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Sunday, 17 July 2016

"Gasoline Alley" by ROD STEWART (Inside 2002's The Universal/Chronicles 3CD Set 'Reason To Believe: The Complete Mercury Studio Recordings' - Suha Gur Remasters) - A Review by Mark Barry...








"…Take Me Back To The Gasoline Alley…"

Arguing the merits of Rod Stewart's 'Mercury Records Years' albums (1969 to 1974) is like saying a few of the Beatles albums from the Sixties were 'pretty good' and you should 'probably' buy some. What I'm getting at here is 'which' version of "Gasoline Alley" should you buy? And while I'm at it what about 1971's "Every Picture Tells A Story" or 1972"s "Never A Dull Moment" or even the lesser-seen "Sing It Again Rod" LP compilation from June 1973 that went to No. 1 but never seems to show on CD? I want to argue that the whole period was magical musically (even the disappointing "Smiler" from 1974 had its fab moments) and this is one of those occasions where you should forego the individual purchase and buy the bleeding lot.

There's a Remastered stand-alone CD for "Gasoline Alley" from 1995 with just the 9-tracks and the gorgeous UK artwork inside and out – an expensive but audiophile Mobile Fidelity Gold CD release from 2011 and a beautifully done Japanese SACD from 2014 - as well as a dizzying array of '5 album collection' Mini Box Sets - most of whom use the 'US' artwork. But I say go for this instead...

US and UK released in November 2002 (reissued January 2005) – "Reason To Believe: The Complete Mercury Studio Recordings" by ROD STEWART on Mercury/Universal/Chronicles 440 063 422-2 (Barcode 044006342221) is a 3CD set of Remasters that offers fans all six albums from the period along with rare 7" single edits and five outakes first released on a 1995 2CD retrospective. 

This 3CD set will allow fans to sequence his six albums (5 studio and 1 compilation) - "An Old Raincoat Won’t Let You Down" (known as "The Rod Stewart Album" in the USA), "Gasoline Alley", "Every Picture Tells A Story", "Never A Dull Moment", "Sing It Again Rod" (compilation with one new track "Pinball Wizard") and finally "Smiler" – his last studio LP for Mercury Records.

Disc 1 contains the first two LPs including "Gasoline Alley" (79:19 minutes):
1. Street Fighting Man
2. Man Of Constant Sorrow
3. Blind Prayer
4. Handbags And Gladrags
5. An Old Raincoat Won't Ever Let You Down [Side 2]
6. I Wouldn't Ever Change A Thing
7. Cindy's Lament
8. Dirty Old Town
Tracks 1 to 8 are his debut LP "An Old Raincoat Won’t Let You Down" – released February 1970 on Vertigo VO 4 in the UK. It was called "The Rod Stewart Album" in the USA and its September 1969 release on Mercury SR-61237 featuring different artwork to the UK issue (same tracks). As this is effectively an American release – the booklet doesn’t picture the lovely 'photograph' gatefold of the UK artwork.

9. Gasoline Alley
10. It's All Over Now
11. Only A Hobo
12. My Way Of Giving
13. Country Comforts [Side 2]
14. Cut Across Shorty
15. Lady Day
16. Jo's Lament
17. You're My Girl (I Don’t Want To Discuss It)
Tracks 9 to 17 are his 2nd solo LP "Gasoline Alley" – released May 1970 in the USA on Mercury SR-61264 and September 1970 in the UK on Vertigo 6360 500. Produced by ROD STEWART and LOU REIZNER.

18. It's All Over Now – issued as a 7” single edit in the UK on Vertigo 6086 002 in September 1970 (the album track "Jo's Lament" was its B-side).

As you can see - with this set you also get the 7" single edit of "It's All Over Now" - something none of the individual "Gasoline Alley" CD releases offers. The packaging is tasty too and the Audio stunning. The 24-page booklet is housed in a three-way foldout card digipak with each flap featuring live photos (pictures beneath the see-through plastic trays also). AMY LINDEN provides the liner notes and there’s discography info on each track and overall recording credits. But the big news is the SUHA GUR remasters which are fantastic – full of presence and life and that raunchy feel Stewart got at the time. Lyrically and musically – there is so much richness here. Armed with a God-given set of tonsils, melodies that haunt and a way with observation - song after song smacks you over the head with greatness and smart choices. And all of it with that fantastic band of his - Ronnie Wood, Martin Quittenton, Ronnie Lane, Mick Waller, Kenny Jones and Ian McLagan - all dripping British Rock’n’Roll swagger that seemed to come so easily to them. The only real disappointment for me - especially with regard to artwork - is that this 3CD compilation is essentially an American release and therefore uses the 'US' artwork for "Gasoline Alley" and unfortunately the lovely British artwork (inside and out) is AWOL.

