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Wednesday, 7 October 2015

"The Golden Age Of American Rock 'n' Roll Volume 5" by VARIOUS ARTISTS (1997 Ace Records CD Remasters) - A Review By Mark Barry...



"...Love Potion No.5..."

The fifth instalment of Ace's "The Golden Age Of American Rock 'n' Roll" CD Series follows the same route as Volumes 1 to 4– 30 cleverly sequenced Mono US 7" singles that hit the American Pop charts (only "She Cried" by Jay & The Americans is in Stereo) with a nice combo of the obvious and the obscure (just 4 of these titles made the British charts). And all of it presented to fans by a record company that gives a damn with a hard-won reputation across four decades of reissue quality (best tape sources used – no needle drops). The full 18 volumes up to late 2015 are listed below. 

So lets take some 'Love Potion No.9' and do the 'Midnight Stroll' with that 'Little Bitty Pretty One' (if mama will let us that is)...

UK and USA released October 1995 - "The Golden Age Of American Rock 'n' Roll Volume 5: Hot 100 Hits From 1954-1963" by VARIOUS ARTISTS on Ace Records CDCHD 600 (Barcode 029667160025) is a 30-track CD and breaks down as follows (72:03 minutes):

1. Wiggle, Wiggle – THE ACCENTS
October 1958 US 7" single on Brunswick 9-55100 (peaked at 51)
January 1959 UK 7" single on Coral Q 72351 (didn’t chart)

2. Love Potion No. 9 – THE CLOVERS
August 1959 USA 7” single on United Artists UA 180 (peaked at 23 Pop & R&B)
September 1959 UK 7" single on London HLT 8949 (didn’t chart)
A Jerry Lieber and Mike Stoller song

3. I'm Leaving It Up To You – DALE & GRACE
October 1963 US 7" single on Montel 921 (peaked at 1)
November 1963 UK 7" single on London Hl 9807 (peaked at 42)
Dale Houston and Grace Broussard – it was covered by Donnie & Marie Osmond in the summer of 1974 on MGM which peaked at No. 2 in the UK and No. 4 in the USA

4. You Cheated – THE SHIELDS
August 1958 US 7" single on Dot 15805 (peaked at 12)
September 1958 UK 7" single on London HLD 8706 (didn’t chart)
The Shields featured Jesse Belvin and Johnny "Guitar" Watson – originally issued on Tender 513 (Dot is the reissue) - initially recorded by the Vocal Group The Slades from Texas on Domino R-500 in early 1958.

5. It Will Stand – THE SHOWMEN
September 1961 US 7" single on Minit 632 (peaked at 61)
January 1962 UK 7" single on London HLP 9481 (didn’t chart)

6. Sleep Walk – SANTO and JOHNNY
August 1959 USA 7" single on Canadian American 109 (peaked at 1)
September 1959 UK 7" single on Pye International 7N.25037 (peaked at 22)
Brothers Santo and Johnny Farina

7. Nothin' Shakin' – EDDIE FONTAINE
July 1958 USA 7" single on Argo 5309 (peaked at 64)
October 1958 UK 7" single on London HLM 8711 (didn’t chart)
Real name Eddie Reardon

8. Happy, Happy Birthday Baby – THE TUNE WEAVERS
August 1957 USA 7" single on Checker 872 (peaked at 5)
November 1957 UK 7" single on London HL 8503 (didn’t chart)
Originally issued on Casa Grande 4037-45 in June 1957 – reissued by Checker in August 1957

9. Heart and Soul – JAN & DEAN
June 1961 USA 7" single on Challenge 9111 (peaked at 25)
July 1961 UK 7” single on London HLH 9395 (peaked at 24)
Jan Berry and Dean Torrence – Produced by Lou Adler – it’s a cover of a Hoagy Carmichael song which went to No. 1 on the Hit Parade for Larry Clinton in 1938

10. What's Your Name – DON & JUAN
February 1962 USA 7" single on Big Top 3079 (peaked at 7)
March 1962 UK 7" single on London HLX 9529 (didn’t chart)
Roland "Don" Trone and Claude "Juan" Johnson – Johnson had been with The Genies who had a small hit with "Who's That Knocking" in 1959 on Shad 5002

11. Little Bitty Pretty One – THURSTON HARRIS & THE SHARPS
October 1957 USA 7" single on Aladdin 398 (peaked at 6)
November 1957 UK 7" single on Vogue V 9092 (didn't chart)
Members of The Sharps later became The Rivingtons

12. Darling Lorraine – THE KNOCKOUTS
November 1959 USA 7" single on Shad 5013 (peaked at 46)
January 1960 UK 7" single on Top Rank JAR 279 (didn’t chart)

13. Tallahassee Lassie - FREDDY CANNON
May 1959 USA 7" single on Swan 4031 (peaked at 6)
June 1959 UK 7" single on Top Rank JAR 135 (peaked at 17)

14. Tell Me Why – THE BELMONTS
June 1961 USA 7" single on Sabina 500 (peaked at 18)
July 1961 UK 7" single on Pye International 7N.25094 (didn’t chart)
Dion’s backing group between 1957 and 1960

15. Over The Mountain, Across The Sea – JOHNNIE & JOE
May 1957 USA 7" single on Chess 1654 (peaked at 8)
August 1958 UK 7" single on London HLM 8682 (didn’t chart)
Johnnie Louise Richardson and Joe Rivers – Johnnie Richardson was later part of The Jaynetts who had a No. 2 hit in 1963 with "Sally, Go 'Round The Roses" on Tuff 369 (see Track 2, Volume 1)

16. Ka-Ding Dong – THE G-CLEFS
September 1956 USA 7" single on Pilgrim 715 (peaked at 24)
November 1956 UK 7" single on Columbia DB 3851 (didn’t chart)
Features Freddy Cannon on Guitar (see also Track 13 on this CD)

17. Underwater – THE FROGMEN
March 1961 USA 7" single on Candix 314 (peaked at 44)
May 1961 UK 7" single on Oriole CB 1617 (didn’t chart – withdrawn)
The British 45 was withdrawn and is consequently listed as a £100 rarity – but that sum doesn’t really reflect how hard it is to find a British copy

18. She Cried – JAY & THE AMERICANS
March 1962 USA 7" single on United Artists 415 (peaked at 5)
April 1962 UK 7" single on HMV/United Artists POP 1009 (didn't chart)
Features John "Jay" Traynor

19. Just A Little Bit – ROSCO GORDON
November 1959 USA 7" single on Vee-Jay VJ 332 (peaked at 64)
April 1960 UK 7" single on Top Rank JAR 332 (didn’t chart)

20. Sometime – GENE THOMAS
June 1961 USA 7" single on United Artists UA 338 (peaked at 53)
Not released in the UK

21. Ain't Gonna Kiss Ya – THE RIBBONS
January 1962 USA 7” single on Marsh 202 (peaked at 81)
Not released in the UK

22. Midnight Stroll – THE REVELS
September 1959 USA 7" single on Norgolde N-103 (peaked at 35
November 1959 UK 7" single on Top Rank JAR 235 (didn’t chart)
Original US issues of this single have the title as "Dead Man's Stroll" (mentioned in the lyrics) – changed slightly later to/and charted as "Midnight Stroll"

