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Monday, 19 October 2015

"The Golden Age Of American Rock 'n' Roll Volume 10" by VARIOUS ARTISTS (September 2002 Ace Records CD Remasters) - A Review by Mark Barry...


  
"...For Your Precious Love..."

The superb 'tenth' instalment of Ace's "The Golden Age Of American Rock 'n' Roll" CD Series followed the same route as Volumes 1 to 9 – offering fans 30 cleverly sequenced Mono US 7" singles that hit the American Pop charts with a nice combo of the obvious and the obscure. Like preceding volumes some are in Stereo (in this case only two - see Track Notes below) and only a few tracks actually made the British charts (even though many are now well known).

And all of this rare and hip material is presented to music lovers on both sides of the pond by a British 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 have some 'Ya Ya' as we shake our 'Ooby Dooby' at 'Maybelline' (while her mother-in-law's out of town)...

UK and USA released September 2002 - "The Golden Age Of American Rock 'n' Roll Volume 10: Hot 100 Hits From 1954-1963" by VARIOUS ARTISTS on Ace Records CDCHD 850 (Barcode 029667185028) is a 30-track CD and breaks down as follows (76:29 minutes):

1. Early In The Morning – THE RINKY-DINKS
August 1958 US 7" single on Atco 45-6121 (peaked at 24)
August 1958 UK 7" single on London HLE 8679 (didn't chart)
Credited in the UK as The Rinky-Dinks featuring Bobby Darin – the song is a co-write between Bobby Darin and Woody Harris

2. Will You Willyum – JANIS MARTIN
April 1956 USA 7" single on RCA Victor 47-6491 (peaked at 50)
Not released in the UK

3. Searchin' – THE COASTERS
March 1957 US 7" single on Atco 45-6087 (peaked at 3)
June 1957 UK 7" single on London HLE 8450 (peaked at 30 in Sept 1957 for 1 week)
Written by Jerry Lieber and Mike Stoller

4. You Can Have Her – ROY HAMILTON
January 1961 US 7" single on Epic 5-9431 (peaked at 12)
February 1961 UK 7" single on Fontana H 298 (didn't chart)
Stereo Version

5. Just Because – LLOYD PRICE
February 1957 US 7" single on ABC-Paramount 45-9792 (peaked at 29)
June 1957 UK 7" single on London HL 8438 (didn't chart)
His debut UK 45 and it's a listed rarity at £150

6. Rockin' Red Wing – SAMMY MASTERS
January 1960 USA 7" single on Lode 108 (peaked at 64)
May 1960 UK 7" single on Warner Brothers WB 10 (didn't chart)
Originally issued September 1959 in the USA with a different-mix on Warner Brothers 5102 but it didn’t chart – the 1960 reissue on Lode 108 did. The British 78" is late for 1960 for the fading format and is therefore a listed rarity at £150

7. I Shot Mr. Lee – THE BOBBETTES
June 1960 USA 7" single on Triple-X 104 (peaked at 52)
August 1960 UK 7" single on Pye International 7N 25060 (didn't chart)
Stereo Version - credited as "I Shot Mister Lee" in the UK

8. Stood Up – RICKY NELSON
December 1957 USA 7" single on Imperial X5483 (peaked at 2)
January 1958 UK 7" single on London HLP 8542 (peaked at 27)
Features Joe Maphis and James Burton on Guitars – his first chart hit in the UK

9. Believe Me – THE ROYAL TEENS
August 1959 USA 7" single on Capitol 4261 (peaked at 26)
September 1959 UK 7" single on Capitol CL 15068 (didn't chart)
Miscredited as Capitol 4281 on the inlay and in the booklet

10. Little Girl Of Mine – THE CLEFTONES
March 1956 USA 7" single on Gee GG-1011 (peaked at 57)
September 1956 UK 7" single on Columbia DB 3801 (didn't chart)
The British 45 has "You, Baby You" on the A-side with "Little Girl Of Mine" on the flip – it’s also very rare as a 45 - listed at £500.00

11. Under The Moon Of Love – CURTIS LEE
October 1961 USA 7" single on Dunes 2008 (peaked at 46)
October 1961 UK 7" single on London HLX 9445 (didn't chart)
Co-written with Tommy Boyce (who would pen hits for The Monkees) and Produced by Phil Spector

12. A Lover's Question – CLYDE McPHATTER
September 1958 USA 7" single on Atlantic 45-1199 (peaked at 6)
November 1958 UK 7" single on London HL-E 8755 (didn't chart)
Written by Brook Benton and Jimmy Williams

13. The Hunch – PAUL GAYTEN
October 1959 USA 7" single on Anna 1106 (peaked at 68)
November 1959 UK 7" single on London HLM 8998 (didn't chart)
His second UK 45 is a listed rarity at £90

14. Mona Lisa – CARL MANN
March 1959 USA 7" single on Philips International 3539 (peaked at 25)
September 1959 UK 7" single on London HL-S 8935 (didn't chart)

15. What Can I Do – DONNIE ELBERT
July 1957 USA 7" single on DeLuxe 45-6125 (peaked at 61)
Not released in the UK

16. Shirley – THE SCHOOLBOYS (Orchestra Conducted by Leroy Kirkland)
November 1956 USA 7" single on Okeh 4-7076 (peaked at 91)
Not released in the UK

17. This Should Go On Forever – ROD BERNARD
February 1959 USA 7" single on Argo 5327 (peaked at 20)
April 1959 UK 7" single on London HLM 8849 (didn't chart)
First US issue in 1958 was on Jin Records 45-108