The opening song "Gasoline Alley" (co-written by Rod with Ron Wood of The Stones) is likely to reduce most ardent Rodders fans to mush within seconds - a plaintive and heartfelt ache for the simple times and even the grimy streets of old as depicted on the stippled gatefold cover. It's trite I know to call songs 'beautiful' but this one is and its been covered many times as proof (Elkie Brooks reminded people of its beauty in 1983 with synth version on A&M Records). And that Ron Wood bottleneck guitar and Stanley Matthews on Mandolin add so much too.

Recorded at Morgan Studios in London - there's a ramshackle feel to the "Gasoline Alley" LP from the off - an unplugged feel that lends the music an authenticity that the later polished Riva material abandoned (different times, different approaches). A nice addition on this set is the 3:37 minute 7" single edit of Bobby Womack's witty and caustic "It's All Over Now" - shorter and punchier that its 6:24 minute big brother on the album (Ian McLagan and Pete Sears plink away on the piano). Written by Steve Marriott and Ronnie Lane for the Small Faces self-titled Immediate Records LP in 1967 – both Ronnie Lane and Kenny Jones join Rod on Vocals and Drums for his clever cover of "My Way Of Giving". Bob Dylan's gorgeous "Only A Hobo" was apparently a "Times They Are A-Changin'...'" outtake and Rod's version can only be described as magical. He takes the original melody's Folk elements and infuses it with that British Faces/Rod Stewart sound - lifting the air and the aching lyrics about 'lying in the gutter and dying with no name' into something so special.

Another clever choice is his Side opener - Elton John's "Country Comforts" taken from his "Tumbleweed Connection" album of October 1970. Rod makes the ballad feel like his own and is ably abetted by wonderful counterpoint vocals from Jack Reynolds as the song winds its way to the end. Rod's brilliant cover of "Cut Across Shorty" (written by Marijohn Wilkin and Wayne Walker) - an Eddie Cochran classic made almost unrecognisable with rattling acoustic guitar strings, Dick Powell on Violin and chunky Ron Wood Rock 'n' Roll guitar licks (and I love that acoustic fade out). "Lady day" is a wickedly good Rod Stewart original ballad with his 'north winds have made my face a little older' lyrics confessing. But there's a warmth to his affection towards his lady that's intensely moving - 'scared when I remember too much' - it's the kind of wonderful overlooked album gem that needs to be in your life - a 'Sunday Morning Coming Down' song I never tire of. And "Jo's Lament" is the same - another RS original that shows his amazing knack for a melody - all those acoustic guitar strums and bottleneck slides that warm your bones like an afternoon on a river. It ends on the fantastic Funk-Rock of "You're My Girl (I Don't Want To Discuss It)" - a Dick Cooper, Beth Beatty and Ernie Shelby song that was done by Little Richard in 1967 on Okeh Records and Rhinoceros in 1968 on their self-titled debut LP on Elektra Records. A great way to end a great album...

To sum up - six whole albums, rare single sides and a batch of previously unreleased for under nine-quid is a bit of a no-brainer really.

Carry yourself back to the "Gasoline Alley" with the "Reason To Believe” 3CD set - a rare instance of quality and quantity combined - and of all of it wrapped up in that top-quality remastered sound…

PS: The first album gives you a superb keyboard contribution from a pre ELP Keith Emerson on "I Wouldn't Ever Change A Thing" - a brilliant song added to hugely by his playing. RIP Keith...

Friday, 15 July 2016

"Sound System" by THE CLASH (2013 Sony Multi-Disc/Memorabilia Box Set) - A Review by Mark Barry...



