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Friday, 9 October 2015

"The Incredible String Band/The 5000 Spirits.../The Hangman's Beautiful Daughter" by THE INCREDIBLE STRING BAND (2015 Beat Goes On 2CD Remasters) - A Review by Mark Barry...



"...Gently Tender..."

Finishing off their reissue campaign for THE INCREDIBLE STRING BAND in real style – Beat Goes On of the UK give fans their revered first three albums – a Folky beginning in 1966 followed by two genuinely masterful, mind-expanding Acid-Folk-Rock platters from the Lava Lamp glory days of 1967 and 1968. Here are the hangman’s beautiful details...

UK released 25 September 2015 (October 2015 in the USA) – "The Incredible String Band/The 5000 Spirits Or The Layers Of The Onion/The Hangman's Beautiful Daughter" by THE INCREDIBLE STRING BAND on Beat Goes On BGOCD 1205 (Barcode 5017261212054) offers fans 3LPs onto 2CD Remasters and plays out as follows:

Disc 1 (70:07 minutes):
1. Maybe Someday
2. October Song
3. When The Music Starts To Play
4. Shaeffer's Jig
5. Womankind
6. The Tree
7. Whistle Tune
8. Dandelion Blues
9. How Happy I Am [Side 2]
10. Empty Pocket Blues
11. Smoke Shovelling Song
12. Can't Keep Me Here
13. Good As Gone
14. Footsteps Of The Heron
15. Niggertown
16. Everything's Fine Right
Tracks 1 to 16 are their debut album "The Incredible String Band" – released June 1966 in the UK on Elektra Records EUK 254 and in the USA on Elektra EKM 322 – both in Mono Only. The Stereo mix was released on Elektra EKS 7322 in the USA in 1969. The Stereo mix is used for this CD.

17. Chinese White
18. No Sleep Blues
19. Painting Box
20. The Mad Hatter's Song
21. Little Cloud
22. The Eyes Of Fate
Tracks 17 to 22 are Side 1 of their 2nd album "The 5000 Spirits Or The Layers Of The Onion" – released July 1967 in the UK on Elektra EUK 257 (Mono) and EUKS 7257 (Stereo) and in the USA on Elektra EKS 74010 (Stereo). The Stereo mix is used.

Disc 2 (74:30 minutes):
1. Blues For The Muse
2. The Hedgehog's Song
3. First Girl I Loved
4. You Know What You Could Be
5. My Name Is Death
6. Gently Tender
7. Way Back In The 1960s
Tracks 1 to 7 are Side 2 of their 2nd album "The 5000 Spirits Or The Layers Of The Onion" – released July 1967 in the UK on Elektra EUK 257 (Mono) and EUKS 7257 (Stereo) and in the USA on Elektra EKS 74010 (Stereo). The Stereo mix is used.

8. Koeeoaddi There
9. The Minotaur's Song
10. Witches Hat
11. A Very Cellular Song
12. 'Mercy', I Cry, 'City' [Side 2]
13. Waltz Of The New Moon
14. The Water Song
15. Three Is A Green Crown
16. Swift As The Wind
17. Nightfall
Tracks 8 to 17 are their 3rd album "The Hangman's Beautiful Daughter" – released March 1968 in the UK on Elektra EUK 258 (Mono) and EKS 7258 (Stereo) and June 1968 in the USA on Elektra EKS 74021 (Stereo only). The Stereo mix is used.

The card slipcase gives this 2CD reissue classiness - as do the new ANDREW THOMPSON Remasters (done at Sound Mastering in London). Elektra/Rhino, Hannibal and Collector’s Choice have all done these albums before to great effect on varying CD remasters down through the years – but these latest 2015 editions have an extra 'oomph' in them. I've had the 5CD "Original Album Series" with its five dinky card sleeves for a few years now to have the music - but have missed proper liner note details and uniformly great sound. Beat Goes On has supplied both in their extensive 2014 and 2015 ISB CD reissues/remasters (see list below) - all of which I've reviewed. The 24-page booklet has full track-by-track credits, the liner notes of each LP (UK and USA on the debut), LP artwork repros (UK and US versions of “5000 Spirits”) and a stormingly good new essay by JOHN O'REGAN discussing the albums and the coloured history of the ISB – the most eclectic of British Folk-Rock bands. But I keep coming back to the gorgeous Audio – especially on my fave "The Hangman's Beautiful Daughter".