23. The Walk – JIMMY McCRACKLIN and His Band
February 1958 USA 7" single on Checker 885 (peaked at 7)
April 1958 UK 7" single on London HLM 8598 (didn’t chart)

24. Hey Little Girl – DEE CLARK
August 1959 USA 7" single on Abner 1029 (peaked at 20)
October 1959 UK 7" single on Top Rank JAR 196 (didn’t chart)

25. This Is The Nite – THE VALIANTS
November 1957 USA 7" single on Keen 3-4004 (peaked at 69)
Not released in the UK

26. Tell Him No – TRAVIS and BOB
March 1959 USA 7" single on Sandy 1017 (peaked at 8)
April 1959 UK 7" single on Pye International 7N.25018 (didn't chart)
Travis Pritchett and Bob Weaver – it was covered in the same month of March 1959 by two groups - The Jackson Brothers on Atlantic 6139 (didn’t chart) and Dean and Marc on Bullseye B-1025 which peaked at 44. Brothers Dean and Marc Mathis would later join The Newbeats

27. Bad Boy – THE JIVE BOMBERS
March 1957 USA 7" single on Savoy 1508 (peaked at 36)
Not released in the UK
Originally released as "Brown Gal" by Lil Armstrong in 1936 on Decca 1092

28. Stranded In The Jungle – THE JAYHAWKS
June 1956 USA 7" single on Flash FL-109 (peaked at 18)
October 1956 UK 7" single on Parlophone R 4228 (didn't chart)
The Jayhawks is the original version released in the same month (June 1956) as The Cadets version on Modern Records - which peaked slightly higher at 15 (see Track 14, Volume 1)

29. Duke Of Earl – GENE CHANDLER
December 1961 USA 7” single on Vee-Jay VJ-416 (peaked at 1)
February 1962 UK 7” single on Columbia DB 4793 (didn’t chart)

30. Goodnite, Sweetheart, Goodnite – THE SPANIELS
December 1953 USA 7” single on Vee-Jay VJ-107 (peaked at 24)
Not released in the UK

NOTES: all tracks are in MONO except Track 18 "She Cried" by Jay & The Americans - which is in STEREO

Volume 5 has a 20-page booklet festooned with ROB FINNIS liner notes and cool pics - quality publicity photos of forgotten names like The Valiants, Gene Thomas and the Vocal Group The Jayhawks. These snaps run alongside rare Trade Adverts for Santo and Johnny, Thurston Harris, Freddy Cannon and The Ravels. The two-page colour collage of British 45s in their label bags that was a feature on Volumes 1 to 4 has been replaced with smaller pictures of various US and UK 7" single labels throughout the text - Finnis connecting all the musical and historical dots as you read. Rob has also sequenced the disc (compiled by Trevor Churchill, John Broven and Finnis) and it plays like an old jukebox with a generous total playing time of 72+ minutes.

The DUNCAN COWELL Remasters are blindingly good – toppermost of the poppermost Audio quality on rarities like the Acapella scales of "You Cheated" by The Shields or the 'do I stand a chance with you' innocence of "What's Your Name" by Don & Juan. Despite the disparate sources – the Audio is uniformly great throughout and will warm the cockrels of collector's hearts.

Volume 5 opens with the finger-clicking cool of The Accents where they want girls to strut the "Wiggle, Wiggle" where it shows the most (naughty boys). Both The Clovers and The Showmen bring fun R&B dancers to the party – the lyrics to the Leiber/Stoller "Love Potion No.9" slaying all in its path - while Norman Johnson's aching croak of a voice is what makes "It Will Stand” so distinctive and catchy. The languid almost Shadows instrumental "Sleep Walk" by Santo & Johnny sounds 'so' clean - as does the fantastic frustration song "Nothin' Shakin'" where Eddie Fontaine is on bended knee begging for kisses but the poor schmuck is getting nowhere fast. Teen Romance comes at us with "Happy, Happy Birthday Baby" by The Teen Weavers while Teen Misery makes a showing with the eerily beautiful "You Cheated" by The Shields (great Audio too). More jaunty angst with "Tell Me Why" by The Belmonts (minus Dion) and "Over The Mountain, Across The Sea" has Johnnie & Joe convinced that the love of their lives waits for them somewhere over dem dar hills.

Boppers include "Ka-Ding Dong" by The G-Clefs and the 'um, um, um' of "Little Bitty Pretty One" by Thurston Harris. The manic "Heart And Soul" has Jan and Dean falling madly in love on a magic night (whoops) while Jay & The Americans are getting all Phil Spector melodramatic with "She Cried" where apparently her kisses aren't like before (don't you just hate it when that happens). The Gene Thomas ballad "Sometime" is a tiny bit rough around the saxophone tape edges but still sounds great - while The Ribbons give it some Girl Group warnings to the local boys about rationing their favours in "Ain't Gonna Kiss Ya" (ouch).

As I said of Volumes 1 to 4 – what is wicked about these Ace compilations is the oddities – finding gems you just don’t know. The gorgeous "I'm Leaving It Up To You" by Dale & Grace is new to me – but it's amazingly evocative of Saturday Nights holding someone tight on the dancefloor. Equally sweet is the Dion-sounding "Darling Lorraine" by The Knockouts – a sent from heaven smoocher. And the rare American 45 to the cool-as-menthol instrumental "Underwater" by The Frog Men is probably the only way UK fans will get anywhere near owning the uber-rare British issue (withdrawn on Oriole) – what a winner. Speaking of cool – Rosco Gordon gives it some Don Draper smooth on the wicked "Just A Little Bit" – a fab groover that will surely make its way into some slick advert selling the latest shiny motorised Euro wonder vehicle as the new season's must have.

Genius inclusions - The Revels are 'passing the cemetery' and witness a 'poor soul doing the Dead Man's Stroll' and this elicits hysterical giggles from the lead singer (what a winner) – while The Valiants feel instinctively that "This Is The Nite" for love (what with the stars out above). And who doesn't dig the shuffle of "The Walk" by Jimmy McCracklin in all its homemade gutbucket production magic. Dee Clarks channels his inner Bo Diddley with his "Hey Little Girl" as he feels an overwhelming need to carry the books of some bubble-gum chewing babette making her way to Chemistry Class. Travis & Bob come on like a cross between The Everly Brothers and Buddy Holly on the party pop of "Tell Him No" while The Jive Bombers have that salacious wink in their honeyed larynxes on the wonderful 'la-la-la-la' song "Bad Boy" presented here in its best-ever audio. And how good is to hear The Jayhawks original of "Stranded In The Jungle" which The Cadets charted in the same month (3 places higher). And it all ends on two classics of the period – "Duke Of Earl" by Gene Chandler (as he walks through this world) and the Vocal Group magic of "Goodnite, Sweetheart, Goodnite" by The Spaniels. I hate to leave you but it's time to go...

