This Review and Over 384 More Like It
Are Available In My E-Book
GIMME SHELTER!
CLASSIC 1960s ROCK ON CD
And Other Genres Thereabouts
Your All-Genres Guide To
Exceptional Reissues and Remasters
All Reviews From The Discs
No Need To be Nervous!
(No Cut and Paste Crap)
<iframe style="width:120px;height:240px;" marginwidth="0" marginheight="0" scrolling="no" frameborder="0" src="//ws-eu.amazon-adsystem.com/widgets/q?ServiceVersion=20070822&OneJS=1&Operation=GetAdHtml&MarketPlace=GB&source=ss&ref=as_ss_li_til&ad_type=product_link&tracking_id=mabasreofcdbl-21&language=en_GB&marketplace=amazon®ion=GB&placement=B013TDUC2K&asins=B013TDUC2K&linkId=573f2e449223d6ca3608be4714bc08db&show_border=
"...Lay Your Shine On Me..."
This fantastic-sounding
February 2020 double-header CD set from the hirsute bods prowling the corridors
of England’s Beat Goes On offers up four studio albums THE BOX TOPS did in the
USA between 1967 and 1969 with some dips into 1970. All were released in the UK
too, albeit one LP with an additional track and another with two extras (the
full compliment is provided here in this release – see notes below the track
lists for sequencing).
Bolstering the quartet are
seven more bonuses - three album outtakes (from the first 3 LPs) and four
non-album single sides - with the bulk of it being in glorious Stereophonic
marvelousness. It be a wee bit of a jellybean jar and that’s for darn gosh sure
(as they say in enlightened parts of Alabama).
All this and a young Alex
Chilton of Big Star (only 16 going on 17) stretching his Eric Burdon via Jim
Morrison voice and newly acquired songwriting chops, Rock-Soul tunes with a
Countrified air from those good ole Southern Soul gentlemen and all-round
beloved dapper dudes – Spooner Oldham and Dan Penn (Penn produced the first
three LPs) - with other melodies penned by Donnie Fritts and Eddie Hinton
(guitar too). Hell The Tops even do a nine-minute cover of a B.B. King Blues
classic at the end of album four that would give Jimmy Page a possible envy
streak (and that’s not at the size of Robbie Williams' nearby and neighbourly
water appendage). And 1968’s "Non Stop" (their one studio set that
didn't make the top 200) may be obscure in 2020, but its an unfairly forgotten
classic in my book and ripe for rediscovery. All this and these are the longest
two BGO CDs I've ever seen in their near 40 years of digital reissue – both
81-minutes-plus. Very cool and not in the least bit square (if you know what I
mean). Here are the unboxed details...
UK released Friday, 28
February 2020 - "The Letter-Neon Rainbow/Cry Like A Baby/Non
Stop/Dimensions/Bonus Tracks" by THE BOX TOPS on Beat Goes On BGOCD 1400
(Barcode 5017261214003) offers 4LPs Remastered Onto 2CDs with Seven Bonus
Tracks and plays out as follows:
CD1 (81:40 minutes):
1. The Letter [Side 1]
2. She Knows How
3. Trains & Boats &
Planes
4. Break My Mind
5. Whiter Shade Of Pale
6. Everything I Am
7. Neon Rainbow [Side 2]
8. People Make The World
9. I'm Your Puppet
10. Happy Times
11. Gonna Find Somebody
12. I Pray For Rain
Tracks 1 to 12 are their
debut album "The Letter/Neon Rainbow" – released November 1967 in the
USA on Bell Records 6011 in Stereo-only and January 1968 in the UK on Stateside
SSL 10128 in Stereo-only - the STEREO MIX is used
13. Cry Like A Baby [Side 1]
14. Deep In Kentucky
15. I'm The One For You
16. Weeping Analeah
17. Every Time
18. Fields Of Clover
19. The Letter [see Notes
below]
20. Trouble With Sam [Side
2]
21. Lost
22. Good Morning Dear
23. 727
24. You Keep Me Hanging On
25. The Door You Closed To
Me [see Notes below]
Tracks 13 to 25 are their
second studio album "Cry Like A Baby" – released April 1968 in the
USA on Bell Records 6017 in Stereo-only as an 11-track LP. The US variant is
sequenced 13 to 18 for Side 1 and 20 to 24 for Side 2. The songs at the end of
each side ("The Letter" and "The Door You Closed To Me")
were two bonuses only on the June 1968 UK 13-track LP on Bell Records MBLL 105
(Mono) and SBLL 105 (Stereo). The song "The Door You Closed To Me" was
also a non-album track in the USA and appeared as the B-side of the "Cry
Like A Baby" 45 single in February 1988 on Mala Records 593. The STEREO
MIX is used for CD.