I've never understood the lesser rating "The Incredible String Band" receives – as if it wasn't somehow a magnificent but simple beginning – I've always thought that its both. And man does this sucker sound good here. If you skip to Track 3 on the debut – the lovely "When The Music Starts To Play" – the clarity of Robin Williamson on Flute with Mike Heron on Lead Vocals and Acoustic Guitar is startling to say the least – the Remaster as warm as you could hope for. Even if the instrumental "Schaeffer's Jig" is only one minute long - Clive Palmer's Banjo and Williamson's Fiddle fill your speakers with UK Folky joy. Sweet too is a mesmerising "Womankind" – Williamson on his own with a melody, that weirdly lovely voice of his and an Acoustic Guitar (and man can you hear where Led Zeppelin's folk leanings came from in this tune). Mike Heron takes over the solo singing/acoustic reins for the equally pretty "The Tree" – and again in superlative Audio.

While the debut was a purely Folk affair - with the 2nd album came the expansion of instruments and added talent – Richard Thompson on Double Bass (from Pentangle), John Hopkins on Piano and Licorice on Vocals and the occasional finger cymbal (Palmer left - later formed The Famous Jug Band). The combo makes the album feel utterly amazing – unique even – and ahead of its time. Producer JOE BOYD and Engineer JOHN WOOD gave "The 5000 Spirits..." album a real polish and combined with great new material – it saw the LP top Folk lists and even dent the UK Pop & Rock charts by peaking at 26. Along with "Pet Sounds" by The Beach Boys – ISB received the ultimate Summer Of Love accolade – a nod from Paul McCartney who had released the magical "Sgt. Peppers" with The Beatles only a month earlier (June 1967) as one of his favourite albums of that mercurial year.

As Heron sings and plays Acoutsic on the magical "Chinese White" – what knocks you out is the Bowed Gimbri played by Williamson – because suddenly you're listening to the invention almost of Acid Folk. There is discernable hiss in the background but it's not too distracting. "When I look inside my painting box...I seem to pick the colours of you..." - Heron sings on the lovely "Painting Box" - while "The Mad Hatter's Song" takes in some vaudeville with the added barrelhouse piano of John Hopkins plinking away tastily in the background. There is hiss again but you’re so entranced by that Soma and Sitar playing and the jagged tempo breaks that it doesn’t matter somehow. It has to be said that the 'ta ta ta' hippy nonsense in "Cloud Song" grates a tad nowadays – but Side 1 of "5000 Spirits" ends on the 'lands of no winds blowing' druggy Folk beauty of "The Eyes Of Fate" – their voices combining into an almost monastic chant (brilliant stuff). Side 2 offers the Harmonica of "Blues For The Muse", a foreboding "My Name Is Death" and the sweet acoustic innocence of "First Girl I Loved" and the tabla/flute "Gently Tender" (gorgeous Audio on the lot). The whole record feels like several light years ahead of the debut in terms of playing, song structures and the ‘to Hell with what people think’ honesty of their chosen lifestyles seeping into every song and witty word.

With Williamson in the song-writing ascendancy (Heron put up three while he put up seven originals) - the tripping of the light psychedelic continues on the wonderfully adventurous, evocative and (damn it) pretty "Hangman's Beautiful Daughter" which the good people of Great Britain even took to the unlikely placing of 5 on the LP charts in April 1968. This time the album is entirely the duo of Robin Williamson and Mike Heron playing a dizzying array of instruments – Gimbri, pan pipe, piano, mandolin, Jew’s harp, oud, chahanai, water harp, harmonica, organ, hammer dulcimer and harpsichord (as well as all vocals and guitars). The only guests are UK Folk hero Dolly Collins on "Waltz Of The New Moon" and "The Water Song" while Licorice returns for Vocal and Finger Cymbals on "The Minotaur's Song". I love the almost entirely Acapella beginning of "A Very Cellular Song" which then descends into thirteen minutes of flute, harpsichord, Jew's Harp and mandolin hippy happiness. Side 2 opens with two peaches – "'Mercy', I Cry, 'City'" and the accomplished "Waltz Of The New Moon". Williamson waxes lyrical about 'quiet pastures' as a counterpoint to the manic and peopled fumes of cities while Dolly Collins arranged the Harpsichord and Harp on the soaring "Waltz Of The New Moon". Dolly does the Flute Organ on the trickling 'mother of life' ode to nature’s finest ingredient - "The Water Song". Acid Folk probably reached some kind of zenith with the Sitar-beautiful floatation tank of "Three Is A Green Crown" – a near eight-minute trip out that sounds utterly astonishing even to this day. Both "Swift As The Wind" and the short but incredibly beautiful "Nightfall" finish the album off on a peaceful riverflow of Sitar notes...