Like Volumes 1 to 4 – instalment No. 5 is an adventurous, period evocative, cleverly paced compilation. But most important of all – it’s blindingly great fun to listen to - stirring up so many fond memories. So even if you weren't there - you will feel all "American Graffiti" after a night in with this CD compilation. But most of all you get a real sense of why UK fans in the 50ts and 60ts looked to the USA with such awe. The Yanks had it all – the cool - the cars - the girls - the film stars and best of all - the music. And there are seventeen more volumes where this came from...

PS: Titles in "The Golden Age Of American Rock 'n' Roll" CD Series are:

1. The Golden Age Of American Rock 'n' Roll: Hard-To-Get Hot 100 Hits From 1954-63 (Ace CDCHD 289, November 1991)
2. The Golden Age Of American Rock 'n' Roll Volume 2: Hot 100 Hits From 1954-1963 (Ace CDCHD 445, March 1993)
3. The Golden Age Of American Rock 'n' Roll Volume 3: Hot 100 Hits From 1954-1963 (Ace CDCHD 497, January 1994)
4. The Golden Age Of American Rock 'n' Roll Volume 4: Hot 100 Hits From 1954-1963 (Ace CDCHD 500, October 1994)
5. The Golden Age Of American Rock 'n' Roll Volume 5: Hot 100 Hits From 1954-1963 (Ace CDCHD 600, October 1995)
6. The Golden Age Of American Rock 'n' Roll Volume 6: 30 Hot 100 Hits From 1954-1963 (Ace CDCHD 650, January 1997)
7. The Golden Age Of American Rock 'n' Roll Volume 7: Hot 100 Hits From 1954-1963 (Ace CDCHD 700, November 1998)
8. The Golden Age Of American Rock 'n' Roll Volume 8: Hot 100 Hits From 1954-1963 (Ace CDCHD 750, November 1999)
9. The Golden Age Of American Rock 'n' Roll Volume 9: Hot 100 Hits From 1954-1963 (Ace CDCHD 800, February 2001)
10. The Golden Age Of American Rock 'n' Roll Volume 10: Hot 100 Hits From 1954-1963 (Ace CDCHD 850, September 2002)
11. The Golden Age Of American Rock 'n' Roll Volume 11: Hot 100 Hits From 1954-1963 (Ace CDCHD 1200, September 2007)
12. The Golden Age Of American Rock 'n' Roll Volume 12: 30 Hot 100 Hits From 1954-1963 (Ace CDCHD 1280, February 2011)
13. The Golden Age Of American Rock 'n' Roll: Special Country Edition (Ace CDCHD 845, April 2002)
14. The Golden Age Of American Rock 'n' Roll: Special Novelty Edition (Ace CDCHD 890, November 2003)
15. The Golden Age Of American Rock 'n' Roll: Special Doo Wop Edition 1953-1963 (Ace CDCHD 1000, May 2004)
16. The Golden Age Of American Rock 'n' Roll: Special "Bubbling Under" Edition – Regional Hits That Just Missed The Hot 100 1959-1963 (Ace CDCHD 1050, March 2006)
17. The Golden Age Of American Rock 'n' Roll – The Follow-Up Hits: Hard-To-Get Hot 100 Hits (Ace CDCHD 1190, January 2008)
18.  The Golden Age Of American Rock 'n' Roll: Special Doo Wop Edition Volume 2 1956-1963 (Ace CDCHD 1230, May 2009)

This review and hundreds more like it can be found in my SOUNDS GOOD Music Book Series - BLUES, GOSPEL, RHYTHM 'n' BLUES and ROCK 'n' ROLL - Exceptional CD Remasters is available to buy/download at Amazon at the following link...



Saturday, 3 October 2015

"The Golden Age Of American Rock 'n' Roll Volume 4" by VARIOUS (1994 Ace Records CD Remasters) - A Review by Mark Barry...



"...Tears On My Pillow..."

The fourth instalment of Ace's "The Golden Age Of American Rock 'n' Roll" CD Series follows the same route as Volumes 1 to 3 – 30 cleverly sequenced Mono US 7" singles (no Stereo this time) with a nice combo of the obvious and the obscure (only 3 of these US releases charted in the UK). And all of it is presented to fans by a record company that gives a damn and has a hard-won reputation to maintain (best tape sources used – no needle drops). The full 18 volumes up to late 2015 are listed below. So lets 'Do The Mashed Potatoes' and the 'Rama Lama Ding Dong' (if we may be so rude)...

UK and USA released October 1994 - "The Golden Age Of American Rock 'n' Roll Volume 4: Hot 100 Hits From 1954-1963" by VARIOUS ARTISTS on Ace Records CDCHD 500 (Barcode 029667150026) is a 30-track CD and breaks down as follows (73:49 minutes):

1. Linda Lu – RAY SHARPE
June 1959 US 7" single on Jamie 1128 (peaked at 46)
September 1959 UK 7" single on London HLW 8932 (didn’t chart)
Produced by Lee Hazelwood – Johnny Kidd & The Pirates took their version of the Ray Sharpe penned song to no. 41 on the UK charts in April 1961 on HMV POP 853

2. Little By Little – NAPPY BROWN
November 1956 USA 7” single on Savoy 1506 (peaked at 57 in January 1957)
March 1957 UK 7" single on London HLC 8384 (didn’t chart)

3. Rama Lama Ding Dong – THE EDSELS
May 1961 US 7" single on Twin 700 (peaked at 21)
June 1961 UK 7" single on Pye International 7N.25086 (didn’t chart)

4. Flamingo Express – THE ROYALTONES
January 1961 US 7" single on Goldisc 3011 (peaked at 82)
February 1961 UK 7" single on London HL 9296 (didn’t chart)
An instrumental

5. New Orleans – U.S. BONDS
October 1960 US 7" single on Legrand 1003 (peaked at 6 Pop, 5 R&B)
November 1960 UK 7" single on Top Rank JAR 527 (peaked at 16)
Garry Anderson (real name) was credited as 'U.S. BONDS' on this and his second hit "Quarter To Three" in May 1961 – but thereafter was known as GARY U.S. BONDS. He had collaborative hits written for him by Bruce Springsteen on two later solo albums "Dedication" (1981) and "On The Line" (1982). See also backing vocals for Tommy Facenda (Track 13)

6. Maybe – THE CHANTELS
January 1958 USA 7" single on End 1005 (peaked at 15)
February 1958 UK 7" single on London HLU 8561 (didn't chart)
Highly rated New York Female Vocal Group – written by Richard Barrett of The Valentines

7. Drip Drop – DION DI MUCI
November 1963 USA 7" single on Columbia 42917 (peaked at 6)
November 1963 UK 7" single on CBS Records AAG 177 (didn’t chart)
Credited to DION DI MUCI when he’s more commonly known as DION – the song was written by Jerry Leiber and Mike Stoller for The Drifters and originally released May 1958 on Atlantic 1187

8. Start Movin' (In My Direction) – SAL MINEO
May 1957 USA 7" single on Epic 9216 (peaked at 9)
July 1957 UK 7" single on Philips PB 707 (peaked at 16)
The 18-year old famously starred alongside James Dean in "Rebel Without A Cause" in 1956