18. I Love You – THE VOLUMES
March 1962 USA 7" single on Chex 1002 (peaked at 22)
June 1962 UK 7" single on Fontana 270109 TF (didn't chart)

19. For Your Precious Love – JERRY BUTLER and THE IMPRESSIONS
June 1958 USA 7" single on Abner 1013 (peaked at 11)
September 1958 UK 7" single on London HL 8697 (didn't chart)
Group featured Curtis Mayfield. The single was issued on three label variants Falcon 1013 (April 1958), Vee Jay VJ 280 (May 1958) and Abner 1013 (June 1958). All previous issues on CD have been in Stereo with overdubs – Ace has located an original 1958 pristine Mono master without overdubs

20. Gilee – SONNY SPENCER
October 1959 USA 7" single on Memo M-17984 (peaked at 82)
September 1959 UK 7" single on Parlophone R 4611 (didn't chart)
Written by Don Covay and John Berry – the A-side is "Oh Boy" in both the USA and UK

21. We Told You Not To Marry – TITUS TURNER
October 1959 USA 7” single on Glover 201 (peaked at 83)
January 1960 UK 7" single on London HLU 9024 (didn't chart)

22. Why – THE CUES
October 1956 USA 7" single on Capitol F3582 (peaked at 77)
January 1957 UK 7" single on Capitol CL 14682 (didn't chart)
Ollie Jones on Lead Vocals – a Jesse Stone song (credited as Charles Calhoun) - in the UK "Prince Or Pauper" was the A-side with "Why" on the flip – a listed rarity in the UK at £150.00

23. Dedicated To The One I Love – THE "5" ROYALES
December 1957 USA 7" single on King 45-5098 (peaked at 81)
April 1961 UK 7" single on Ember EMBS 124 (didn't chart)
A No. 3 hit for The Shirelles on Scepter 1203 in February 1961

24. Sugaree – RUSTY YORK
June 1959 USA 7" single on Chess 1730 (peaked at 77)
Not released in the UK
Written by Marty Robbins and first recorded by The Jordanaires on Capitol F3610 in 1957 – Rusty York's version appeared on two labels before Chess bought the masters – P.J. Records 45-100 and Note Records 10021

25. Sh-Boom (Life Could Be A Dream) – THE CHORDS
February 1954 USA 7" single on Cat 45-104 (peaked at 85)
September 1954 UK 7" single on Columbia SCM 5133 (didn't chart)
Originally issued as the B-side to "Cross Over The Bridge" in the USA – the B-side "Sh-Boom" became the hit and it was reissued in June 1954 with "Sh-Boom" as the A and "Little Maiden" as the B (also on Cat 45-104). The September 1954 UK issue on 45 is Columbia SCM 5133 – hugely rare and listed at £2000+ - the British 78" is Columbia DB 3512 and is booked at £200+ (both had "Little Maiden" as the B-side).

26. Ooby Dooby – ROY ORBISON and Teen Kings
May 1956 USA 7" single on Sun 242 (peaked at 59)
Not released in the UK (see Note)
Note: It was first issued in the UK in September 1957 as part of the "Hillbilly Rock" 4-Track EP by Roy Orbison on London RES 1089 (Track 1 on Side 2). It was finally issued as a stand-alone 45 in the UK in October 1970 on Sun 6094 001 as part of the Rock 'n' Roll revival of the time with "Devil Doll" on the B-side.

27. Hearts Of Stone – THE CHARMS
September 1954 USA 7" single on De Luxe 45-6062 (peaked at 15)
March 1955 UK 7" single on Parlophone MSP 6155 (didn't chart)
A December 1954 cover of the song by The Fontaine Singers on Dot 45-15265 went to No. 1 on the USA pop charts. The UK 7" single of The Charms original on Parlophone MSP 6155 is a listed as a Vocal Group rarity at £500 – the UK 78" on Parlophone R 3988 is listed at £60

28. Ya Ya – LEE DORSEY
July 1961 USA 7" single on Fury 1053 (peaked at 7)
Not released in the UK (see Note)
Note: although not issued in the UK in 1961 – it belated turned up as the B-side to "Do-Re-Mi" in March 1965 on Sue Records WI 367 – it's a listed British rarity at £40.

29. Ain't Got No Home – CLARENCE "Frogman" HENRY
October 1956 USA 7” single on Argo 5259 (peaked at 20)
March 1957 UK 7" single on London HLN 8389 (didn't chart)
His debut 45 in the UK is a listed rarity at £150

30. Maybelline – CHUCK BERRY and His Combo
July 1955 USA 7” single on Chess 1604 (peaked at 5)
Not released in the UK (see Notes)
Notes: Chuck Berry's legendary debut 45 "Maybelline" first turned up in the UK in June 1956 as the lead off track on Side 1 of the "Rhythm And Blues With Chuck Berry" 4-Track EP on London REU 1053. It was finally released as a stand-alone 45 in the UK boasting a commemorative 50th Anniversary picture sleeve in April 2005 on Chess 9830034 with its original US B-side "Wee Wee Hours" (also issued on a 2-track CD single).

