lil (1:48)
10. Simon Stokes & The Nighthawks - Down In Mexico (3:13)
11. Simon Stokes & The Nighthawks - You've Been In (3:52)
12. Simon Stokes & The Nighthawks - Ride On Angel (4:02)

Simon Stokes the crazy hard psych rocker par excellence. Grandson of big band leader Harry D. Stokes, Simon Stokes was known as a loner, sleepwalker, and fan of the classic monster movies his grandfather loved. As a teenager, Stokes became obsessed with the blues and R&B via the legendary DJ Symphony Sid. Beginning in 1965, Stokes recorded a number of 45s in LA as the Flower Children and Heathen Angels. He then got a deal as a staff writer at Elektra the same day they signed his friends The MC5 and The Stooges! That’s not it for impressive connections…
Simon Stokes made this album, beyond Captain Beefheart in the psychedelic blues stakes, in 1968, and became a cult figure with Biker groups everywhere! His next album, "The Black Whip Thrill Band", with it's outrageous S&M cover, caused a controversy which refuses to die down even today and made his cult following even larger!
Subsequent recordings with Timothy Leary and others followed, as well as film soundtracks and legendary debauched tours, until Stokes went underground. More recently, in 2002, he returned to form with the album "Honky", recorded with long-time fans Wayne Kramer and members of the Bellrays. must for all fans of MC5, The Stooges, Captain Beefheart, and heavy psychedelic blues everywhere!

Love Afair - New Day (1970)



The second Love Affair album was credited simply to L.A. The band had recorded a progressive album, inspired by Jethro Tull, and felt that a name change was necessary in order to attract more mature audiences.

Группа образована в 1 9 6 6 году в Великобритании. Стив Зллис - вокал Морган Фишер - клавишные Рекс Брейли - гитара Мик Джексон - бас-гитара Морис Бэйкон - ударные
Love Affair начинали как любительская группа, выступая в пабах и ночных клубах Лондона (у музыкантов время от времени возникали проблемы с полицией, так как певцу в 1 9 6 6 году еще не исполнилось 1 6 лет). Вскоре Морган Фишер покинул группу, а его место занял Линтон Гест - в новом составе Love Affair записали композицию Роберта Найта "Everlasting Love, которая принесла музыкантам контракт с фирмой CBS Records. В январе 1 9 6 8 года песня возглавила хит-парад Великобритании, и Love Affair мгновенно стали кумирами подростков всего мира. Менеджментом коллектива занимался Мо Бэйкон, отец барабанщика группы. Записав еще несколько хит-синглов (Rainbow Valley", "А Day Without Love", "One Road" и "Bringing On Back The Good Times"), в конце 6 9 -х годов Love Affair распались. Вокалист организовал новую группу Ellis, Морган Фишер присоединился к Mott The Hoople, а Морис Бейкон переквалифицировался в издателя музыкальной литературы.
Дискография:
Everlasting (CBS) - 1 9 6 9 New Day (CBS) - 1 9 7 0 Greatest Hits (Columbia) - 1 9 8 5 Everlasting Hits (CBS) - 1 9 9 3 The Everlasting (Columbia) - 1 9 9 6 No Strings Every (Angel Air) - 2 0 0 0. "


Personnel
* Steve Ellis (born Stephen John Ellis, 7 April 1950, Edgware, London) — (vocals)
* Rex Brayley (born Rex Charles Brayley, 3 January 1948, London) — (guitar)
* Lynton Guest (born 28 November 1951, Leicester) — (keyboards 1967 to 1968)
* Morgan Fisher (born Stephen Morgan Fisher, 1 January 1950, Mayfair, London) — (keyboardist from 1968 to 1971)
* Maurice Bacon (born 26 January 1952, Southgate, London) — (drummer)
* Mick Jackson (born Michael Jackson, 27 January 1950, Bradford, Yorkshire) — (bass)