"…Something About England…"

I'll openly admit to a wee tremble when this beauty got handed over by a relieved postman - his arms reverting back to normalcy. This thing is big and heavy and yet I love every mad over-the-top inch of it. There's a ton of info to get through so let's do the Armagideon Times, Badges and Dog Tags...

Released September 2013 and featuring full involvement with the band - "Sound System" by THE CLASH is a multiple CD, DVD and Memorabilia Box Set on Sony 88725460002 (Barcode 887254600022) and features the following:

A beautiful and thoughtfully put together Box Set shaped like a Ghetto Blaster Radio (270 x 420 x 100mm) - and once you open the flip-top lid - it reveals each item has been carefully placed inside in a numerical order - their exact placing within laid out in detail in the 'Service Manual'. Here are the contents - numbered 1 to 22 (1 to 8 housed in hard card book sleeves – the music is 1 to 6):

MUSIC:
1. The Clash CD (Newly Remastered by Tim Young and The Clash)
2. Give 'Em Enough Rope CD (Newly Remastered)
3. London Calling 2CD (Newly Remastered)
4. Sandinista! 3CD (Newly Remastered) [1 to 4 on the left side]
5. Combat Rock CD (Newly Remastered)
6. The Clash Extras 3CD (Newly Remastered)

EXTRAS:
7. The Clash DVD (Newly Remastered)
8. Service Manual (Hardback Book Sleeve Like The CDs) [5 to 8 on the right side]
9. Flightcase: 5 Badges and Dog Tags [centred between-and-dividing 1 to 8 CDs]
10. Flightcase: 3 DIY Stickers: 85 x 140mm [behind 1 to 4 CDs]
11. Flightcase: The Clash Paperback Book ("The Future Is Unwritten" - blank inside) [behind CDs 5 to 8]
12. The Clash Folder (contains 13 to 18 below)
13. The Armagideon Times Special Edition (36 Pages)
(Features written contributions from The Baker, Robin Banks, John Cooper Clarke, Johnny Green, Ray Jordan, Don Letts, Alex Michon, Chris Salewicz, Pennie Smith and Kosmo Vinyl. There are also essays from each member of the band - JOE STRUMMER, MICK ONES, PAUL SIMONON and TOPPER HEADON)
14. The Armagideon Times  (Reprinted Fanzine - 24 Pages)
15. The Armagideon Times 2 (Reprinted fanzine  - 24 Pages)
16. Bumper Sticker 88 x 297mm
17. Bumper Sticker 88 x 297mm
18. The Clash Vintage Sticker Set: 180 x 280mm (9 peelable stickers on one sheet)
19. Riser (Black & Yellow Card at the base of the box)
20. Poster Tube (Looks Like A Large Cigarette with a 'Clash' Filter Area)
21. Poster (15" x 15")
22. The Box Itself (inside Divider Has Number 22 on it)

Disc 1 - "The Clash" - 35:20 minutes:
1. Janie Jones
2. Remote Control
3. I'm So Bored With The U.S.A.
4. White Riot
5. Hate & War
6. What's My Name
7. Deny
8. London's Burning [Side 2]
9. Career Opportunities
10. Cheat
11. Protex Blue
12. Police & Thieves
13. 48 Hours
14. Garageland
Tracks 1 to 14 are their UK debut LP "The Clash" released April 1977 on CBS Records S CBS 82000 and August 1979 on Epic Records JE 36060 in the USA (with a Free 7" single containing "Groovy Times" and "Gates Of The West"). To sequence the USA 15-track version of their debut LP in remastered form - use the following tracks off Disc 1 and CD1 in the "Extras" 3-disc set [3/1] = Track 3 on Disc 1 etc:

1. Clash City Rockers [Track 8 - Disc 1 of 6 "Extras"]
2. I'm So Bored With The U.S.A. [3/1]
3. Remote Control [2/1]
4. Complete Control [Track 6 - Disc 1 of 6 "Extras"]
5. White Riot [4/1]
6. White Man In Hammersmith Palais [Track 10 - Disc 1 of 6 "Extras"]
7. London's Burning [8/1]
8. I Fought The Law [Track 15 - Disc 1 of 6 "Extras"]
9. Janie Jones [1/1] - Side 2
10. Career Opportunities [9/1]
11. What's My Name [6/1]
12. Hate & War [5/1]
13. Police & Thieves [12/1]
14. Jail Guitar Doors [Track 9 - Disc 1 of 6 "Extras"]
15. Garageland [14/1]
FREE SINGLE:
16. Groovy Times [Track 16 - Disc 1 of 6 "Extras"]
17. Gates Of The West [Track 17 - Disc 1 of 6 "Extras"]