NOTES: all tracks are in MONO except tracks 4 and 7 – which are in STEREO

Volume 10 has an info-packed 28-page booklet festooned with ROB FINNIS liner notes and cool pics - quality publicity photos of forgotten names like Janis Martin, Sammy Masters, Curtis Lee, The Schoolboys, The Volumes and Titus Turner (to name but a few). These snaps run alongside rare Trade Adverts for The Coasters, Lloyd Price, Ray Hamilton, Ricky Nelson (sheet music too), The Royal Teens, The Cleftones, The Charms and one of the originators of Rock 'n' Roll – Chuck Berry (debut 45 "Maybelline"). The two-page colour collage of British 45s in their labels bags that was a feature on Volumes 1 to 4 has been replaced for 5 to 12 with smaller pictures of various UK and US record labels throughout the text (all songs in chronological order) - 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 (especially if you shuffle play) and this CD compilation features a generous total playing time of 76+ minutes.

The DUNCAN COWELL Remasters are fantastically good – toppermost of the poppermost Audio quality on rarities like the Jackie Wilson vocal pyrotechnics of "You Can Have Her" by Roy Hamilton – here in gobsmacking Stereo glory.  There’s even a genuine reissue scoop in the first-ever-on-CD MONO mix of the Jerry Butler/Impressions classic "For Your Precious Love" – all previous versions being false Stereo with overdubs (this mix is Mono without overdubs and it sounds stunning). Speaking of superlative and influential vocalists – Clyde McPhatter gets his shuffling moment to shine on the irrepressible "A Lover’s Question" – so clean and full of life. In fact despite the disparate sources – the Audio is uniformly great throughout (like all the other volumes) and will warm the cockrels of collector's hearts who’ve wanted this quality on CD for decades now.

Volume 10 opens with an echoed-yell followed by the catchy New Orleans shuffle of "Early In The Morning" by the delightfully titled Rinky-Dinks featuring none other than Bobby Darin backed up with ‘yeah yeah yeah’ girly vocals and saxophone blasts. A coy but not-quite-so-innocent Janis Martin tells us that she won’t dance with Henry because she wants her "Will You Willyum" – and with a coolsville name like Will Yum - can you blame her excitement. The Coasters are favoured with a Lieber/Stoller seek-and-destroy winner in the fab "Searchin'" – but they’re blown of the proverbial Audio bathtub with an astonishing Stereo Version of "You Can Have Her" where Roy Hamilton sounds uncannily like Jackie Wilson on a vocal roll (what a blast this track is). John Lennon would touch on Lloyd Price’s "Just Because" during his "Rock 'n' Roll" LP sessions in 1974 (on Apple) though I don't know if he'd approve of the sappy 'Indian Maid' pseudo bopper "Rockin' Red Wing" by Sammy Masters – even if it does have excellent Sax solos.

Beautifully clear Audio also accompanies the answer song "I Shot Mr. Lee" by The Bobbettes sounding like LaVern Baker singing about 'a handsome cat'. Speaking of the same – Ricky Nelson gives it some casual disdain in "Stood Up" even though the poor chap is broken hearted and all a quiver. 'I still love you' blows out of the lungs of the white boy Vocal Group The Royal Teens on "Believe Me" - while a 'diddle-diddle-deh' background chant runs through the unintentionally upbeat "Little Girl Of Mine" by The Cleftones (fab audio on this). Crudely recorded by Phil Spector and yet full of atmosphere and hubris – "Under The Moon Of Love" by Curtis Lee is co-written with Tommy Boyce who would later pen hits for The Monkees.

Rock and Roll and Rockabilly fans will flip for a trio of steppers – first up is the 'cold and lonely work of art' song "Mona Lisa" by Carl Mann where his guitar apes Buddy Holly as the band sticks to Fats Domino (and yet it all works) – a fantastic rocker in "Sugaree" by Rusty York – a tune I’ve had on Bear Family CDs and placed on endless rocking compilations – and finally an irresistible lip-curling "Ooby Dooby" by Roy Orbison and The Teen Kings when he started out at Sam Phillips' Sun Records in 1956. Other bopping winners include "Gilee" by Sonny Spencer – a new one on me and a real discovery – and finally a vocal group I adore – The Cues on Capitol and their fabulous dancer "Why" which I've had on Bear Family's "Why" LP and subsequent CD from years back (see reviews) – present here in Audio that's just as good.

As I said of Volumes 1 to 9 – what's wicked about these Ace CD compilations is the oddities – finding gems you just don't know. The drum-lurch of "The Hunch" by Paul Gayten is the kind of one-off instrumental that could only have been from the period – his Saxophone wailing alongside a rolling piano as those drums echo in the background (great stuff). The 'I warned you prat' song "We Told You Not To Marry" by Titus Turner is an absolute hoot. A posses of girlies sing to tell poor Titus and he answers their taunts - shucks but they warned him not to marry Bonny - but Titus ignored them - says he loved her - and just went ahead anyway - and now she and the baby won’t leave him alone and nothing he does seems to be enough (Mr. T under pressure from her indoors folks). But my absolute poison on this CD is Donnie Elbert's quivering voice on the smoocher "What Can I Do". It fills the whole song with an amazing longing and a genuine sense of 1957 teenage angst. And then that sailing-in Saxophone solo seals the audio deal and the tunes in my heart with my bullet (and again here with a superbly clean transfer).