BONUS TRACKS:
26. Georgia Farm Boy (album
outtake first issued March 2000 in the USA on Sundazed SC 6158 - the Expanded
Edition CD reissue of the "The Letter-Neon Rainbow" LP)
27. Take Me To Your Heart
(album outtake first issued March 2000 in the USA on Sundazed SC 6159 - the
Expanded Edition CD reissue of the "Cry Like A Baby" LP)
28. Come On Honey (non-album
track, March 1970 US 7" single on Bell 865, B - CD reissue as per 27)
29. You Keep Tightening Up
On Me (non-album track, March 1970 US 7" single on Bell 865, A - CD
reissue as per 27)
CD2 (81:43 minutes):
1. Choo Choo Train [Side 1]
2. I'm Movin' On
3. Sandman
4. She Shot A Hole In My
Soul
5. People Gonna Talk
6. I Met Her in Church [Side
2]
7. Rock Me Baby
8. Rollin' In My Sleep
9. I Can Dig It
10. Yesterday Where's My
Head
11. If I Had Let You In
Tracks 1 to 11 are their
third studio album "Non Stop" – released October 1968 in the USA on
Bell Records 6023 in Stereo-only and November 1968 in the UK on Bell Records
MBLL 108 (Mono) and SBLL 108 (Stereo) - the STEREO MIX is used
12. Soul Deep [Side 1]
13. I Shall Be Released
14. Midnight Angel
15. Together
16. I'll Hold Out My Hand
17. I Must Be The Devil
18. Sweet Cream Ladies
(Forward March) [Side 2]
19. (The) Happy Song
20. Ain't No Way
21. I See Only Sunshine
22. Rock Me Baby (Version 2)
Tracks 12 to 22 are their
fourth album "Dimensions" – released September 1969 in the USA on
Bell Records 6032 in Stereo-only as a 10-Track LP without the song "I See
Only Sunshine" on Side 2 and November 1969 in the UK on Bell Records MBLL
120 (Mono) and SBLL 120 (Stereo) as an 11-track LP with the song "I See Only
Sunshine" slotted in as above on Side 2 – the STEREO MIX is used
BONUS TRACKS:
23. King's Highway
(non-album track, March 1971 US 7" single on Bell 981, A - CD as per 25)
24. Since I Been Gone
(non-album track, March 1971 US 7" single on Bell 981, B - CD appearance
is March 2000 in the USA on Sundazed SC 6160 - the Expanded Edition CD reissue
of the "Non Stop" LP)
25. Lay Your Shine On Me
(album outtake first issued March 2000 in the USA on Sundazed SC 6161 - the
Expanded Edition CD reissue of the "Dimensions" LP)
The outer slipcase card
wrap, 24-page booklet and foldout double-CD jewel case all lend this reissue a
typical air of class. Longstanding writer for BGO – Mojo and Record Collector’s
CHARLES WARING - provides superbly detailed and researched liner notes that
cover the recording and release of the first four albums, the singles
surrounding them, Producers Spooner Oldham, Dan Penn, Tommy Cogbill and Chips
Moman, line-up changes and even quotes from singer-songwriter Alex Chilton and
original drummer Danny Smythe on their punishing and sometimes disillusioning
schedules. The booklet also features all original artwork (hokey liner notes
from 1967 and 1968 by Hal Smith and Mark Lindsay) and well as the usual 2020
Remaster reissue credits. Even the inner back inlay beneath the CD trays has a
shot of the "Dimensions" album sleeve (nice touch).