Disc 2 - "Give 'Em Enough Rope" - 37:02 minutes:
1. Safe European Home
2. English Civil War
3. Tommy Gun
4. Julie's Been Working For The Drug Squad
5. Last Gang In Town
6. Guns On The Roof [Side 2]
7. Drug-Stabbing Time
8. Stay Free
9. Cheapskates
10. All The Young Punks (New Boots And Contracts)
Tracks 1 to 10 are their 2nd album "Give 'Em Enough Rope" - released October 1978 in the UK on CBS Records S CBS 82431 and February 1979 in the USA on Epic JE 35543

Disc 3 - "London Calling"
CD1 (33:37 minutes):
1. London Calling
2. Brand New Cadillac
3. Jimmy Jazz
4. Hateful
5. Rudie Can't Fail
6. Spanish Bombs [Side 2]
7. The Right Profile
8. Lost In The Supermarket
9. Clampdown
10. The Guns Of Brixton

CD2 (31:36 minutes):
1. Wrong 'Em Boyo [Side 3]
2. Death Or Glory
3. Koka Kola
4. The Card Cheat
5. Lover's Rock [Side 4]
6. Four Horsemen
7. I'm Not Down
8. Revolution Rock
9. Train In Vain
All 19-tracks are their 3rd album release - the double-LP "London Calling" released December 1979 in the UK on CBS Records CLASH 3. The track "Train In Vain" on the end of Side 2 was not listed on the sleeve of original copies even though it was on the album (the run-out groove gave you the name of the track). Released January 1980 in the USA on Epic E2 36328 as a 2LP set - initial copies were the same regarding "Train In Vain".

Disc 4 - "Sandinista!"
CD1 (45:42 minutes):
1. The Magnificent Seven [Side 1]
2. Hitsville U.K.
3. Junco Partner
4. Ivan Meets G.I. Joe
5. The Leader
6. Something About England
7. Rebel Waltz [Side 2]
8. Look Here
9. The Crooked Beat
10. Somebody Got Murdered
11. One More Time
12. One More Dub

CD2 (51:31 minutes)
1. Lightning Strikes (Not Once But Twice) [Side 3]
2. Up In Heaven (Not Only Here)
3. Corner Soul
4. Let's Go Crazy
5. If Music Could Talk
6. The Sound Of Sinners
7. Police On My Back [Side 4]
8. Midnight Log
9. The Equaliser
10. The Call Up
11. Washington Bullets
12. Broadway

CD 3 (47:32 minutes):
13. Lose This Skin [Side 5]
14. Charlie Don't Surf
15. Mensforth Hill
16. Junkie Slip
17. Kingston Advice
18. The Street Parade
19. Version City [Side 6]
20. Living In Fame
21. Silicone On Sapphire
22. Version Pardner
23. Career Opportunities
24. Shepherds Delight
All 36-tracks are the 3LP set "Sandinista!" - released December 1980 in the UK on CBS Records FSLN 1 and Epic E3X 37037 in the USA

Disc 5 - "Combat Rock" - 46:21 minutes:
1. Know Your Rights
2. Car Jamming
3. Should I Stay Or Should I Go
4. Rock The Casbah
5. Red Angel Dragnet
6. Straight To Hell
7. Overpowered By Funk [Side 2]
8. Atom Tan
9. Sean Flynn
10. Ghetto Defendant
11. Inoculated City
12. Death Is A Star
Tracks 1 to 12 are the album "Combat Rock" - released May 1982 in the UK on CBS Records FMLN 2 and Epic FE 37689 in the USA