Once derided by certain quarters of the music press as hippy claptrap given far too much free recording time and leeway - The Incredible String Band’s first three albums feel magical to me now. In fact like the double-album "Wee Tam And The Big Huge" from later in 1968 - they seem to grow in beauty and stature as the decades pass. We are almost certainly never going to see their like again. And you have to say that Beat Goes On have done those pioneering gems a proper knighthood on this brill 2CD reissue/remaster.

"...I remember your long red hair falling in our faces as I kissed you..." - Williamson sang on the confessional love-remembered "First Girl I Loved". How sweet it all was. Peace and Love man and pass us that cauldron of Dandelion Soup with a platter of pink and purple slices of bread...

PS: Beat Goes On CD Remasters for The Incredible String Band are:

1. The Incredible String Band (1966)/The 5000 Spirits Or The Layers Of The Onion (1967)/The Hangman's Beautiful Daughter (1968) – September 2015, Beat Goes On BGOCD 1205, 2CDs

2. Wee Tam And The Big Huge (1968) – July 2015, Beat Goes On BGOCD 1191, 2CDs

3. I Looked Up (April 1970) – September 2014, Beat Goes On BGOCD 1166,1CD

4. "U" (October 1970) – September 2014, Beat Goes On 1164, 2CDs

5. Be Glad The Song Has No Ending (April 1971)/Liquid Acrobat As Regards The Air (October 1971) – June 2004, Beat Goes On BGOCD 627, 2CDs)

6. Earthspan (1972)/No Ruinous Feud (1973) – July 2004, Beat Goes BGOCD 628, 2CDs

"Sam Apple Pie" by SAM APPLE PIE (2012 Angel Air CD Remaster) - A Review by Mark Barry...



"...Some Say I'm A Beast..."

Recorded across 3-days in March 1969 – Walthamstow's SAM APPLE PIE saw their lone album released on the hip Decca Records label in October of 1969. But despite favourable press reviews and some public interest – it effectively disappeared without so much as a howdy-doody into obscurity. Both the Mono and Stereo variants of the original British vinyl album on Decca now stretch to £350 and £250 a pop (if you can find them). Yet on hearing this rather endearing Blues Rock artefact of the late 60ts on this superb little 2012 Angel Air CD Remaster – you can understand why collectors are digging its no nonsense no frills approach the most. Here are the details...

UK released October 2012 (December 2012 in the USA) – "Sam Apple Pie" by SAM APPLE PIE on Angel Air SJPCD 401 (Barcode 5055011704015) is a straightforward transfer of the album and plays out as follows (47:40 minutes):

1. Hawk
2. Winter Of My Love
3. Stranger
4. Swan Song
5. Tiger Man
6. Something Nation [Side 2]
7. Sometime Girl
8. Uncle Sam's Blues
9. Annabelle
10. Moonlight Man
Tracks 1 to 10 are the self-titled debut album of "Sam Apple Pie" – released October 1969 in the UK on Decca LK-R 5005 (Mono) and SKL-R 5005 (Stereo). The Stereo mix is used.

SAM APPLE PIE was:
SAM SAMPSON – Lead Vocals, Harp, Worcester Weasel Whistle
MICK 'TINKERBELL' SMITH – Lead Guitar
ANDY 'SNAKEHIPS' JOHNSON – Slide Guitar
DOG RENNY – Bass
DAVE CHARLES – Drums

Guests:
HARRY KLEIN – Baritone Sax on Tracks 2 and 4
REX MORRIS – Tenor Saxophone on Tracks 2 and 4
STEVE JOLLY – Guitar on Track 10
MALCOLM MORLEY – Electric Harpsichord on Track 3, Piano on Track 9
ANDY CLARK – Piano on Track 8

A UK 7" single was prepped for release 30 May 1969 which featured Mono Single Mixes of "Tiger Man (King Of The Jungle)" b/w "Sometime Girl" on Decca F 22932 – but unfortunately it isn't featured on this release. The 8-page booklet does feature liner notes by JOHN TUCKER that includes interviews with one of the original Producers PETER SHERTSER. Licensed from Red Lightning Records – it doesn’t say who remastered this or where it was done – but it sounds full on – the droning fretwork and bass as clear as day. And when the almost Sabbath-Dark guitars join with the horn players on the seven-minute "Swan Song" – this hybrid of Blues Rock meets Heavy Rock is amazing audiowise.