Their first single, "She Smiled Sweetly", written by Mick Jagger and Keith Richards, released on Decca Records flopped, but they reached the top of the UK Singles Chart in January 1968 with "Everlasting Love". By this time the group had relocated to CBS Records. The song was first recorded by Robert Knight, whose version had reached No. 13 in the Billboard Hot 100 chart in the autumn of 1967, and it was previously offered to the Marmalade, who turned it down as they thought it too pop-oriented for them.
Ellis had a similar vocal style to Steve Marriott of the Small Faces, and the production was similar to a Motown soul record. Controversy ensued when the group admitted they had not played on the record, but that all the work was done by session musicians, although such a practice had long since been common - and has continued ever since. Ironically their first recording of the song, produced by Muff Winwood, had featured them playing all the instruments. But the record label rejected this version, in favour of one produced by Mike Smith, recorded with a recording studio rhythm section, strings, brass, flutes and backing vocalists, arranged by Keith Mansfield - and Ellis the only member of the group to be heard.
Four further Top 20 hits followed, "Rainbow Valley", "A Day Without Love" (both 1968), "One Road" and "Bringing On Back The Good Times" (both 1969). Love Affair sold more singles in 1968 in the UK than any other band, except for The Beatles. At the end of that year they released an album, "Everlasting Love Affair".
The group became frustrated at being treated like teen idols, unable to hear themselves on stage because of the constant screaming, and at being pigeonholed as a "pop group". All the A-sides featured heavy orchestral and brass arrangements behind Ellis's vocals, with minimal participation from the others, although they wrote and played on the heavier B-sides themselves.
As Ellis wrote in the booklet notes to a later compilation CD, "Singles A's and B's", "In an attempt to break the mould we recorded a song far removed from the anthemic-like previous hits. The song was called "Baby I Know". Released at the end of 1969, competing with releases from other big names for a place in the charts over Christmas, it failed completely. Ellis felt the band had run its course, and he left in December 1969 for a solo career: "It felt like a mountain had been lifted from my shoulders". The rest of the band soldiered on without any further success, continuing briefly as LA with new vocalist, August Eadon (aka Gus Yeadon). Further releases likewise never charted.
The group has since been revived, though sometimes without any original members, for cabaret dates; and Ellis has also performed live with a reconstituted Steve Ellis's Love Affair.

1. Love Affair - New Day (4:23)
2. Love Affair - Walking Down The Road (3:13)
3. Love Affair - Gee's Whiz (4:40)
4. Love Affair - Gypsy (5:05)
5. Love Affair - Goodbye Brother, Farewell Friend (3:39)
6. Love Affair - Hurt By Love (5:51)
7. Love Affair - Bad Girl (4:14)
8. Love Affair - Nine To Five (5:05)
9. Love Affair - Thank You Bean (3:23)
10. Love Affair - Speak Of Peace, Sing Of Joy (4:30)

Czerwone Gitary - Ballady (1994) Poland



Czerwone Gitary (The Red Guitars) is one of the most popular rock bands in the history of Polish popular music. The band formed in 1965 and achieved its greatest success from 1965 to 1970. Often considered the Polish equivalent of the Beatles, many of their hits are now classics in Poland. The group toured extensively outside Poland (in Czechoslovakia, Hungary, USA, Germany and Soviet Union) but had mostly disappeared from the Polish scene by the 1980s. The band reformed in the 1990s.
Members:


Jerzy Kossela (guitar, vocal, founder, leader, left in 1967, returned in 1991, still in the band as of 2010)
Henryk Zomerski (drums, founder, left the band soon after it was founded, in late 1965; still in the band since 1999)
Bernard Dornowski (guitar, one of the original members, left in 1999)
Jerzy Skrzypczyk (drums, one of the original members, still in the band as of 2010)
Krzysztof Klenczon (bass, one of the original members; left in 1970)
Seweryn Krajewski (guitar, replaced Zomerski in December 1965; left in 1997)
Dominik Kuta (briefly in 1970)
Ryszard Kaczmarek (1971-1975)
Jan Pospieszalski (guitar, 1976-1980)
Wojciech Hoffman (guitar, 1997-2000)
Arkadiusz Malinowski (guitar, bass, 1999-2002)
Dariusz Olszewski (2000-2003)
Mieczysław Wądołowski (guitar, vocal, joined 1997, still in the band as of 2010)
Marek Kisieliński (guitar, joined 2003, still in the band as of 2010)
Arkadiusz Wiśniewski (guitar, bass, vocal, joined in 2002, still in the band as of 2010)