9. Lonely Saturday Night – DON FRENCH
March 1959 USA 7" single on Lancer 104 (peaked at 72)
June 1959 UK 7” single on London HLW 8884 (didn’t chart)
Later discovered and recorded Soul Diva Millie Jackson

10. Don't Let Go – ROY HAMILTON
January 1958 USA 7" single on Epic 9257 (peaked at 13)
March 1958 UK 7" single on Fontana 45-H 113 (didn’t chart)
Features The Jesse Stone Orchestra

11. Pop Pop Pop-Pie – THE SHERRYS
October 1962 USA 7" single on Guyden 2068 (peaked at 35)
November 1962 UK 7" single on London HLW 9625 (didn't chart)
Little Joe Cook of Little Joe and The Thrillers had a hit with "Peanuts" on Okeh 7088 in October 1957 (see Track 15 on this compilation) – the Philadelphia Girl Vocal Group The Sherrys feature his daughters Dinnel and Delphine Cook

12. Life's Too Short – THE LAFAYETTES
June 1962 USA 7" single on RCA Victor 47-8044 (peaked at 87)
July 1962 UK 7" single on RCA Records RCA 1299 (didn’t chart)

13. High School U.S.A. [City]  – TOMMY FACENDA
November 1959 USA 7" single on Atlantic 51 to 78 (peaked at 28)
Not released in the UK
Originally released as "High School U.S.A Virginia" on Legrand 1001 in September 1959 – Atlantic Records picked up on the hit and re-released it in October 1959 with 28 different 'city' titles in the name – hence the catalogue numbers range from Atlantic 51 to 78 (Virginia through to Oklahoma). The song also features Gary U.S. Bonds on backing vocals.

14. Glory Of Love – THE ROOMMATES
June 1961 USA 7" single on Valmor 008 (peaked at 49)
Not released in the UK
A cover version of a July 1951 hit for The Five Keys on Aladdin 3099

15. Peanuts – LITTLE JOE and THE THRILLERS
October 1957 USA 7" single on Okeh 7088 (peaked at 22)
November 1957 UK 7" single on Phillips PB 759 (didn’t chart)
See also a Little Joe Cook connection with The Sherrys (Track 11 on this compilation)

16. Need You – DONNIE OWENS
October 1958 USA 7" single on Guyden 2001 (peaked at 25)
November 1958 UK 7" single on London HLU 8747 (didn’t chart)
Written by Bobby Wheeler (who plays Bass on it) and features Duane Eddy on Guitar with The Ben Denton Singers on Backing Vocals

17. Party Doll – BUDDY KNOX with The Rhythm Orchids
February 1957 USA 7" single on Roulette 4002 (peaked at 1)
March 1957 UK 7" single on Columbia DB 3914 (peaked at 29)
Originally issued on a small private label Triple-D 797 in the summer of 1956 – the February 1957 reissue on Roulette 4002 became the hit

18. Could This Be Magic – THE DUBS
November 1957 USA 7" single on Gone 5011 (peaked at 23)
December 1957 UK 7" single on London HLU 8526 (didn't chart)

19. Killer – THE ROCKY FELLERS
April 1963 USA 7" single on Scepter 1246 (peaked at 16)
April 1963 UK 7" single on Stateside SS 175 (didn’t chart)
Philippine family – Pop Feller and his four sons - Eddie, Albert, Tony & Junior

20. Barbara – THE TEMPTATIONS
May 1960 USA 7" single on Goldisc 3001 (peaked at 29)
June 1960 UK 7" single on Top Rank JAR 384 (didn't chart)
A white Vocal group from New York (not the Motown group)

21. Peek-A-Boo – THE CADILLACS
January 1959 USA 7” single on Josie 846 (peaked at 28)
January 1959 UK 7" single on London HLJ 8786 (didn't chart)
Features the Osie Johnson Orchestra – the song features Jesse "Speedo" Carroll who later joined The Coasters

22. You’ll Lose A Good Thing – BARBARA LYNN
July 1962 USA 7" single on Jamie 1220 (peaked at 8 Pop, 1 R&B)
July 1962 UK 7" single on Sue WI 4038 (didn’t chart)

23. Lucky Ladybug – BILLIE & LAURIE
December 1958 USA 7" single on Swan 4020 (peaked at 14)
January 1959 UK 7" single on London HLU 8795 (didn’t chart)
Billy Ford and Lillie Bryant – their first US hit "La Dee Dah" from January 1958 on Swan 4002 is Track 12 on Volume 3

24. Tears On My Pillow – LITTLE ANTHONY & THE IMPERIALS
August 1958 USA 7" single on End 1027 (peaked at 4)
September 1958 UK 7" single on London HLH 8704 (didn’t chart)
Lead Vocals by Anthony Gourdine – a million-seller single

25. Baby Talk – JAN & DEAN
August 1959 USA 7" single on Dore 522 (peaked at 10)
September 1959 UK 7" single on London HLN 8936 (didn’t chart)
Jan Berry and Dean Torrence – see also their first May 1958 hit "Jennie Lee" on Arwin 108 credited to Jan & Arnie (Track 4, Volume 3)

26. Here I Stand – THE RIP CHORDS
February 1963 USA 7" single on Columbia 4-42687 (peaked at 51)
April 1963 UK 7" single on CBS Records AAG 143 (didn't chart)
The band featured Terry Melcher (Doris Day’s son) and Bruce Johnston who would form The Beach Boys with Brian Wilson. Melcher produced the single and Jack Nitzsche did the Arrangements

27. (Do The) Mashed Potatoes (Part 1) – NAT KENDRICK and THE SWANS
February 1960 USA 7" single on Dade 1804 (peaked at 84)
April 1960 UK 7" single on Top Rank JAR 351 (didn't chart)
Features an uncredited James Brown on the vocals

28. Why Don’t You Write Me? – THE JACKS
November 1955 USA 7" single on RPM Records 428 (peaked at 82)
Not released in the UK
Originally sung by the Vocal group The Feathers in 1954 on Showtime 1105. The Jacks would also be known as The Cadets – see my reviews for both Ace CD compilations for these Vocal Groups – "Stranded In The Jungle" (1994) and "Why Don't You Write Me?" (1995)

29. Barbara-Ann – THE REGENTS
May 1961 USA 7” single on Gee 1065 (peaked at 13)
June 1961 UK 7” single on Columbia DB 4666 (didn’t chart)
New York Vocal Group

30. Those Oldies But Goodies (Remind Me Of You) – LITTLE CAESAR and THE ROMANS
May 1961 USA 7” single on Del-Fi 4158 (peaked at 9)
Not released in the UK
Featured Carl "Little Caesar" Burnett on Lead Vocals

NOTES: all tracks are in MONO

The first two volumes featured only 12-pages in each booklet (written by ROB FINNIS) that were indepth but felt just a tad slight for such a prestigious line. So for Volume 3 and 4 the British label has pushed it to 16-pages and spruced up the presentation - the results are fab. You get quality publicity photos of forgotten names like Little Joe, The Dubs, The Lafayettes and the white-boy one-hit-wonder Vocal Group The Temptations (no relation to Motown’s hit-making machine). These run alongside rare Trade Adverts for Donnie Owens, Sal Mineo, The Rocky Fellers and the oddball duo of Billy and Lillie. In between all this are tightly packed factoids collectors hoover up - Finnis connecting all the musical and historical dots. There is a two-page centerspread – a colour collage of all those gorgeous British 45s in their funky Top Rank, London (Tri-Centres), Stateside, Fontana and mottled CBS label bags. Finnis has also sequenced the disc and it plays like an old jukebox – and as you can see above – the playing time is more than generous.