"Sound System Extras" (6)
CD1 (75:25 minutes):
1. White Riot (Single Version)
2. 1977 (B-side)
3. Listen (Capitol Radio EP) / Interviews (Capitol Radio EP) - 11:08 minutes
4. Capitol Radio (Capitol Radio EP)
5. London's Burning (Live B-side Remote Control)
6. Complete Control (Single Version)
7. City Of The Dead (B-side)
8. Clash City Rockers (Original Single Version)
9. Jail Guitar Doors (B-side)
10. White Man In Hammersmith Palais (A-side)
11. The Prisoner (B-side)
12. 1-2 Crush On You (B-side Tommy Gun)
13. Time Is Tight (Black Market Clash 10" LP)
14. Pressure Drop (B-side English Civil War)
15. I Fought The Law (Cost Of Living EP)
16. Groovy Times (Cost Of Living EP)
17. Gates Of The West (Cost Of Living EP)
18. Capitol Radio (Cost Of Living EP)
19. Armagideon Time (B-side London Calling)
20. Bank Robber (A-side)
21. Rockers Galore On A UK Tour (B-side)

CD2 (75:45 minutes):
1. Magnificent Dance (12" (Available On Singles Box Set)
2. Midnight To Stevens (Outtake)
3. Radio One (B-side Hitsville UK)
4. Stop The World (B-side The Call Up)
5. The Cool Out (US 12" B-side The Call Up)
6. This Is Radio Clash (A-side)
7. This Is Radio Clash (B-side 7" - Different Lyrics)
8. First Night Back In London (B-side Know Your Rights)
9. Rock The Casbah (Bob Clearmountain 12" Mix)
10. Long Time Jerk (B-side Rock The Casbah)
11. The Beautiful People Are Ugly Too (Outtake)
12. Idle In Kangaroo Court (Outtake listed as Kill Time)
13. Ghetto Defendant (Extended Version - Unedited - 6:14 minutes)
14. Cool Confusion (B-side Should I Stay Or Should I Go)
15. Sean Flynn (Extended 'Marcus Music' Version - 7:24 minutes)
16. Straight To Hell (Unedited Version from Clash On Broadway)

CD3 (35:16 minutes)
Extracts from The Clash's first-ever recording session at Beaconsfield Film School 1976 - Recorded by Julian Temple
1. I'm So Bored With The U.S.A.
2. London's Burning
3. White Riot
4. 1977
Polydor Demos - The Clash's second recording session January 1977
5. Janie Jones
6. Career Opportunities
7. London's Burning
8. 1977
9.White Riot
Live At The Lyceum, London 28th December 1979
10. City Of The Dead
11. Jail Guitar Doors
12. English Civil War
13. Stay Free
14. Cheapskates
15. I Fought The Law

DVD, Region 0:
"Julien Temple Archive" - 6:20 minutes
"White Riot Promo Film" - 7:20 minutes
Promo and Interviews with Tony Parsons
1977
White Riot
London's Burning
"Sussex University 1977" - 8:25 minutes
I'm So Bored With The U.S.A.
Hate & War
Career Opportunities
Remote Control
"Don Letts Super 8 Medley" - 11:40 minutes
White Riot
Janie Jones
City Of The Dead
Clash City Rockers
White Man In Hammersmith Palais
1977
"Clash On Broadway" - 19:50 minutes
London Calling
This Is Radio Clash
The Magnificent Seven
Guns Of Brixton
Safe European Home
"Promo Videos"
Tommy Gun
London Calling
Bank Robber
Clampdown (Live)
Train In Vain (Live)
The Call Up
Rock The Casbah
Should I Stay Or Should I Go (Live At Shea Stadium)
Career Opportunities (Live At Shea Stadium)

The detachable card list on the rear falls away easily so I simply store it inside with the 'folder' in the rear pouch. Quite apart from the sheer visual and tactile whack of this thing - the big news for fans is brand new remasters from first generation tapes by TIM YOUNG in conjunction with the band at Metropolis Studios in London. We should talk about the REMASTERS because they're fabulous. Tim Young's notes in the "Extras" 3-disc set explain that "Rope" has had the first generation tapes used for the first time to his knowledge - so I immediately went to my favourite track "Guns On The Roof" - and WOW is the only appropriate response. It sounds just incredible with all that guitar power you always thought was buried in the mix somewhere now to the fore. "Drug-Stabbing Time" and "Stay Free" are even better - leaping out of your speakers with renewed venom.