In some respects its hard to hear The "5" Royales ham-fisted and heavy-handed version of "Dedicated To The One I Love" with new ears when The Shirelles' delicate and lovely 1961 cover version remains so engrained in your heart. There are far better Five Royales tunes - see my extensive review of "Soul & Swagger: The Complete "5" Royales 1951-1967" – a magnificent 2014 5CD Book Set on Rockbeat. Life could be a dream for The Chords in "Sh-Boom" (here in superb audio also) - while the equally infectious 'boom boom' chant of The Volumes on "I Love You" squares off a nice set of Vocal group inclusions. And don't get me started on the Soulful gorgeousness of "For Your Precious Love" – Jerry Butler and The Impressions here in clean Mono for the first time ever apparently. Dooby do indeed...

Like Volumes 1 to 9 – instalment No. 10 is an adventurous, period evocative, cleverly paced compilation that barely puts a foot wrong. Loving the damn lot. And there are seventeen more volumes where this came from...

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...


Sunday, 18 October 2015

"The Golden Age Of American Rock ‘n’ Roll Volume 9” by VARIOUS ARTISTS (2001 Ace Records CD – Duncan Cowell Remasters) - A Review by Mark Barry...



"...Let's Have A Party..."

After a near two-year wait from Volume 8 in November 1999 - the ninth instalment of Ace's "The Golden Age Of American Rock 'n' Roll" CD Series came in early 2001 and followed the same route as Volumes 1 to 8 – offering up 30 cleverly sequenced Mono US 7" singles that hit the American Pop charts with a nice combo of the obvious and the obscure. Like preceding volumes – some are in Stereo (five - see Track Notes below) and only a few tracks actually made the British charts (even though many are now well known).

And all of this rare and hip material is presented to fans on both sides of the pond by a British 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 have some 'Rang Tang Ding Dong' as we shake our 'Ooh Poo Pah Doo' at 'Fannie Mae' (when her mother's not looking mind)...

UK and USA released February 2001 - "The Golden Age Of American Rock 'n' Roll Volume 9: Hot 100 Hits From 1954-1963" by VARIOUS ARTISTS on Ace Records CDCHD 800 (Barcode 029667180023) is a 30-track CD and breaks down as follows (71:18 minutes):

1. I'm A Fool To Care – JOE BARRY
April 1961 US 7" single on Smash 1702 (peaked at 24)
June 1961 UK 7" single on Mercury AMT 1149 (didn't chart)
Originally issued on Jin 144 in 1960 – the reissue on Smash 1702 charted

2. Palisades Park – FREDDY CANNON (Frank Stay and his Orchestra)
April 1962 USA 7” single on Swan 4106 (peaked at 3)
June 1962 UK 7" single on Stateside SS 101 (didn't chart)

3. I Wonder Why – DION and THE BELMONTS
May 1958 US 7" single on Laurie 3013 (peaked at 22)
June 1958 UK 7" single on London HLH 8646 (didn't chart)

4. A Casual Look – THE SIX TEENS
March 1956 US 7" single on Flip 315 (peaked at 25)
November 1956 UK 7" single on London HL-U 8345 (didn't chart)
Rare on UK 45 (£350) or 78” (£50) – same catalogue numbers

5. Lonely Weekends – CHARLIE RICH
January 1960 US 7" single on Philips International 3552 (peaked at 22)
April 1960 UK 7" single on London HLU 9107 (didn't chart)

6. Fannie Mae – BUSTER BROWN
November 1959 USA 7" single on Fire 1008 (peaked at 38)
September 1960 UK 7" single on Melodisc 45/1559 (didn't chart)
Stereo Version

7. Shortnin' Bread – PAUL CHAPLAIN And His Emeralds
June 1960 USA 7" single on Harper 100 (peaked at 82)
October 1960 UK 7" single on London HLU 9205 (didn't chart)

8. I Really Love You – THE STEREOS
July 1961 USA 7" single on Cub K9095 (peaked at 29)
September 1961 UK 7" single on MGM Records MGM 1143 (didn't chart)
Stereo Version

9. Doctor Feel-good by DR. FEELGOOD and THE INTERNS
January 1962 USA 7" single on Okeh 4-7144 (peaked at 66)
May 1962 UK 7” single on Columbia DB 4838 (didn't chart)
Stereo Version - the British 70ts R&B band Dr. FEELGOOD took their name from this song – Dr. Feelgood is Willie Perryman aka Piano Red

10. Seventeen – BOYD BENNETT And His Rockets
May 1955 USA 7" single on King 45-1470 (peaked at 5)
October 1955 UK 7” single on Parlophone MSP 6180 (didn't chart)
The British 45 is a listed rarity at £350.00

11. Daddy's Home – SHEP and THE LIMELITES
March 1961 USA 7" single on Hull H-740 (peaked at 2)
June 1961 UK 7" single on Pye International 7N 25090 (didn't chart)

12. Bop-A-Lena – RONNIE SELF
January 1958 USA 7" single on Columbia 41101 (peaked at 63)
Not released in the UK

13. A Wonderful Dream – THE MAJORS
May 1962 USA 7" single on Imperial 5855 (peaked at 22)
September 1962 UK 7" single on London HLP 9602 (didn't chart)
Produced by Jerry Ragovoy

14. Bertha Lou – CLINT MILLER
December 1957 USA 7" single on ABC-Paramount 45-9878 (peaked at 79)
Not released in the UK

15. I’m Movin' On – MATT LUCAS
March 1963 USA 7" single on Smash S-1813 (peaked at 56)
Not released in the UK
A Hank Snow cover version

16. Coney Island Baby – THE EXCELLENTS
May 1962 USA 7" single on Blast BL-205 (peaked at 51)
Not released in the UK

17. No, No, No – THE CHANTERS
June 1961 USA 7" single on DeLuxe 6191 (peaked at 41)
Not released in the UK
Lead Vocals Larry Pendergrass - originally released October 1958 on DeLuxe 6177 that didn't chart – reissued in 1961 on 6199 and 6200 (charted).