The DUNCAN COWELL Remasters are what makes collectors itch with pleasure - blindingly good Audio quality on rarities like the fun of "Little By Little" by Nappy Brown who seems to be channelling the sheer exuberance of Jackie Wilson – the drum wallop of the 'everybody take a trip with me' as Gary U.S. Bonds wants us to a stroll down to "New Orleans" - or the full-on girly fest that is "Pop Pop Pop-Pie" by The Sherrys. Ace explains that lip-smacking in front of microphones can sound like clicks – as if its been dubbed from discs – but they assure us that these transfers are about 'real tapes' aimed at collectors who want the best and I have to say they've done an impressive job – especially given the wild and varying nature of each recording. There's only one dubbed from mint 45s because the tapes no longer exist but they leave us to guess which one it is.

Volume 4 opens with the finger-clicking cool of Ray Sharpe repeating phrases like a hiccup in an incredibly clean transfer of "Linda Lu". Both Nappy Brown and The Edsels bring up the R&B dancer rear with two infectious dancefloor fillers – "Little By Little" and the brill sounding  "Rama Lama Ding Dong". Not unlike a Sandy Nelson drums and brass bopper – "Flamingo Express" by the obscure Royaltones is one of those sax-and-guitar driven instrumentals that is naturally joyful (doesn't feel forced). It's also cool to hear Gary U.S. Bonds represented by "New Orleans" instead of the more common "Quarter To Three" - and those trouser-splitting high notes hit on "Maybe" by The Chantels still impress.

Dion's slowed down cover version of The Drifters classic "Drip Drop" builds and builds to a convincing end (great sound quality) and easily outclasses the clinging teen balladry of Sal Mineo who wants his girl 'to start our loving tonight' (good luck with that). Genius inclusion goes to Don French who is seeking his inner Elvis Presley as he Sun Records the life out of "Lonely Saturday Night" (fab eerie echo too). But best audio has to be Roy Hamilton's brilliant "Don't Let Go" which I reviewed on the Roy Hamilton CD compilation "Dark End Of The Street 1963-1969" (released on Raven CD in 2009). It's the kind of 60ts Charlie Rich/Elvis Presley bopper that will have you reaching for the liner notes  wanting to know more about Hamilton's fab yet relatively forgotten voice.

As I said of Volumes 1 to 3 – what is wicked about these Ace compilations is the oddities – finding gems you just don’t know. The girl-naming song "Life's Too Short" by The Lafayettes tells us that Sally is 'tough' but Emmy is 'cool enough' (thank Gawd for that). The Tommy Facenda bop tune "High School U.S.A." was released in 27 versions – each name-checking American cities in the Atlantic Records title (catalogue numbers 51 to 78) - and the Vocal Group bopper "Peanuts" has Little Joe and The Thrillers doing a vocal gymnast impression as he reaches for notes that will do his larynx and his undercarriage damage. And I swear I can hear someone hitting a cardboard box instead of a drum (Buddy Holly style) on Buddy Knox's hugely popular Rockabilly "Party Doll" (a No. 1 in 1957).

But genius choices for this Volume has to go to the hugely romantic "Need You" by Donnie Owens which should be cheesy with its 'our flame of love will never die' lyrics but somehow avoids it and comes on as wonderfully endearing. More swooning follows with the lovely "Could This Be Magic" by The Dubs - but the white-boy "Barbara" by The Temptations (not the Motown hit machine) is saccharine pap we could probably live without. Far better is the "Yakety Yak" soundalike "Peek-A-Boo" by the R&B combo The Cadillacs where they go after The Coasters marketplace and win (what a great little tune). And how lovely is the Barbara Lynn smoocher "You'll Lose A Good Thing" where her vocals and the song arrangements straddle the borders of Vocal Groups and Soul.

And there can't be any true music lovers out there who don't have a 'thing' for the wonderful ache in Little Anthony's "Tears On My Pillow" – a song he re-recorded in the 60ts (Ace uses the original unlike other compilations). There's tremendous audio on "Baby Talk" by Jan & Dean (even if the tune doesn't appeal to me that much) and the same Audio excellence applies to the busy "Here I Stand" by The Rip Chords where you can almost hear Brian Johnston's Beach Boys sound emerging already (with a little help from Brian and Dennis). But my crave is the Frat Party jerk of "(Do The) Mashed Potatoes (Part 1)" which is everything a fun and cool 60ts 45 record should be.

Both Volumes 2 and 3 felt like a huge improvement over Volume 1 (which is a wee gem anyway). Volume 4 is the same - adventurous, massively evocative of the period and cleverly paced too. But most important of all – it’s blindingly great fun to listen to - stirring up so many fond memories. So even if you weren't there - you will feel all "American Graffiti" after a night in with this CD compilation. But most of all you get a real sense of why UK fans in the 50ts and 60ts looked to the USA with such awe. The Yanks had it all – the cool - the cars - the girls - the film stars and best of all - the music. And there are seventeen more volumes where this came from...

PS: Titles in "The Golden Age Of American Rock 'n' Roll" CD Series are:

1. The Golden Age Of American Rock 'n' Roll: Hard-To-Get Hot 100 Hits From 1954-63 (Ace CDCHD 289, November 1991)
2. The Golden Age Of American Rock 'n' Roll Volume 2: Hot 100 Hits From 1954-1963 (Ace CDCHD 445, March 1993)
3. The Golden Age Of American Rock 'n' Roll Volume 3: Hot 100 Hits From 1954-1963 (Ace CDCHD 497, January 1994)
4. The Golden Age Of American Rock 'n' Roll Volume 4: Hot 100 Hits From 1954-1963 (Ace CDCHD 500, October 1994)
5. The Golden Age Of American Rock 'n' Roll Volume 5: Hot 100 Hits From 1954-1963 (Ace CDCHD 600, October 1995)
6. The Golden Age Of American Rock 'n' Roll Volume 6: 30 Hot 100 Hits From 1954-1963 (Ace CDCHD 650, January 1997)
7. The Golden Age Of American Rock 'n' Roll Volume 7: Hot 100 Hits From 1954-1963 (Ace CDCHD 700, November 1998)
8. The Golden Age Of American Rock 'n' Roll Volume 8: Hot 100 Hits From 1954-1963 (Ace CDCHD 750, November 1999)
9. The Golden Age Of American Rock 'n' Roll Volume 9: Hot 100 Hits From 1954-1963 (Ace CDCHD 800, February 2001)
10. The Golden Age Of American Rock 'n' Roll Volume 10: Hot 100 Hits From 1954-1963 (Ace CDCHD 850, September 2002)
11. The Golden Age Of American Rock 'n' Roll Volume 11: Hot 100 Hits From 1954-1963 (Ace CDCHD 1200, September 2007)
12. The Golden Age Of American Rock 'n' Roll Volume 12: 30 Hot 100 Hits From 1954-1963 (Ace CDCHD 1280, February 2011)
13. The Golden Age Of American Rock 'n' Roll: Special Country Edition (Ace CDCHD 845, April 2002)
14. The Golden Age Of American Rock 'n' Roll: Special Novelty Edition (Ace CDCHD 890, November 2003)
15. The Golden Age Of American Rock 'n' Roll: Special Doo W*p Edition 1953-1963 (Ace CDCHD 1000, May 2004)
16. The Golden Age Of American Rock 'n' Roll: Special "Bubbling Under" Edition – Regional Hits That Just Missed The Hot 100 1959-1963 (Ace CDCHD 1050, March 2006)
17. The Golden Age Of American Rock 'n' Roll – The Follow-Up Hits: Hard-To-Get Hot 100 Hits (Ace CDCHD 1190, January 2008)
18.  The Golden Age Of American Rock 'n' Roll: Special Doo W*p Edition Volume 2 1956-1963 (Ace CDCHD 1230, May 2009)