"London Calling" is like a different animal ("Jimmy Jazz", "Death Or Glory" and "Train In Vain" are unbelievably good with "Train" running out longer by about five seconds) - but to my ears "Sandinista!" feels the least improved. It's definitely clearer on the bass and rhythm section ("The Magnificent Seven" and "The Call Up" and Timon Dogg'svocal on "Lose This Skin") but the differences are not as stark as the first 3 LPs - they're just subtler. Despite the sprawl of "Sandinista!" - I've always loved it precisely because its like "The White Album" or "Exile On Main St." or "Physical Graffiti" - you can dip into it and still seemingly find something new every time. The choral brass arrangements at the beginning of "Somewhere In England" is now gorgeous while the game-machine noises on "Ivan Meets G.I. Joe" are even more manic. "Somebody Got Murdered" and their take on Eddy Grant's "Police On My Back" are much improved - ballsy as they should be. Back to "London Calling" and I'm impressed with "Lost In The Supermarket" and "Brand New Cadillac" - comparing them against my 1999 versions - there's more going on with the high hats, drums and bass. And that Rock 'n' Roll guitar as "Brand New Cadillac" begins punches way above its former weight now. I also love the way each of the CDs has their original vinyl bits reproduced - the "Armagideon Times" for "Sandinista!", the inner sleeves of "London Calling" made into one fold-out lyric poster - the inner and poster of "Combat Rock" combined in the same way - and all the CDs are black like vinyl LPs. The driving backbeat behind "Combat Rock's" Side 2 standout "Overpowered By Funk" is a little improved but I can't say I hear much difference in "Should I Stay Or Should I Go".

I own the Singles Box Set on CD so I compared the remasters and again the "Extras" versions are far superior - that guitar into on "Clash City Rocker" and distant Strummer vocal are better - and the balls of "I Fought The Law" is truly fantastic (a cover of an old Bobby Fuller Four hit). And my favorite B-side ever - their genius take on Willie Williams reggae tune "Armagideon Time" sounds like its going to do your speakers harm. That amazing bass and percussive beginning of "The Magnificent Dance" (the 12" remix) has jaw-dropping sound quality as does the US 12" B-side "The Cool Out" (an instrumental version of "The Call Up") - both with meaty rhythm sections. The early Polydor demos show a band getting there and the expert Glyn Johns produced that amateur feel out of the first album. I'm not sure I like them having loved the originals for all these years. Other disappointments include the outtakes on Disc 2 like "The Beautiful People..." and "Kangaroo Court" which are wholly dismissible and "Sean Flynn" has huge hiss levels on it. But I'm glad to see that Metropolis again mastered the DVD because the picture quality on the Don Letts and Clash On Broadway segments is brill (you get a sense of their danger live).

To sum up - "The Last Gang In Town" and "The Only Band That Ever Mattered" - there's been an awful lot of knob written about The Clash across the years (what about the Ramones, The Pistols or even Television) - and "Sound System" conveniently exorcises out the infamous and horrible end of "Cut The Crap" in 1985. You could also argue that you'd be better off just spending twenty quid on the simpler "5 Studio Albums Box Set" released in tandem with this - but I'd say if ever a band deserved this kind of over-the-top celebration - then England's heroes The Clash are the boys. And when you think of how EMI has consistently cheaped-out Stranglers fans with card sleeves and little else - thank God Sony stumped up. I love the care and attention that went into "Sound System". So there you have it - all those old bits spangly new again and presented to us in a fabulous setting.

Tim Young has described remastering The Clash's six years of output as a 'labour of love'. Well - while the future may indeed be unwritten - I suspect his brilliant work here (in conjunction with surviving members of the band) will be written about for decades to come. Well done and 'Career Opportunities' to all involved...

"Collected" by JOE JACKSON (2010 Universal [Holland] 3CD Remasters) - A Review by Mark Barry...