18. Just Got To Know – JIMMY McCRACKLIN
September 1961 USA 7" single on Art-Tone 825 (peaked at 64)
April 1962 UK 7" single on Top Rank JAR 617 (didn't chart)

19. Rang Tang Ding Dong (I Am The Japanese Sandman) – THE CELLOS
April 1957 USA 7" single on Apollo 510-45 (peaked at 62)
Not released in the UK

20. Fever – LITTLE WILLIE JOHN
May 1956 USA 7" single on King 45-4935 (peaked at 24)
September 1956 UK 7" single on Parlophone R 4209 (didn't chart)
Covered by a huge number of artists over the years - Peggy Lee (1958), Elvis Presley (1960) and The McCoys (1965) all charted with the song on 45 and LP – the British 45 is a listed rarity at £200

21. Crossfire – JOHNNY and THE HURRICANES
April 1959 USA 7” single on Warwick M-502 (peaked at 23)
July 1959 UK 7" single on London HL 8899 (didn't chart)
His debut in the UK - was also issued on 78" with the same catalogue number

22. Baby Oh Baby – THE SHELLS
August 1957 USA 7" single on Johnson 104 (peaked at 21 in December 1960)
February 1962 UK 7" single on London HLU 9288 (didn't chart)
UK single is a listed rarity at £40 – the single was bought nearly three years after its release and then charted in late 1960 on the Billboard Pop charts

23. Let’s Have A Party – WANDA JACKSON
November 1960 USA 7" single on Capitol 4397 (peaked at 37)
August 1960 UK 7" single on Capitol CL 15147 (didn't chart)
Originally released in the UK in 1958 on a 4-track EP on Capitol EAP1-1041 as the lead off track – the British A&B-side 45 followed in 1960

24. Tonight (Could Be The Night) – THE VELVETS featuring Virgil Johnson
May 1961 USA 7" single on Monument 441 (peaked at 26)
Not released in the UK
Stereo version

25. Ooh Poo Pah Doo – Part 1 – JESSE HILL
February 1960 USA 7" single on Minit 607 (peaked at 28)
May 1960 UK 7" single on London HLU 9117 (didn't chart)

26. So Tough – THE ORIGINAL CASUALS
December 1957 USA 7" single on Back Beat 503 (peaked at 42 in February 1958)
Not released in the UK

27. Queen Of My Heart – RENE and RAY
May 1962 USA 7" single on Donna 1360 (peaked at 79)
Not released in the UK
Paul Venezuela (Rene) and Ray Quinones (Ray)

28. You Talk Too Much – JOE JONES and His Orchestra
September 1960 USA 7" single on Roulette R-4304 (peaked at 3)
November 1960 UK 7" single on Columbia DB 4533 (didn't chart)

29. Out Of Sight, Out Of Mind – THE FIVE KEYS
August 1956 USA 7” single on Capitol F3502 (peaked at 23)
October 1956 UK 7" single on Capitol CL 14639 (didn't chart)
In the UK "Out Of Sight, Out Of Mind" was the B-side to "That's Right" (the USA reversed this) – it's also a listed rarity on 45 in the UK at £150

30. If You Wanna Be Happy – JIMMY SOUL
December 1962 USA 7” single on S.P.Q.R. 45-3305 (peaked at 1)
April 1963 UK 7” single on Stateside SS 178 (peaked at 39)
Stereo Version – real name Jim McCleese

NOTES: all tracks are in MONO except tracks 6, 8, 9, 24 and 30 – which are in STEREO

Volume 9 has an info-packed 30-page booklet (two more pages than Vol. 8 and that was the largest) festooned with ROB FINNIS liner notes and cool pics - quality publicity photos of forgotten names like Paul Chaplain and his Emeralds, Stereos, Piano Red as Doctor Feelgood with his Interns, Ronnie Self, Matt Lucas, Little Willie John and The Cellos. These snaps run alongside rare Trade Adverts for Jimmy McCracklin, Johnny and The Hurricanes, The Shells, The Velvets, The Excellents, The Original Casuals and Joe Jones. 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 (all songs in chronological order) - 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 this CD compilation features a generous total playing time of 71+ minutes.

The DUNCAN COWELL Remasters are fantastically good – toppermost of the poppermost Audio quality on rarities like the swooning white boy Vocal Groups smooch of "Coney Island Baby" by The Excellents sounding like it was recorded yesterday (really loudly too) while the '...movin' and groovin' satisfies my soul...' of Wanda Jackson's superb girly rocker "Let's Have A Party" sounds fresh and alive. The shout and response song "Ooh Poo Pah Doo" by Jesse Hill shakes and shimmies while the sheer class of The Five Keys on "Out Of Sight, Out Of Mind" is pure Vocal Group Harmony gorgeousness and a real highlight on here. In fact despite the disparate sources – the Audio is uniformly great throughout and will warm the cockrels of collector's hearts.