It's easy to see why the cover of the Joe Hill Lewis R&B swinger "Tiger Man" was chosen as a UK 7" single. Elvis Presley touched on it in his '68 Comeback Special – but Sam Apple Pie take it to another witty rocking level where it sounds like really great Juicy Lucy circa "Who Do You Love" – wild and untamed slide guitar with 'who ha' vocals (there's a demo of Decca F 22932 pictured on Page 5). "...Some say I'm a beast!" Sampson snarls as the boogiethon nears its frantic end – great stuff and definitely going on a 'Wicked Lost Singles' CD-R compilation of mine real soon.

Side 2 opens with the catchy "Something Nation" which has traces of Help Yourself and Wishbone Ash melody – clever guitar runs too. “Sometime Girl” is a Bluesy Guitar moan penned by Johnson and Sampson where the band sounds not unlike Stan Webb's Chicken Shack. Ten Years After meets Paul Butterfield is how I'd describe the wicked "Uncle Sam's Blues" as they have themselves some barroom Boogie - complete with a honky-tonk piano and heavy chromatic harmonica (now this would also have made a good single too). "Uncle Sam's Blues" is so sloppy and almost amateur – and yet so endearing – like much of the album. There's some hiss and tape rumble on the gentle ballad "Annabelle" where the drums attempt that Fleetwood Mac's "Albatross" rumbling background vibe - a piano plinking away alongside the rumble as Sampson attempts to be vocally deep.

Side 2 ends on a chugging guitar workout – "Moonlight Man" sounding like seven-minutes of ZZ Top meets Savoy Brown turned up to 13 on a dial of 12. It’s got that dirty guitar cranked up in the mix – as Sampson gives it some backdoor man lyrics (ladies had better look out). And when that gritty harp comes wafting out of the speakers – it's liable to trample your frail Zimmer-framed Aunty Florence in its path. Then just as you think you know where the song is going – suddenly you get a Budgie clever pace break where Flute and Cymbals go all Jazz on your ass before of course it lurches back into those big guitars and mean-mouthed harp. It ends the album on a Rocking high...

Sam Apple Pie went on to make one more album called not surprisingly "East 17" on DJM Records in 1973 (after their London postal code in Walthamstow), which is equally rare – though less in demand for some reason.

It’s not all genius for sure – but parts of "Sam Apple Pie" absolutely smash it and you can 'so' hear why collectors are drawn to its simple balls-to-the-wall Blues Rock meets Heavy Rock soundscapes. It's even kinda cool (lord help us). Check it out...

"Love Wars/Radio M.U.S.C. Man" by WOMACK & WOMACK (2015 Robinsongs Expanded 2CD Remaster) - A Review for Mark Barry...


This Review Along With 100s Of Others Is Available in my
SOUNDS GOOD E-Book on all Amazon sites
SOUL, FUNK and JAZZ FUSION - Exception CD Remasters  
Just Click Below To Purchase for £3.95
Thousands of E-Pages - All Details and In-Depth Reviews From Discs 
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"...Good Times..."

A smart CD reissue by Robinsongs of the UK (part of Cherry Red) – two popular Soul/Funk albums by Cecil & Linda Womack from 1983 and 1985 on two Remastered CDs with a duo of bonus versions for the big hit "Love Wars" added on as Bonus Tracks. Here are the Womack friendly details...

UK and USA released August 2015 – "Love Wars/Radio M.U.S.C. Man" by WOMACK & WOMACK on Robinsongs WROBIN1CDD (Barcode 5013929950122) offers 2LPs with 2 Bonus Versions onto 2CDs and plays out as follows:

Disc 1 (56:29 minutes):
1. Love Wars
2. Express Yourself
3. Baby I'm Scared Of You
4. T.K.O.
5. A.P.B. [Side 2]
6. Catch And Don't Look Back
7. Woman
8. Angie
9. Good Times
Tracks 1 to 9 are the album "Love Wars" – released December 1983 in the USA and UK on LP and CD Elektra Records 960 293-1 and 960 293-2. It peaked at 34 in March 1984 on the American R&B charts.

BONUS TRACKS:
10. Love Wars (Extended Vocal)
11. Love Wars (Instrumental Dub)
Tracks 10 and 11 are the A&B-sides of a December 1983 US 12" Single on Elektra 0-66987. Track 10 was issued as UK 12" single in April 1984 on Elektra E 9799 (T) with the album track "Good Times" as its B-side.