The Czerwone Gitary were founded by guitarist/vocalist Jerzy Kossela and bassist Henryk Zomerski on 3 January 1965 in Gdańsk. Initial members included Bernard Dornowski (guitar/vocals), Krzysztof Klenczon (lead guitar /vocals ) and Jerzy Skrzypczyk (drums/vocals ); four members (Dornowski, Klenczon, Kossela and Zomerski) had played previously in another notable Polish band, the Niebiesko-Czarni (The Blue-Blacks). Note: Radio disc jockey Neil Kempfer-Stocker was the first person to air the Blue-Blacks 45 rpms in America while at WRMC Radio Bethlehem, Pennsylvania in 1968. In Autumn 1965 Zomerski was replaced by Seweryn Krajewski (bass/vocals) ; around that time the band also launched their first tour in Poland under the slogan "We play and sing the loudest in Poland".
Their 1966 debut album To właśnie my (It's us) sold 160,000 copies, and their May 1967 follow up, Czerwone Gitary 2, sold a then-record (for Poland) 240,000. In the same year Krajewski received a special award at the National Festival of Polish Song in Opole (Krajowy Festiwal Piosenki Polskiej w Opolu). In 1967 Kossela left the band. The band's 1968 third album sold 220,000 copies, and the group received an award in Opole for their song Takie ładne oczy (Such Pretty Eyes). In 1969 the band received a MIDEM award in Cannes for the largest number of discs sold in Poland up to that date; this was the same year that the Beatles received this award. Thereafter the Czerwone Gitary would be known as the Polish Beatles (see also Beatlesque).[1] The same year the group received a special award from Billboard magazine, and in Poland, another award from Opole festival for Biały krzyż (White cross).
Klenczon left in 1970, the year of the band's acclaimed LP Na fujarce (On the flute). Krajewski then took lead as the group turned to mainstream folk-tinged pop in the 1970s.
After a hiatus the Czerwone Gitary returned in the early 1990s with Kossela, Dornowski and Skrzypczyk resurrecting the group. Krajeski refused to participate and even released a solo album credited to Czerwone Gitary by Seweryn Krajewski called Koniec (The End). Initially the new lineup played the old hits; its first new album since the 1970s was the ...jeszcze gra muzyka (...still the music plays) in 1998. In a 2000 poll for the Polish magazine Polityka, Czerwone Gitary were selected as "One of the Best Polish Bands of the 20th Century". In 2005 a new song Senny szept (Sleepy whisper) took fourth place in the Sopot International Song Festival.


1. 01-Czerwone Gitary-Ballada Pasterska (3:02)
2. 02-Czerwone Gitary-Ktos,Kogo nie znasz (3:14)
3. 03-Czerwone Gitary-Czy slyszysz,co mowie (3:11)
4. 04-Czerwone Gitary-Barwy Jesieni (2:24)
5. 05-Czerwone Gitary-Anna Maria (3:52)
6. 06-Czerwone Gitary-Stracic Kogos (3:11)
7. 07-Czerwone Gitary-Jest wszystko tak samo,a jednak nie tak (3:59)
8. 08-Czerwone Gitary-Gdy kiedys znow zawolam cie (3:57)
9. 09-Czerwone Gitary-Wracam do tego (3:00)
10. 10-Czerwone Gitary-Mija rok (3:43)
11. 11-Czerwone Gitary-Dobra pogoda na szczescie (3:56)
12. 12-Czerwone Gitary-Dwie sowy (2:55)
13. 13-Czerwone Gitary-Kolysanka dlaOkruszka (4:44)
14. 14-Czerwone Gitary-Na dach swiata (4:21)