Volume 9 opens with a blatant Fats Domino knock-off – the catchy New Orleans shuffle of "I'm A Fool To Care" by Joe Barry – a No. 1 in the Big Easy when it was originally issued in 1960 on Jin Records and then a nationwide hit again when reissued by Smash Records in 1961. Vocals Groups come at you in differing tempos – the white-boy bopping of "I Wonder Why" by Dion and The Belmonts while the lovely (and rare) smooch of "A Casual Look" by The Six Teens with a 13-year old Trudy Williams has sheet music pictured for it on Page 7. You're then hit with two dancefloor winners – the Presley-sounding "Lonely Weekends" from Charlie Rich (started off the decade with a bang in January 1960) and the utterly wonderful chug of "Fannie Mae" by Buster Brown – an R&B harmonica driven piece that reminds me of Little Walter at his Chess Records best. Another stepper that collector’s will love is the drums rumba of "Shortnin' Bread" by Paul Chaplain and The Emeralds – where apparently his baby loves the stuff.

Beautifully clear Audio also accompanies the echo-laden smooch of "Daddy's Home" – an old-fashioned Vocal Group number by Shep and The Limelites who came from The Heartbeats (see "A Thousand Miles Away" – track 26 on Volume 8). What a gorgeous song – I've had it on Rhino CD compilations – but never sounding as good as this. The same Audio magnificence applies to the wonderfully sappy "I Really Love You" complete with its 'dum dum dum' vocal backing. Bill Haley and His Comets would blush at the obvious knock-off "Seventeen" by Boyd Bennett and his Rockets – a great little 1955 Rock 'n' Roller that may as well be the bequiffed one under another name. Rock and Roll and Rockabilly fans will flip for a trio of blasters – first up is the joyful fun of "Doctor Feel-good" by Piano Red - the 70ts British R&B band with Wilko Johnson and Lee Brilleaux took their name from this 45 – a version done by Johnny Kidd and the Pirates. Then there's pure manic dynamite with "Bop-A-Lena" by Ronnie Self – and finally an irresistible lip-curling "Bertha Lou" by Clint Miller where she pickles his body from his head to his feet – his blood running wild (careful now). Matt Lucas attempts a rocking cover of Hank Snow's "I'm Movin' On" and wins - while The Chanters charms us with their 'don't kiss me anymore' pleas in "No, No, No" – here in best ever Audio.

As I said of Volumes 1 to 8 – what's wicked about these Ace CD compilations is the oddities – finding gems you just don't know. The recorded-in-a-bucket but crammed full of pure R&B feeling of "Just Got To Know" by Jimmy McCracklin reminds of heroes like Amos Milburn, Piano Red and Smiley Lewis. It might have more hiss than most would like - but the novelty tune "Rang Tang Ding Dong" is a rocking hoot nonetheless while the wild pace of the instrumental "Crossfire" will keep Saxophone blasters happy. Superb audio accompanies the weirdly cute 'darling I do' of "Tonight (Could Be The Night)" - the lead singer of The Velvets smoothly promising his gal a ring around her finger come the evening moonlight (good luck with that sweetie). Crude and lo-fi to the max – the romantic shuffler "Queen Of My Heart" exudes an innocence that could only have come from the period. And it ends with two politically incorrect winners – the 'even worry my pet' blabbermouth girlfriend song "You Talk Too Much" by Joe Jones is liable to elicit a slap in his kisser nowadays (it's tell-it-like-it-is lyrics was a sensation at the time and the trade adverts played on this) – while the fantastically witty don't-marry-a-pretty-wife song "If You Wanna Be Happy" by Jimmy Soul was a huge No. 1 for a reason (I loved the Kid Creole & The Coconuts tongue-in-cheek version of it in the 80ts).

Like Volumes 1 to 8 – instalment No. 9 is an adventurous, period evocative, cleverly paced compilation that barely puts a foot wrong. Loving the damn lot. And there are seventeen more volumes where this came from...

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...


"Mother And Child" Original Soundtrack Music by ED SHEARMUR (2010 Varese Sarabande CD) - A Review by Mark Barry...



"...A Waltz For Karen..."

Sometimes you stumble on a Soundtrack that works on every level - moving, heartfelt and joyous - the music swells and sweeps you away. You may even find yourself crying for no reason. The melodies remind you of something beautiful that you've forgotten - something elusive - but you can't quite put your finger on what that is.

Thomas Newman achieves this on occasion with his gorgeous soundtrack music - stuff like "The Shawshank Redemption", "Road To Perdition" and "The Second Best Exotic Marigold Hotel" (see my review for the CD). John Barry too of course and Ennio Morricone - both on a stack of beautiful soundtracks. And now I think we can add Britain's Edward Shearmur to that expanding list of greats - a Londoner whose sessioned with Page and Plant and scored several respected soundtracks to date.

The "Mother And Child" movie is wonderful storytelling - a beautifully intricate and human tale. It's an unravelling mother/daughter/families story told through several interlocking couples and featuring a huge cast of great actors shining in a screenplay written and directed by Columbia Cinematographer and Filmmaker Rodrigo Garcia.

Garcia did "Lola" in 1989 and the excellent "Passengers" in 2008 (again with David Morse - see my review for the Blu Ray) and the decidedly off-the-cuff Glenn Close dressed-as-a-man movie "Albert Nobbs" in 2011 (set in turn of the century Dublin). Garcia also penned episodes for prestigious TV shows like "The Sopranos", "Six Feet Under" and had huge involvement in the magnificent Gabriel Byrne shrink-and-patients TV Series "In Treatment" for three Seasons (Byrne won a deserved Emmy).