Disc 2 (42:53 minutes):
1. No Relief
2. Maze
3. Night Rider
4. Eyes
5. Radio M.U.S.C. Man [Side 2]
6. Love's Calling
7. Strange And Funny
8. Romeo & Juliet (Where You Are?)
9. Here Comes The Sun
Tracks 1 to 9 are the album "Radio M.U.S.C Man" – released July 1985 in the USA on Elektra Records 60406-1 (LP) and 9 60406-2 (CD). Released June 1985 in the UK on Elektra EKT 6 (LP) and 960 406-2 (CD). Peaked on the US R&B album charts at 51.

The 12-page booklet features detailed liner notes from LOIS WILSON of Mojo Magazine while the ALAN WILSON Remasters were carried out at Western Star Studios. Originally Produced by STEWART LEVINE (Simply Red, The Crusaders and many others) – both albums have huge polish and feature long who’s who of famous session players – Abraham Laboriel and Nathan East on Bass, Neal Larsen and Bobby Lyle on Keyboards, Lennie Castro and Paulinho Da Costa on Percussion while Cecil Womack played Guitars (brother of Bobby Womack) and Linda shared Keyboards and duet vocals (daughter of the legendary Sam Cooke). The Audio on these CDs is sweet and full – tracks like their rather lovely version of "Angie" shine and don't have too much of that awful 80s over-production (on the first album at least).

Their debut album "Love Wars" album has great Womack & Womack originals – "Love Wars", "Baby I'm Scared Of You" (both singles) and "Woman" being amongst the standouts. Cover versions include "Angie" (Rolling Stones) and "Good Times" (Bobby Womack) - while they co-wrote "Love T.K.O" with ace Keyboardist Eddie "Gip" Nobel for Teddy Pendergrass when they were part of the Philadelphia International songwriting teams (Pendergrass had a huge hit with it in1980 – their version is called "T.K.O."). One of the albums hidden nuggets is "Express Myself" – a funky sweetheart of a tune where they found a great groove, message and smash it with gorgeous duet vocals. "Catch And Don't Look Back" is the kind of catchy 80s Soul Funk that hooks you – gives it some slap bass – harmony vocals and 'do's and don'ts' lyrics – and you're quickly won over. And a big prize for collectors and Funk lovers will be the rare B-side "Instrumental" of "Love Wars" which takes that wicked groove and only uses occasional vocal choruses (included her as one of the two Bonus Mixes). At just short of seven minutes – it makes for a very sexy listen indeed.

Their 2nd platter suffers to some degree with that 'drum sound' thing so many mid-80s productions had – that dull thud and whack of a Soulless machine. It kind of undoes good Funk grooves like "Maze" but is actually a good part of the smooth "Night Rider" which we thought was so cool at the time. "Eyes" has a sweet smooch too – loverman in his palace or lurve. There's an ill-advised wishy-washy cover of "Here Comes The Sun" by The Beatles – but far, far better is the Lionel Richie groove of "Strange And Funny" – probably the best melody on the album.

The first album is a bit of an unsung hero frankly – but platter number two is undone by the times and the need for 'that sound'. Still with the great remasters and those cool bonus tracks and a good price thrown in for a double – it’s recommended - and as a must buy for fans...

This review and hundreds more like it are available in my SOUNDS GOOD Music Books Series available to download (over 2000 e-Pages worth) in my SOUL, FUNK and JAZZ FUSION Book at the following link...


Wednesday, 7 October 2015

"The Golden Age Of American Rock 'n' Roll Volume 6" by VARIOUS ARTISTS (January 1997 Ace Records CD Remasters) - A Review by Mark Barry...



"...Come Go With Me..."

The sixth instalment of Ace's "The Golden Age Of American Rock 'n' Roll" CD Series follows the same route as Volumes 1 to 5 – 30 cleverly sequenced Mono US 7" singles that hit the American Pop charts with a nice combo of the obvious and the obscure. "I Wonder (If Your Love Will Ever Belong To Me)" by The Pentagons, "The Shape I'm In" by Johnny Restivo, "Lover Please" by Clyde McPhatter and "Papa-Oom-Mow-Mow" by The Rivingtons are in Stereo - while only the Vocal Group classic "Little Star" by The Elegants made the British charts. And all this hipster material is 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 sip on a 'Tall Cool One', succumb to that 'Itchy Twitchy Feeling' and do the 'Love Bug Crawl' with that 'Real Wild Child' (all in the best possible taste of course)...