ANDREW THOMPSON did the
Remasters at Sound Performance in London and I have to say that these albums
are sparkling. Although most are in full STEREO, I can’t help thinking (and to
my ears) that certain cuts are in MONO – like the single "The Letter"
on the debut (repeated on the British LP for "Cry Like A Baby"). The
audio on deeply cool album cuts like "She Knows How", "People Make The World", "Choo
Choo Train" and "She Shot A Hole In My Soul" is wonderful – a
genuine pleasure to hear in all their 60ts cool-aid grooviness. To the
records...
Arising out of a Memphis Beat
group called The Devilles, the embryonic 1966 Box Tops hooked up with
Soul-steeped producers Chips Moman and Dan Penn. Then with the aid of an
uppercoming Missouri songwriter called Wayne Carson Thompson (usually credited
on the labels as Carson Thompson) – they found a total world-beating winner in
one of his three demo songs called "The Letter" (ticket for an
aeroplane, anyone). Thompson also penned the album’s other moniker "Neon
Rainbow" which would become the group’s second single and a dual title on
the debut album. His third contribution to the covers-heavy first LP outing was
"She Knows How" – another wickedly hooky tune.
Young Soul buck Bobby Womack
provided two - "People Make The World" and "Gonna Find
Somebody" – neither of which would turn up on his two stunning albums for
Imperial "Fly Me To The Moon" and "My Prescription" in 1968
and 1970. We get a purely functional version of Procol Harum's "A Whiter
Shade Of Pale", a wimpy cover of the Burt Bacharach and Hal David Dionne
Warwick vehicle "Trains & Boats & Planes" and a slightly
better take on John D. Loudermilk's "Break My Mind". But what really interests
me about the debut (apart from how mature Chilton sounded as a 16-year old
giving it some 60ts R&B) is the four Rock-Soul songs from the pens of two
of my absolute fave-rave writers – Memphis boys Spooner Oldham and Dan Penn
(accompanied by ace arranger Mike Leech). They give us "Everything I
Am", the James and Bobby Purify classic "I'm Your Puppet",
"Happy Times" and "I Pray For Rain". It's been eons since I
played these period slices of Southern hospitality and gosh darn their
burning-churning groovy bits but they've stood up well – especially as they
come from a year that saw the dynamic duo write "Do Right Woman, Do Right
Man" for Aretha Franklin and "The Dark End Of The Street" for
James Carr. Yum yum...
The second LP "Cry Like
A Baby" once again saw Dan Penn at the Production controls – the US copy
offering 11 cuts whilst the UK issue slapped on a further two songs – one at
the end of either side. The team of Oldham and Penn stumped up the fantastic
hit "Cry Like A Baby" and five more - "Every Time",
"Fields Of Clover", "Trouble With Sam" (Penn only),
"727" and the bonus cut on the British LP "The Door You Closed
On Me". The band gets yeah-man psych on their cover of The Supremes
Holland-Dozier-Holland classic "You Keep Me Hangin' On", goes all
Peppers Sitar on "I'm The One For You", whilst the album is also
notable for the inclusion of two from cult Country Rocker Mickey Newbury -
"Good Morning Dear" and a waltz co-write with Dan Folger on
"Weeping Analeah".
A quietly unnoticed hero of mine called Glen
Spreen arranged the strings on "Lost" (a co-write of his with Mark
James) – Spreen would enjoy a huge working career as LP arranger for the
much-missed Dan Fogelberg on Dan's albums "Home Free", "Captured Angel",
"Phoenix", "The Innocent Age" and more (he even arranged for Presley). And amidst the four
bonuses tail-ending CD1 is Alex Chilton's first songwriting-credit for the band
on "Come On Honey", Carson Thompson once again throwing up a non-LP
groover in "You Keep Tightening Up On Me" and another Mickey Newbury
cover in the album outtake - "Georgia Farm Boy" - that I believe
Sundazed first unearthed to the world in 2000 on their expanded CD reissue of
the debut album "The Letter-Neon Rainbow".