This review and hundreds more like it can be found in my SOUNDS GOOD Music Book Series - BLUES, GOSPEL, RHYTHM 'n' BLUES and ROCK 'n' ROLL - Exceptional CD Remasters is available to buy/download at Amazon at the following link...

"The Golden Age Of American Rock 'n' Roll Volume 3" by VARIOUS (1994 Ace Records CD Remasters) - A Review by Mark Barry...



"...Girl In My Dreams..."

In the liner notes for Volume 3 of this wonderfully evocative CD reissue series ("The Golden Age Of American Rock 'n' Roll") – the collector-friendly British label Ace Records states - "...thanks for assistance in locating the finest master tapes to..." – and go on to list a slew of great names in reissue like Walter De Venne and John Beecher to name but a few. After years of needle-drops by other less scrupulous reissue companies – the audio quality on this third CD volume is right up there and 21 years after its initial release still remains on catalogue...

The third instalment follows the same route as Volumes 1 and 2 – 30 cleverly sequenced Mono US 7" singles (only "Sacred" by The Castells is in Stereo) – a nice mixture of the obvious with the obscure/rare (three US numbers 1s while only 6 of these 30 American releases charted in the UK) – and all presented to fans by a record company that knows and cares and has a reputation to maintain. The full 18 volumes in Ace's "The Golden Age Of American Rock 'n' Roll" CD Series to 2015 are listed below. So once more into the details for those 'All American Boys'...

UK and USA released January 1994 - "The Golden Age Of American Rock 'n' Roll Volume 3: Hot 100 Hits From 1954-1963" by VARIOUS ARTISTS on Ace Records CDCHD 497 (Barcode 029667149723) is a 30-track CD and breaks down as follows (75:42 minutes):

1. The All American Boy – BILL PARSONS
December 1958 US 7" single on Fraternity 835 (peaked at 2)
February 1959 UK 7" single on London HL 8798 (peaked at 22)
Bill Parsons is a pseudonym for Bobby Bare who later had his own US TV show in the 80s – the song is famously about Elvis Presley

2. Kansas City – WILBERT HARRISON
April 1959 USA 7” single on Fury 1023 (peaked at 1 on both Pop & R&B)
May 1959 UK 7" single on Top Rank JAR 132 (didn’t chart)
Written by Jerry Leiber and Mike Stoller – first recorded by Little Willie Littlefield in 1952 on Federal 12110 – the Wilbert Harrison version sold over a million copies and has been covered extensively ever since

3. My True Love – JACK SCOTT
June 1958 US 7" single on Carlton 462 (peaked at 3)
July 1958 UK 7" single on London HLU 8626 (peaked at 9)
Its B-side "Leroy" also charted in June 1958 peaking at No. 11. The A-side "My True Love" peaked in July 1958 and sold a million copies

4. Jennie Lee – JAN & ARNIE
May 1958 US 7" single on Arwin 108 (peaked at 8)
June 1958 UK 7" single on London HL 8653 (didn’t chart)
Jan Berry and Arnie Ginsberg – the group also included Dean Torrence who would later become JAN & DEAN

5. The Joker (That's What They Call Me) – BILLY MYLES
November 1957 US 7" single on Ember 1026 (peaked at 25)
December 1957 UK 7" single on HMV Records POP 423 (didn’t chart)

6. The Beat – THE ROCKIN' R's
March 1959 USA 7" single on Tempus TR-7541 (peaked at 57)
May 1959 UK 7" single on London HL 8872 (didn't chart)
An instrumental originally issued as Tempus 7541 in mid 1958, repressed as TR-7541 in March 1959 when it charted for the first time

7. To Know Him, Is To Love Him – THE TEDDY BEARS
September 1958 USA 7" single on Dore 503 (peaked at 1)
October 1958 UK 7" single on London HLUN 8733 (peaked at 2)
Written and Produced by PHIL SPECTOR – the record went on to sell two and half million copies – Lead Vocals by Annette Kleinbard (aka Carol Connors) and Drums by Sandy Nelson

8. When You Dance – THE TURBANS
November 1955 USA 7" single on Herald 458 (peaked at 3)
Not released in the UK

9. Love Letters – KETTY LESTER
March 1962 USA 7" single on Era 3068 (peaked at 5)
March 1962 UK 7” single on London HLN 9527 (peaked at 4)
Written in 1945 for a movie by the same name - "Love Letters" was originally a hit for Dick Haymes in September 1945 on Decca 18699 (peaked at 11)

10. So Tough – THE KUF-LINX
February 1958 USA 7" single on Challenge 1013 (peaked at 76)
March 1958 UK 7" single on London HLU 8583 (didn’t chart)
The five sessionmen who played on this 45 – only weeks later recorded "Tequila" as The Champs and had a huge hit Stateside – becoming the first Instrumental Number 1

11. To The Aisle – THE FIVE SATINS
August 1957 USA 7" single on Ember 1019 (peaked at 25)
October 1957 UK 7" single on London HL 8501 (didn't chart)
Their first Vocal Group hit "In The Still Of The Nite" is Track 20 on Volume 2

12. Le Dee Dah – BILLY & LILLIE
January 1958 USA 7" single on Swan 4002 (peaked at 9)
February 1958 UK 7" single on London HLU 8564 (didn’t chart)
New Yorkers Billy Ford and Lillie Bryant

13. Endless Sleep – JODY REYNOLDS
May 1958 USA 7" single on Demon 1507 (peaked at 5)
June 1958 UK 7" single on London HL 8651 (didn't chart)
Session Guitar Play Al Casey plays on the song – Jody Reynolds is a Male Rockabilly singer and on the back of the Rock 'n' Roll Revival in the late 70ts in the UK - a reissue of the song belated charted in April 1979 on Lightning LIG 9015 at No. 66