UK and USA released January 1997 - "The Golden Age Of American Rock 'n' Roll Volume 6: Hot 100 Hits From 1954-1963" by VARIOUS ARTISTS on Ace Records CDCHD 650 (Barcode 029667165020) is a 30-track CD and breaks down as follows (73:03 minutes):

1. Shirley – JOHN FRED and The Playboys
December 1958 US 7" single on Montel SJM 1002 (peaked at 82)
Not released in the UK

2. Come Go With Me – THE DELL-VIKINGS
January 1957 USA 7” single on Dot 15538 (peaked at 4)
April 1957 UK 7" single on London HLD 8405 (didn’t chart)
Originally released in the USA December 1956 on Fee Bee FB-205

3. Black Slacks – JOE BENNETT and THE SPARKLETONES
July 1957 US 7" single on ABC-Paramount 9837 (peaked at 17)
August 1957 UK 7" single on HMV Records POP 399 (didn’t chart)

4. Lollipop – RONALD and RUBY
February 1958 US 7" single on RCA Victor 47-7174 (peaked at 20)
March 1958 UK 7" single on RCA Records RCA1053 (didn’t chart)
Lee "Ronald" Morris and Beverley "Ruby" Ross

5. Ten Commandments Of Love – HARVEY and THE MOONGLOWS
August 1958 US 7" single on Chess 1705 (peaked at 22)
October 1958 UK 7" single on London HL-M 8730 (didn’t chart)
Featuring Harvey Fuqua

6. Love Bug Crawl – JIMMY EDWARDS
October 1957 USA 7" single on Mercury 71209 (peaked at 78)
January 1958 UK 7" single on Mercury 7MT 193 (didn’t chart)
Originally issued on Wednesday Records H8OW-0976/7 in the USA – a private pressing of a few hundred copies.
The British issue on 78" and 45" are known Rockabilly rarities – 78" at £50 and the 7" at £500.

7. Do You Want To Dance – BOBBY FREEMAN
March 1958 USA 7" single on Josie 45-835 (peaked at 5)
June 1958 UK 7" single on London HLJ 8644 (didn’t chart)

8. Hard Times (The Slop) – NOBLE "THIN MAN" WATTS & His Rhythm Sparks
November 1957 USA 7" single on Baton 249 (peaked at 44)
May 1958 UK 7" single on London HLU 8627 (didn’t chart)
Instrumental

9. Imagination – THE QUOTATIONS
November 1961 USA 7" single on Verve VK 10245 (peaked at 79 on Cashbox)
January 1962 UK 7” single on HMV Records POP 975 (didn’t chart)

10. I Wonder (If Your Love Will Ever Belong To Me) – THE PENTAGONS
September 1961 USA 7" single on Jamie 1201 (peaked at 84)
Not released in the UK
Rick Nelson recorded a version of the "I Wonder..." song – US released April 1964 as the flipside to "The Very Thought Of You" on Decca 31612

11. At My Front Door – THE EL DORADOS
August 1955 USA 7" single on Vee-Jay VJ 147 (peaked at 17)
Not released in the UK

12. You're So Fine – THE FALCONS
March 1959 USA 7" single on Unart UR 2013 (peaked at 17)
June 1959 UK 7" single on London HLT 8876 (didn’t chart)

13. Tall Cool One – THE WAILERS
May 1959 USA 7" single on Golden Crest CR 518 (peaked at 36)
October 1959 UK 7" single on London HL 8958 (didn’t chart)
An Instrumental - Takoma Rock 'n' Roll band (not Bob Marley's backing group)

14. The Shape I'm In – JOHNNY RESTIVO
September 1959 USA 7" single on RCA Victor 47-7559 (peaked at 80)
July 1959 UK 7" single on RCA Records RCA 1143 (didn’t chart)

15. Little Star – THE ELEGANTS
June 1958 USA 7" single on Apt 45-25005 (peaked at 1)
August 1958 UK 7" single on HMV Records POP 520 (peaked at 25)

16. Lover Please – CLYDE McPHATTER
February 1962 USA 7" single on Mercury 71941 (peaked at 7)
April 1962 UK 7" single on Mercury AMT 1174 (didn’t chart)
Formerly the Lead Singer with The Drifters (on Atlantic Records)

17. Charlena – THE SEVILLES
December 1960 USA 7" single on J.C. Records 116 (peaked at 84)
Not released in the UK
Reissued in the USA June 1963 on Galaxy 721

18. Pledging My Love – JOHNNY ACE
March 1955 USA 7" single on Duke 136 (peaked at 17)
March 1961 UK 7" single on Vogue Pop V 9180 (didn't chart)