"…Step Into Another World…"

“Collected” doesn’t look like much but man does it deliver. There’s a lot of JOE JACKSON on here so let’s get to the white winklepickers and dodgy watches…

Euro-released September 2010 – "Collected" by JOE JACKSON on Universal Music 533 069-5 (Barcode 600753306956) is a 3CD set out of the Netherlands and breaks down as follows:

Disc 1 (74:46 minutes)
1. Fools In Love (Album Version)
2. Is She Really Going Out With Him?
3. Look Sharp! (Album Version)
4. Got The Time
5. Sunday Papers
6. It’s Different For Girls (tracks 1 to 6 are from his debut LP “Look Sharp!” released January 1979 in the UK on A&M Records AMLH 64743)
7. I’m The Man
8. On Your Radio
9. Get That Girl (tracks 7 to 9 are from his 2nd album “I’m The Man” released October 1979 in the UK on A&M Records AMLH 64794)
10. Tilt [see 15]
11. Biology
12. Mad At You
13. Beat Crazy
14. One To One (tracks 11 to 14 are from his 3rd album “Beat Crazy” released October 1980 in the UK on A&M Records AMLH 64837)
15. The Harder They Come (tracks 15 and 10 are the A&B-sides of a non-album 7” single released June 1980 in the UK on A&M Records AMS 7536. The A is a Jimmy Cliff cover – the B-side a JJ original)
16. Jack, You’re Dead
17. Jumpin’ Jive
18. Is You Is Or is You Ain’t My Baby
19. Five Guys Named Moe
20. What’s The Use Of Getting Sober (When You’re Gonna Get Drunk Again)
Tracks 16 to 20 are from his 4th LP “Joe Jackson’s Jumpin’ Jive” released June 1981 in the UK on A&M Records AMLH 65830. The whole album is cover versions of Forties and Fifties Louis Jordan Rhythm ‘n’ Blues hits

Disc 2 (78:00 minutes):
1. Another World
2. Steppin’ Out
3. Real Men
4. A Slow Song
5. Breaking Us In Two (tracks 1 to 5 are his 5th album “Night And Day” released June 1982 in the UK on A&M Records AMLH 64906)
6. Cosmopolitan
7. 1-2-3 Go (This Town’s A Fairground)
8. Laundromat Monday (tracks 6 to 8 are from his 6th album “Mike’s Murder O.S.T.”) released September 1983 in the UK on A&M Records AMLX 64931)
9. Cha Cha Loco
10. Be My Number Two
11. You Can’t Get What You Want (Till You Know What You Want) (tracks 9 to 11 are from his 7th album “Body And Soul” released March 1984 in the UK on A&M Records AMLX 65000)
12. Happy Ending (featuring Elaine Caswell) (April 1984 UK 7” single on A&M Records AM 186)
13. Not Here, Not Now (from “Body And Soul” as per tracks 9 to 11)
14. Will Power (from his album “Will Power” released April 1987 in the UK on A&M Records AMA 3908)
15. (He’s A) Shape In A Drape (from the soundtrack LP “Tucker – A Man And His Dreams O.S.T.” released November 1988 in the UK on A&M Records AMA 3917)
16. Nineteen Forever
17. Down To London (tracks 16 and 17 are from his album “Blaze Of Glory” released April 1989 on A&M Records AMA 5249)

Disc 3 (77:05 minutes):
1. The Human Touch
2. Me And You (Against The World) (tracks 1 and 2 are from his album “Blaze Of Glory” released April 1989 on A&M Records AMA 5249)
3. When You’re Not Around
4. Stranger Than Fiction (tracks 3 and 4 from his album “Laughter & Lust” released April 1991 on Virgin America VUSLP 34)
5. Glamour And Pain
6. Happyland (tracks 5 and 6 are from “Night And Day II” released on CD October 2000 on Sony Jazz SK 89621)
7. Too Tough
8. King Pleasure Time (tracks 7 and 8 are from “Rain” released January 2008 on CD)
9. Come On (Live) (exclusive track from the compilation album “Propaganda – No Wave II” released 1979 in the UK on A&M Records AMLE 64786)
10. Right And Wrong (Live)
11. It’s A Big World (Live)
12. Forty Years (Live)
13. Home Town (Live) (tracks 10 to 13 are from his double live set “Big World” released March 1986 in the UK on A&M Records JWA 3)
14. Is She Really Going Out With Him (A Capella Version)
15. Jumpin Jive (Live) (tracks 14 and 15 are from his double live set “Live 1980/86” released May 1988 on A&M Records AMA 6706)
16. Summer In The City
17. Medley (The In Crowd/Down To London- Live) (tracks 16 and 17 are from “Summer In The City: Live In New York” released June 2000 on CD on Sony Classical SK 89237)
18. Stranger Than You (Live 2 Meter Sessies) (from “Night And Day II” released on CD October 2000 on Sony Jazz SK 89621)