14. Chicken, Baby, Chicken – TONY HARRIS
June 1957 USA 7" single on Ebb 104 (peaked at 89)
Not released in the UK

15. Lover’s Island – THE BLUE JAYS
August 1961 USA 7" single on Milestone 2008 (peaked at 31)
Not released in the UK
Californian R&B Vocal Group

16. No Chemise, Please – GERRY GRANAHAN
June 1958 USA 7" single on Sunbeam 102 (peaked at 23)
August 1958 UK 7" single on London HL 8668 (didn’t chart)
Gerry Granahan is the real name for 'Dicky Doo' of The White New Jersey Vocal Group 'Dicky Doo & The Don'ts' who had a hit with "Click Clack" on Swan 4001 in February 1958 (peaked at 28 – see track 30). He also formed The Fireflies who has a further hit with "You Were Mine" in September 1959 on Ribbon 6901 (peaked at 21)

17. It Was I – SKIP & FLIP
July 1959 USA 7" single on Brent 7002 (peaked at 11)
July 1959 UK 7" single on Top Rank JAR 156 (didn't chart)
Gary "Flip" Paxton and Clyde "Skip" Battin. Gary "Flip" Paxton later formed The Hollywood Argyles (see Volume 2, Track 29, "Alley Oop") and started the Garpax label (see my review for "Keep A Hold On Him: More Garpax Girls"). "Skip" Battin was an original member of The Byrds, New Riders Of The Purple Sage and The Flying Burrito Brothers. Their second hit as Skip & Flip was "Cherry Pie" – Track 22 on Volume 1

18. Tonight I Fell In Love – THE TOKENS
April 1961 USA 7" single on Warwick 615 (peaked at 15)
June 1961 UK 7" single on Parlophone R 4790 (didn't chart)
The Tokens featured brothers Phil and Mitch Margo and Jay Siegel who later formed CROSS COUNTRY who had one self-titled album on Atco in 1973. They charted a cover version of Wilson Pickett's "In The Midnight Hour" in September 1973 on Atco 6934. The 2nd hit for The Tokens in November 1961 was "The Lion Sleeps Tonight" – a Number 1.

19. Happy Birthday Blues – KATHY YOUNG with THE INNOCENTS
February 1961 USA 7" single on Indigo 115 (peaked at 30)
April 1961 UK 7" single on Top Rank JAR 554 (didn’t chart)
Their 2nd hit from October 1960 called "A Thousand Stars" is Track 8 on Volume 1

20. Rockin' Little Angel – RAY SMITH
January 1960 USA 7" single on Judd 1016 (peaked at 22)
February 1960 UK 7" single on London HL 9051 (didn't chart)
The melody is adapted from an 1844 cowboy song called "Buffalo Gals"

21. Tonite, Tonite – MELLO-KINGS
May 1957 USA 7” single on Herald H-502 (peaked at 77)
Not released in the UK

22. Cha-Hua-Hua – THE PETS
May 1958 USA 7" single on Arwin 109 (peaked at 34)
June 1958 UK 7" single on London HL 8652 (didn’t chart)
A novelty instrumental featured Plas Johnson on Saxophone and Earl Palmer on Drums

23. Western Movies – THE OLYMPICS
July 1958 USA 7" single on Demon 1508 (peaked at 8)
September 1958 UK 7" single on HMV Records POP 528 (peaked at 12)

24. The Girl In My Dreams – THE CLIQUES
April 1956 USA 7" single on Modern 987 (peaked at 45)
Not released in the UK
Featured Eugene Church who had solo hits on Specialty, Class and King Records and Jesse Belvin who wrote "Earth Angel" for The Penguins (Track 10 on Volume 1) and many other hits

25. Sugar Shack – JIMMY GILMER & THE FIREBALLS
September 1963 USA 7" single on Dot 16487 (peaked at 1)
October 1963 UK 7" single on London HLD 9789 (peaked at 45)
Co-written by Keith McCormack of The String-A-Longs who has two hits in 1961 on Warwick and a lady writer called Faye Voss. Norman Petty of Buddy Holly Fame overdubbed a repeated organ refrain onto the track that he later claimed 'made' the song a million-seller.

26. There Is Something On Your Mind – BIG JAY McNEELY & BAND
April 1959 USA 7" single on Swingin’ 614 (peaked at 44)
August 1959 UK 7" single on Top Rank JAR 169 (didn't chart)

27. Woman Is A Man’s Best Friend – TEDDY & THE TWILIGHTS
March 1962 USA 7" single on Swan 4102 (peaked at 59)
Not released in the UK

28. Sacred – THE CASTELLS
June 1961 USA 7" single on Era 3048 (peaked at 20)
July 1961 UK 7" single on London HLN 9392 (didn’t chart)
California Vocal Group - Chuck Girard of The Castells later joined and sang on The Hondells hit "Little Honda" on Mercury 72324 in 1964

29. The Freeze – TONY & JOE
July 1958 USA 7” single on Era 1075 (peaked at 33)
September 1958 UK 7” single on London HLN 8694 (didn’t chart)
Rock & Roll Vocal Duo - Tony Savonne and Joe Saraceno

30. Click-Clack – DICKY DOO & THE DON’TS
February 1958 USA 7” single on Swan 4001 (peaked at 28 Pop and 8 R&B)
March 1958 UK 7” single on London HLU 8589 (didn’t chart)
Dicky Doo is Gerry Granahan – see Track 16 above for his solo single "No Chemise, Please"

NOTES: all tracks are in MONO except "Sacred" by The Castells (Track 28) - which is in STEREO

The first two volumes featured only 12-pages in each booklet (written by ROB FINNIS) that were indepth but felt just a tad slight for such a prestigious line. So for Volume 3 the British label pushed it to 16-pages and spruced up the presentation - the results are fab. You get quality publicity photos of forgotten names like Billie & Lillie, The Turbans and Ketty Lester alongside rare Trade Adverts for Big Jay McNeely, Billy Myles and Ray Smith (and so on). In between all this are tightly packed factoids collectors hoover up - Finnis connecting all the musical and historical dots. On the rear page of the booklet there is a colour collage of all those gorgeous British 45s in their funky Top Rank, London (Tri-Centres), HMV and Parlophone label bags. Finnis has also sequenced the disc and it plays like an old jukebox – and as you can see above – the playing time is more than generous. Mistakes – The Turbans are credited as charting at 33 when it was 3 and The Twilights (of Teddy & The Twilights) is misspelt - other than that – this is exemplary stuff.

The DUNCAN COWELL Remasters are what makes collectors itch with pleasure - blindingly good Audio quality on rarities like the boppin' cool of "So Tough" by the delightfully named Kuf Linx - popular R&B dancers like the 'squeeze her with all your might' of "When You Dance" by The Turbans – or real warmth on pleading Vocal Group turns like "Happy Birthday Blues" by Kathy Young and The Innocents. Ace explains that lip-smacking in front of microphones can sound like clicks – as if its been dubbed from discs – but they assure us that these transfers are about 'real tapes' aimed at collectors who want the best and I have to say they've done an impressive job – especially given the wild and varying nature of each recording.