The Original Soundtrack CD to "Mother And Child" appears to be only available in the USA on Varese Sarabande 302067 021 2 (Barcode 030206702125) and plays to 40:31 minutes (16 tracks). The inlay is a gatefold slip of paper that shows a collage of the principal actors - Annette Bening, Naomi Watts, Jimmy Smits, Samuel L. Jackson, Kerry Washington, S. Epatha Merkerson, Cherry Jones, Elpidia Carrillo, David Morse and Shareeka Epps. It was Executive Produced by Alejandro Gonzalez Inarritu who brought us the stunning "Birdman" in 2014 (see my review for the Blu Ray).

There's barely any info on how it was recorded let alone what instruments Shearmur plays - but the music is beautiful - and at times intensely moving. Different variants of a gorgeous Piano refrain – gut-string acoustic guitars - big chunky synth drones – mostly mellow and easy on the ear and heart. The lovely opening song "Little One" is written and sung by Lucy Schwartz (the only one with lyrics) - the rest are instrumentals by Shearmur that rearrange a reoccurring beautiful theme but played on differing instruments. There's a final track on here called "Karen's Letter" - and sublime is the only word to apply to it.

A musical gem - seek it out if you can...

Friday, 16 October 2015

"The Golden Age Of American Rock 'n' Roll Volume 8" by VARIOUS ARTISTS (1999 Ace Records CD Remasters) - A Review by Mark Barry...



"...Red Hot Lincoln..."

The eight instalment of Ace's "The Golden Age Of American Rock 'n' Roll" CD Series follows the same route as Volumes 1 to 7 – 30 cleverly sequenced Mono US 7" singles that hit the American Pop charts with a nice combo of the obvious and the obscure. Unlike preceding volumes none are in Stereo while only 4 of these tracks actually made the British charts. And all of this rare and hip material is presented to fans on both sides of the pond 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 do the 'Mojo Workout' as we shunt to the 'Bongo Stomp' in our 'Red Hot Lincoln' (and at our age too)...

UK and USA released November 1999 - "The Golden Age Of American Rock 'n' Roll Volume 8: Hot 100 Hits From 1954-1963" by VARIOUS ARTISTS on Ace Records CDCHD 750 (Barcode 029667175029) is a 30-track CD and breaks down as follows (74:07 minutes):

1. Shout! Shout! (Knock Yourself Out) – ERNIE MARESCA
February 1962 US 7" single on Seville 117 (peaked at 6)
March 1962 UK 7" single on London HLU 9531 (didn’t chart)
Credited as "Shout Shout" in the UK - Maresca also wrote "No One Knows" and "A Lover's Prayer" for Dion & The Belmonts

2. Whispering Bells – THE DELL-VIKINGS
May 1957 USA 7” single on Dot 45-15592 (peaked at 9)
August 1957 UK 7" single on London HLD 8464 (didn’t chart)

3. We Belong Together – ROBERT and JOHNNY
February 1958 US 7" single on Old Town 1047 (peaked at 32)
Never released in the UK
Robert Carr and Johnny Mitchell

4. Sorry (I Ran All The Way Home) – THE IMPALAS
January 1959 US 7" single on Cub K 9022 (peaked at 2)
May 1959 UK 7" single on MGM Records MGM 105 (peaked at 28)

5. Way Down Yonder In New Orleans – FREDDY CANNON
August 1959 US 7" single on Swan 4043 (peaked at 3)
November 1959 UK 7" single on Top rank JAR 247 (peaked at 3)

6. So Fine – THE FIESTAS
February 1959 USA 7" single on Old Town 1062 (peaked at 11)
May 1959 UK 7" single on London HL 8870 (didn’t chart)

7. Bongo Stomp – LITTLE JOEY and THE FLIPS
June 1962 USA 7" single on Joy 45K-262 (peaked at 33)
July 1962 UK 7" single on Pye International 7N 25152 (didn’t chart)
Little Joey is Joey Hall

8. Wicked Ruby – DANNY ZELLA and his Zell Rocks
January 1959 USA 7" single on Fox ZTSC-10057 (peaked at 71)
Not released in the UK
An Instrumental - the B-side of "Black Sax"

9. Tragedy – THOMAS WAYNE with The DeLons
October 1958 USA 7" single on Fernwood 109 (peaked at 5)
April 1959 UK 7” single on London HLS 8846 (didn’t chart)
Produced by Scotty Moore – Elvis' Guitar Player – also issued in the UK on an Export issue 7" single London HL 7075

10. Here I Stand – WADE FLEMONS & The Newcomers
November 1958 USA 7" single on Vee-Jay VJ-295 (peaked at 80)
Not released in the UK

11. Gee – THE CROWS
May 1953 USA 7" single on Rama RR-5 (peaked at 14)
June 1954 UK 7" single on Columbia SCM 5119 (didn’t chart)
The UK 45 is incredibly rare – booked at £2000+ in the Record Collector Price Guide - while the 78" version on Columbia DB 3478 is booked at £150.00

12. Don’t Be Angry – NAPPY BROWN
March 1955 USA 7" single on Savoy 45-1155 (peaked at 25)
June 1955 UK 7" single on London HL 8145 (didn’t chart)
Real name Napoleon Brown – "Don't Be Angry" was covered shortly afterwards by two R&B Vocal Groups - The Crew Cuts on Mercury 70597 (peaked at 14) and after that (also in 1955) by The Cadets on Modern 956 (failed to chart)