Which brings us to album
number three "Non Stop" from October 1968 opening CD2 with the LP's lead
off single – the Donnie Fritts and Eddie Hinton penned "Choo Choo
Train". Mala Records had in fact debuted the 45 Stateside in May 1968
(Mala 12,005) with "Fields Of Clover" from the second album on the
flipside – but even then the writing seemed to be on the wall for this
non-charting LP. "Cry Like A Baby" had gone all the hit way to an
impressive No. 2 on the American singles chart in March 1968 – but in June 1968
(only months later) when "Choo Choo Train" hit the Billboard listings
– it only managed a peak of only No. 26. And despite the songwriting strength
of the album's second 45 "I Met Her In Church" on Mala 12.017 - an
Oldham/Penn original backed with their equally cool "People Gonna
Talk" song on the flipside - it too only rose to No. 37 and this time only
managed one week on the chart. Hardly surprising then that in November 1968, a
slightly panicking Bell Records tried to cash in on what must have appeared to
be an already fading band by putting out the LP "The Box Tops Super
Hits" as a mop-up exercise. At least it charted and rose to No. 45 –
reminding people of how much they loved those hooky Rock-Soul numbers.
As well as the clever rework
of Hank Snow's country groover "I'm Movin' On" on Side 1 (John Kay of
Steppenwolf may have nicked his arrangement of the cover from the Box Tops for
his "Forgotten Songs & Unsung Heroes" LP in 1972) – the "Non
Stop" album also has an enlightened cover version choice on Side 2 in the
B.B. King classic "Rock Me Baby". A Bluesy little gem running to 3:49
minutes, I mention the tune because when The Box Tops returned with their
fourth "Dimensions" album in 1969, clearly recognizing that they'd
stumbled on a sound and Rock-Soul-orientated groove Chilton really liked - they
went at it again, only this time extending its fantastic Blues-Rock-Soul vibe
to nearly nine minutes. Wayne Carson Thompson provided "Sandman"
which I think is good rather than great – Fritts and Hinton put up contribution
number two in the shape of the US Side 2 finisher "If I Had Let You
In" (sweet) and keyboardist Paul Davis of The Reivers provided the
excellent "Rollin' In My Sleep". As I said earlier, why the public
ignored this rather cool and sexy little LP is anyone's guess – but I'd say
it's time to go back and re-look.
The final album "Dimensions"
opens with the absolute winner that is "Soul Deep" - a Wayne Carson
Thompson masterpiece. But then you're hit with a genuine surprise. Even in
1968, Dylan cover versions had become a seriously overdone thing. And yet The Box
Tops managed in their version of "I Shall Be Released" to capture the
song's beauty and spirituality and even (some would say) take it further. Their
take is gorgeous and in April 1969 Mala previewed the album by putting "I
Shall Be Released" on a US 45 A-side (Mala 12,038) with Chilton's equally
superb Blues number "I Must Be The Devil" on the flip. 23 May 1969
saw this combo issued by Bell Records in Blighty (Bell BLL 1063) and for me is
one of the great forgotten combos of that amazing year (love me two times).
Can't say I like the cover of Neil Diamond's "Ain't No Way" much, but
the Al Gorgoni and Chip Taylor song "I'll Hold Out My Hand" is a
goody. And the three bonus cuts ending CD2 has Chilton's rare single-only track
"Since I Been Gone". The only minor gripe is that the stand-alone
September 1969 single "Turn On A Dream" (a Mark James song) with
Chilton's "Together" on the flipside is not here, but that perhaps is
being too greedy.
Beat Goes On has gotten good
at these sort of releases and this is another feather in their long-standing
fluffy hat. Great audio, great content and quality presentation – my love is
Soul Deep boys for sure...