Volume 3 opens with Bobby Bare cheekily masquerading as Bill Parsons singing about that most 'American' of all boys – Elvis Presley (the tenuous Elvis connection even propelled the record to 22 in the UK). It's followed by a much-covered winner – Wilbert Harrison's fantastic R&B shuffler "Kansas City" – the kind of song that makes grown men quiver in their Zimmer-frames. Both Jack Scott and Jan & Arnie tackle the swooning Vocal group thing in different ways – Scott goes crooner on the sappy "My True Love" without really sounding convincing while the drum-bop and "ba ba ba" rapid vocals of "Jennie Lee" by Jan & Arnie (soon to become Jan & Dean) gives the tune a homemade infectious effect (great little dancer). Melodrama comes at us with a fabulous-sounding "The Joker" where Billy Myles assures us he's crying all the time despite his comic-book grin. Smoochers include boy meets a girl and each step draws him closer "To The Aisle" by The Five Satins, the never grows old passion of "Lover's Island" by The Blue Jays and the thrill of your embrace in "Tonite, Tonite" by the very Mello-Kings – all in best ever Audio Quality despite the crudeness of their humble beginnings.

As I said of Volume 1 – what’s great about these Ace compilations is the oddities – a fabulous guitar-driven-beat underpins the wicked Rock 'n' Roll instrumental "The Beat" by The Rockin' R's (drums sound awesome) - while good old team-player Phil Spector starts his global domination with The Teddy Bears and their sweet-as-mom's-apple-pie "To Know Him, Is To Love Him". The girl's clothing song "No Chemise, Please" by Gerry Granahan (Dicky Doo in the Don'ts) is the kind of novelty hit The Clovers and The Coasters would have eaten up. Before The Tokens inflicted the awful "The Lion Sleeps Tonight" on an unsuspecting world in 1962 – they had a hit in 1961 with the altogether better "Tonight I Fell In Love". I could probably live without the neither-here-nor-there instrumental chugga-bugga of "Cha-Hua-Hua" by The Pets (maybe someone in Mad Men could use it) - but I've always been partial to The Coasters shoot-em-up fun of "Western Movies" by The Olympics.

But genius choices for this Volume has to go to the fabulous Johnny Cash "Love God Murder" eerie death vibe of "Endless Sleep" by Rockabilly star Jody Reynolds (Nice Cave will be pleased) and the utterly infectious "Sugar Shack" by Jimmy Gilmer and The Fireballs – a tune guaranteed to make you do the neck jerk and embarrass yourself in some hip inner city party. I also dig the 'Rock 'n' Roll is all I crave' of "Chicken, Baby, Chicken" by the rasping Tony Harris – the kind of poultry tune I shouldn't really fall for but have. Properly great boogie Rock 'n' Roll comes in the shape of "Rockin' Little Angel" where Ray Smith sounds uncannily like Elvis in his phrasing and lip-snarling approach. We return to common sense with "Woman Is A Man's Best Friend" where Teddy & The Twilight bop their way to their inner girly - while church bells toll for The Castells in their string-laden swoon-fest "Sacred". Another forgotten winner is the 'saxophone will blow it' stop and start motions of "The Freeze" by Tony & Joe – a Frat Party shake-your-tail-feather shimmy-shammy if ever there was one. And it all ends on "Click Clack" where Dicky Doo is trying to work out why he ever left his girl (probably something to do with the one-way ticket he bought). What a blast...

Both Volumes 2 and 3 feel like a huge improvement over Volume 1 (which is a wee gem anyway). Volume 3 is adventurous, massively evocative of the period and cleverly paced too. But most important of all – it’s blindingly great fun to listen to - stirring up so many fond memories (even if you weren't there - you will feel all "American Graffiti" after a night in with this CD compilation).

But most of all you get a real sense of why UK fans in the 50ts and 60ts looked to the USA with such awe. The Yanks had it all – the cool - the cars - the girls - the film stars and best of all - the music. And there are seventeen more volumes where that came from...

PS: Titles in "The Golden Age Of American Rock 'n' Roll" CD Series are:

1. The Golden Age Of American Rock 'n' Roll: Hard-To-Get Hot 100 Hits From 1954-63 (Ace CDCHD 289, November 1991)
2. The Golden Age Of American Rock 'n' Roll Volume 2: Hot 100 Hits From 1954-1963 (Ace CDCHD 445, March 1993)
3. The Golden Age Of American Rock 'n' Roll Volume 3: Hot 100 Hits From 1954-1963 (Ace CDCHD 497, January 1994)
4. The Golden Age Of American Rock 'n' Roll Volume 4: Hot 100 Hits From 1954-1963 (Ace CDCHD 500, October 1994)
5. The Golden Age Of American Rock 'n' Roll Volume 5: Hot 100 Hits From 1954-1963 (Ace CDCHD 600, October 1995)
6. The Golden Age Of American Rock 'n' Roll Volume 6: 30 Hot 100 Hits From 1954-1963 (Ace CDCHD 650, January 1997)
7. The Golden Age Of American Rock 'n' Roll Volume 7: Hot 100 Hits From 1954-1963 (Ace CDCHD 700, November 1998)
8. The Golden Age Of American Rock 'n' Roll Volume 8: Hot 100 Hits From 1954-1963 (Ace CDCHD 750, November 1999)
9. The Golden Age Of American Rock 'n' Roll Volume 9: Hot 100 Hits From 1954-1963 (Ace CDCHD 800, February 2001)
10. The Golden Age Of American Rock 'n' Roll Volume 10: Hot 100 Hits From 1954-1963 (Ace CDCHD 850, September 2002)
11. The Golden Age Of American Rock 'n' Roll Volume 11: Hot 100 Hits From 1954-1963 (Ace CDCHD 1200, September 2007)
12. The Golden Age Of American Rock 'n' Roll Volume 12: 30 Hot 100 Hits From 1954-1963 (Ace CDCHD 1280, February 2011)

13. The Golden Age Of American Rock 'n' Roll: Special Country Edition (Ace CDCHD 845, April 2002)
14. The Golden Age Of American Rock 'n' Roll: Special Novelty Edition (Ace CDCHD 890, November 2003)
15. The Golden Age Of American Rock 'n' Roll: Special Doo W*p Edition 1953-1963 (Ace CDCHD 1000, May 2004)
16. The Golden Age Of American Rock 'n' Roll: Special "Bubbling Under" Edition – Regional Hits That Just Missed The Hot 100 1959-1963 (Ace CDCHD 1050, March 2006)
17. The Golden Age Of American Rock 'n' Roll – The Follow-Up Hits: Hard-To-Get Hot 100 Hits (Ace CDCHD 1190, January 2008)
18.  The Golden Age Of American Rock 'n' Roll: Special Doo W*p Edition Volume 2 1956-1963 (Ace CDCHD 1230, May 2009)

PS: this review is dedicated to Charles Fizer of The Olympics who was killed in Race Riots in August 1965 aged only 25...

This review and hundreds more like it can be found in my SOUNDS GOOD Music Book Series - BLUES, GOSPEL, RHYTHM 'n' BLUES and ROCK 'n' ROLL - Exceptional CD Remasters is available to buy/download at Amazon at the following link...

INDEX - Entries and Artist Posts in Alphabetical Order