19. Itchy Twitchy Feeling – BOBBY HENDRICKS with Jimmy Oliver's Orchestra
June 1958 USA 7" single on Sue 706 (peaked at 25)
October 1958 UK 7" single on London HL 8714 (didn’t chart)

20. Priscilla – EDDIE COOLEY and THE DIMPLES
September 1956 USA 7" single on Royal Roast 621 (peaked at 20)
February 1957 UK 7" single on Columbia DB 3873 (didn’t chart)

21. Hold Back The Tears – THE DELACARDOS
April 1961 USA 7” single on United Artists UA 310 (peaked at 81)
June 1961 UK 7" single on HMV Records POP 890 (didn’t chart)

22. You Can Make It If You Try – GENE ALLLISON
September 1957 USA 7" single on Vee-Jay VJ 256 (peaked at 36)
April 1958 UK 7" single on London HLU 8605 (didn’t chart)

23. Real Wild Child - IVAN
July 1958 USA 7" single on Coral 9-62017 (peaked at 68)
October 1958 UK 7" single on Coral Q 72341 (didn’t chart)
Jerry "Ivan" Allison – the drummer with Buddy Holly's Crickets – the song is written by Johnny O'Keefe who put it out as a US 7" single in April 1958 on Brunswick 9-55067 credited as Johnny O'Keefe and The Dee Jays. Covered by Jerry Lee Lewis in 1958 at Sun and by Iggy Pop in 1986 on A&M

24. Quarter To Four Stomp – THE STOMPERS
January 1962 USA 7" single on Landa 684 (peaked at 100)
April 1962 UK 7" single on Fontana H 385 (didn’t chart)

25. Don't You Just Know It – HUEY (PIANO) SMITH & The Clowns
March 1958 USA 7" single on Ace 545 (peaked at 9)
June 1958 UK 7" single on Columbia DB 4138 (didn’t chart)
The Clowns featured Lead Vocalist Bobby Marchan

26. I'm Walkin' – RICKY NELSON
April 1957 USA 7" single on Verve V 10047 (peaked at 4)
June 1957 UK 7" single on HMV Records POP 355 (didn't chart)

27. I Love An Angel – LITTLE BILL & THE BLUENOTES
June 1959 USA 7" single on Dolton No. 4 (peaked at 66)
August 1959 UK 7" single on Top Rank JAR 176 (didn't chart)

28. Short Shorts – ROYAL TEENS
January 1958 USA 7" single on ABC-Paramount 45-9882 (peaked at 3)
February 1958 UK 7" single on HMV Records POP 454 (didn't chart)
Originally released in the USA in 1957 on Power Records 215

29. Hide And Go Seek, Part 1 – BUNKER HILL
June 1962 USA 7” single on Mala 451 (peaked at 33)
November 1962 UK 7” single on Stateside SS 135 (didn’t chart)
Real name David Walker who later sang with The Mighty Clouds Of Joy

30. Papa-Oom-Mow-Mow – THE RIVINGTONS
January 1962 USA 7” single on Liberty 55427 (peaked at 48)
February 1962 UK 7” single on Liberty LIB 55427 (didn’t chart)
Members of The Sharps became The Rivingtons – see also "Little Bitty Pretty One" by Thurston Harris & The Sharps (Track 11, Volume 5)

NOTES: all tracks are in MONO except Tracks 10, 14, 16 and 30 - which are in STEREO

Volume 6 has an impressive 20-page booklet festooned with ROB FINNIS liner notes and cool pics - quality publicity photos of forgotten names like The Elegants, (the real) Beverly Ross of Ronald and Ruby, The Royal Teens and The Rivingtons. These snaps run alongside rare Trade Adverts for Jimmy Edwards, Nobel & Watts, The Pentagons and The Sevilles. The two-page colour collage of British 45s in their labels bags that was a feature on Volumes 1 to 4 has been replaced with smaller pictures of various UK and US record labels throughout the text - Finnis connecting all the musical and historical dots. Compiled by Trevor Churchill, John Broven and Rob Finnis – the clever sequencing makes it feel like an old jukebox and it features a generous total playing time of 73+ minutes.

The DUNCAN COWELL Remasters are blindingly good – toppermost of the poppermost Audio quality on rarities like the Rockabilly girl/guy bop of "Black Slacks" by Joe Bennett & The Sparkletones or the 'what a thrill...crawling up my spine...' echoed-vocal sauciness of "Love Bug Crawl" by Jimmy Edwards. Despite the disparate sources – the Audio is uniformly great throughout and will warm the cockrels of collector's hearts.