You get a four-way foldout digipak with a piano on one flap and a saxophone on the other and a very basic 8-page booklet with a 2-page catch up on his career. But that’s not why I’m here. I’ve found a strange “Collected” anomaly that I’ve mentioned before (see STEELY DAN, J.J. CALE and GERRY RAFFERTY). These Universal compilations come out of Europe (the Netherlands and Germany) - mastered by QS Sound Lab (no names) - and I’d swear the audio is better than previously released issues anywhere else. I tried the 10cc set but there was no improvement. But on this Joe Jackson set its far more pronounced. The audio is gorgeous and beautifully rendered.

Fans will also know that the "This Is It: The A&M Years 1979-1989" 2CD anthology (reissued as "Gold" in 2008) is the last half decent remasters of his material – and both end at 1989. But as you can see with this tasty number and the detailed track lists I’ve provided above – it extends way beyond and is so much the better for it.

Tracks like “Down To London” and “Me And You (Against The World)” are typical of him – radio-friendly boppers with an irresistibly catchy sing-along chorus and sharp lyrics. But when he slows it down and even goes all Sloppy Joe on the romance front – Joe Jackson has a way with a melody and words that cut like a knife – even be ‘too’ real for comfort. This started happening on the “Night And Day” LP with “Real Men” and “Breaking Us In Two” and continued “Be My Number Two” “Not Here, Not Now”. It’s the same for later gems like “The Human Touch” with its Eleanor Rigby strings and gorgeous melody/words.

The first CD is chockfull of fantastic New Wave three-minutes blasts - most of which come from his brilliant debut “Look Sharp” – tracks like the smarmy “Fools In Love”, the biting “Sunday Papers” and the frantic “Got The Time” still sound vital like the first Police album. “On Your Radio” with its harmonica/guitar/bass combo was the kind of single we chewed up back in the day. But although I love Louis Jordan (see my review for the Bear Family box set) – Jackson’s “Jumpin’ Jive” project still doesn’t sound right (sound quality is ace though). Things of course took a massive leap forward with “Night And Day” – a truly sophisticated piece of work. Nice to hear that Mike’s Murder track too. He continued on that tack – his “Blaze Of Glory” is a bit of a forgotten classic.

You might think the inclusion of ‘live’ stuff is perfect compilation filler – but in the case of Joe Jackson (and the compilers) – it’s different for us (never mind girls). His incendiary version of Chuck Berry’s “Come On” is fantastic as is the brilliantly clever Acapella vocal take on “Is She Really Going Out With Him?” – the same song just told in a clever new way. The “Big World” 3-sided double-album was all new material but just to make things difficult (or fresh as he felt) it was recorded ‘live’ – and again tracks like “Right And Wrong” and “Forty Years” are stunning stuff (could easily have been “Night And Day” outtakes). The cheeky Brit even has the nerve to cover The Lovin’ Spoonful’s “Summertime In The City” in front of a New York audience – but his combo of 1965’s “In Crowd” with his own “Down To London” (from 1989) is bloody genius (you can feel the audience digging it).

Who would have thought that England’s sleepy Burton-On-Trent could produce such consistent brilliance. Like his contemporaries Graham Parker and Nick Lowe – Joe Jackson has always been bubbling under with album after album of class – looked on as ‘that guy’ by a public unwilling to keep up with his latest spin - yet beloved by fans. And yet with 55 tracks across three CDs – you get the strong feeling that this fab Euro compilation is only scraping the surface of a rock you should have looked under long ago. Looking bloody sharp my son…

PS: Artists in this Universal Euro Series are:
The Allman Brothers, The Band, J.J. Cale, The Carpenters, Creedence Clearwater Revival, Cuby + Blizzards, Fairport Convention, Golden Earring, John Hiatt, Joe Jackson, The Moody Blues, Gerry Rafferty Stealers Wheel and The Humblebums, Shocking Blue, Steely Dan, Cat Stevens, 10cc., Thin Lizzy and Gino Vannelli.

INDEX - Entries and Artist Posts in Alphabetical Order