Volume 6 opens with the R&B drum-shuffle of John Fred promising he’ll take his girl "Shirley" around the world (well maybe around Baton Rouge is his bus-fare holds out). Beautifully clear Audio accompanies Vocal Groups The Dell-Vikings and Harvey & The Moonglows who offer happiness and heartache in equal measure - The Dells pleading for her nibs to "Come Go With Me" while Harvey Fuqua of The Moonglows wants to lay down the "Ten Commandments Of Love" first before he gets all kissy-kissy with his baby (really Harvey). Rock 'n' Roll and Rockabilly fans with love the properly great jiver "Love Bug Crawl" by Jimmy Edwards (sounds 'so' clean) - as does the sappy "Do You Want To Dance" where Bobby Freeman sounds suspiciously like he needs singing lessons and not another teen pose. Far better is the instrumental Saxophone and Guitar shuffler "Hard Times (The Slop)" by Noble "Thin Man" Watts where he sounds like he's going to invent a dance craze like the Mashed Potato any second now (great stuff). More Vocal Group 'my, my, my' bending of phrases hits you with an awesome-sounding "Imagination" by The Quotations while The Pentagons are listening to voices deep within that echo their worst manly fears - "I Wonder (If Your Love Will Ever Belong To Me)". The El Dorados have a crazy little mama come knock, knock, knocking "At My Front Door" while The Falcons have nothing but swooning admiration for their baby doll in their lovely Vocal Group gem "You're So Fine".

As I said of Volumes 1 to 5 – what’s wicked about these Ace CD compilations is the oddities – finding gems you just don’t know. The cymbal and piano instrumental "Tall Cool One" by The Wailers is fab stuff – very Pink Panther in places and surely a shoe-in for a belated TV theme. The quivering-lip-vocals of Johnny Restivo gives the wickedly catchy "The Shape I'm In" an Elvis Presley/Charlie Rich 60ts cool. Equally fun is the copycat Clyde McPhatter vocals of Bobby Hendricks on the brilliantly titled "Itchy Twitchy Feeling" - while the recorded-in-a-leaking-bucket "Charlena" by The Sevilles is Low Fi for sure but still massively atmospheric and sounding as vibrant as it did when first pressed in 1961.

Whenever I hear Johnny Ace’s immortal smoocher "Pledging My Love" from 1955 - I always think of a fabulous Aretha Franklin non-album B-side cover version of it which was doubled with a song called "The Clock" on the flip of "Share Your Love With Me" on Atlantic 2650 in 1969. That and Paul Simon's name-checking of the tragic Johnny Ace in his wonderful "The Late Great Johnny Ace” song on the massively underrated "Heart And Bones" album in 1983 (check out both of those masterpieces). Eddie Cooley is determined to get his ring on the finger of "Priscilla" (great Saxophone solo in the centre) while the heartbroken Delacardos have to "Hold Back The Tears" if the girl's name is even mentioned (tissue anyone).

Genius inclusions – you can’t help think that Buddy Holly’s drummer Jerry ‘Ivan’ Allison teleported to some hedonistic future when he wrote "Real Wild Child" – because two genuinely wild men of Rock 'n' Roll (Jerry Lee Lewis and Iggy Pop) both returned the compliment by covering the fabulous rocker on Sun Records in 1958 and A&M Records in 1986. What a great inclusion "Real Wild Child" is and the 1958 Coral Records original sounding so full of that Rock 'n' Roll danger. And I don't care how familiar how the 'ah ah ah – aye o' vocals of "Don't You Just Know It" by Huey Piano Smith is – the song is still joyous R&B fun.

Teenyboppers might have swooned to Ricky Nelson's matinee good looks but I still prefer the Fats Domino original of "I'm Walkin'" to his cover – better is the slow and smoochy Saxophone of "I Love An Angel" by a fawning Little Bill & The Bluenotes - here in awesome clarity. There are few words to describe the 'uh man dig that crazy chick' of the marvellously naff "Short Shorts" by The Royal Teens (but we like it anyway man). And Volume 6 ends with a double-whammy of Audio magnificence - the shouting of David Walker (later with The Mighty Clouds Of Joy) masquerading as Bunker Hill on the genuinely nanny goat raucous "Hide And Go Seek" (someone literally bleats like a goat in the background) – and the 'funniest sound I ever heard' of "Papa-Oom-Mow-Mow" by The Rivingtons - whose lead singer needs to seek psychiatric help as soon as possible...

Like Volumes 1 to 5 – instalment No. 6 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...

INDEX - Entries and Artist Posts in Alphabetical Order