13. One Summer Night – THE DANLEERS
June 1958 USA 7" single on Mercury 71322 (peaked at 7)
October 1958 UK 7" single on Mercury AMT 1003 (didn’t chart)
The British 45 is rare – booked at £200 – as is the 78" (same catalogue no) at £40

14. Lotta Lovin' – GENE VINCENT & His Blue Caps
July 1957 USA 7" single on Capitol 3763 (peaked at 13)
August 1957 UK 7" single on Capitol CL 14763 (didn’t chart)

15. Ballad Of A Girl And Boy – THE GRADUATES
January 1959 USA 7" single on Shan-Todd ST-0055 (peaked at 74)
Not released in the UK

16. Bullwhip Rock – THE CYCLONES
July 1958 USA 7" single on Trophy T-500 (peaked at 83)
Not released in the UK
The B-side of "Nelda Jane" by Bill Taylor and Cyclones

17. Mojo Workout (Dance) – LARRY BRIGHT
January 1960 USA 7" single on Tide T-006 (peaked at 92)
Not released in the UK
A derivative of the Muddy Waters classic "I Got My Mojo Working"

18. Zing! Went The Strings Of My Heart – THE FURYS
December 1962 USA 7" single on Mack IV 112 (peaked at 92)
May 1963 UK 7" single on Stateside SS 182 (didn't chart)
Written by James McEachin who would later become a TV actor in Tenafly and Perry Mason (also a successful novelist)

19. Air Travel – RAY and BOB
September 1961 USA 7" single on Ledo 1151 (peaked at 99)
Not released in the UK
Ray Appleberry and Bobby Swayne

20. Once Upon A Time – ROCHELL and THE CANDLES with Johnny Wyatt
November 1961 USA 7" single on Swingin’ 623 (peaked at 26)
Not released in the UK
Male quartet formed by Rochell Henderson

21. The Fool – SANFORD CLARK
June 1956 USA 7” single on Dot 15481 (peaked at 7)
October 1956 UK 7" single on London HLD 8320 (didn’t chart)

22. Speedoo – THE CADILLACS
October 1955 USA 7" single on Josie 785 (peaked at 17)
Not released in the UK

23. My Wife Can’t Cook – LONNIE RUSS
November 1962 USA 7" single on Four-J 501 [aka 4j 501] (peaked at 57)
February 1963 UK 7" single on Fontana 267263 TF (didn’t chart)

24. Running Bear – JOHNNY PRESTON
June 1959 USA 7" single on Mercury 71474 (peaked at 1)
January 1960 UK 7" single on Mercury AMT 1079 (peaked at 1)
Written by J.P. Richardson – aka The Big Bopper

25. The Mountain’s High - DICK and DEEDEE
July 1961 USA 7" single on Liberty F-55350 (peaked at 2)
September 1961 UK 7" single on London HLG 9408 (peaked at 37)
Dick St. John and Mary Spelling – it had been issued initially as the B-side to "I Want Someone" on Lama 7778 in April 1961 - when DJs flipped the record. Liberty F-55350 took over putting "The Mountain's High" on the A-side.

26. A Thousand Miles Away – THE HEARTBEATS
September 1956 USA 7" single on Hull H-720 (peaked at 53)
Not released in the UK
Vocal group that featured Johnny 'Shep' Sheppard who would become Shep & The Limelites – it was the B-side of "Oh Baby Don't" but DJs like Alan Freed flipped it and made "A Thousand Miles Away" the classic hit

27. Hey Girl, Hey Boy – OSCAR McLOLLIE and JEANETTE BAKER
April 1958 USA 7" single on Class 288 (peaked at 61)
Not released in the UK
Oscar McLollie was a Band Leader in the early 50ts – Jeanette Baker was in the Vocal group The Dots (Caddy Label)

28. Been So Long – THE PASTELS
January 1958 USA 7" single on Argo 5287 (peaked at 24)
Not released in the UK
Featuring DiFosco Ervin on Lead Vocals – later went solo as Big Dee Irwin and had a hit in April 1963 with "Swinging On A Star" on Dimension 1010

29. I Don’t Love You No More (I Don’t Care About You) – JIMMY NORMAN
April 1962 USA 7” single on Little Star 113 (peaked at 47)
Not released in the UK
Jimmy Norman Scott – was with the Vocal group The Viceroys

30. Hot Rod Lincoln – JOHNNY BOND
June 1960 USA 7” single on Republic 2005 (peaked at 26)
September 1960 UK 7” single on London HLU 9189 (didn’t chart)
Credited in the UK as "Hot Rod Jalopy"

NOTES: all tracks are in MONO

Volume 8 has an impressive 24-page booklet festooned with ROB FINNIS liner notes and cool pics - quality publicity photos of forgotten names like Robert & Johnny, Freddy Cannon, Danny Zella, The Graduates, Larry Bright and The Pastels. These snaps run alongside rare Trade Adverts for The Dell-Vikings, The Danleers, Nappy Brown, Rochell and The Candles, The Cadillacs and Lonnie Russ. 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 74+ minutes.

The DUNCAN COWELL Remasters are blindingly good – toppermost of the poppermost Audio quality on rarities like the blasting boogie of "Way Down Yonder In New Orleans" by Freddy Cannon sounding like it was recorded yesterday (really loudly too) while the 'my baby’s so doggone neat...' of "So Fine" by The Fiestas sounds amazingly clean. The last two tracks on here - "I Don't Love You No More (I Don't Care About You)" by Jimmy Norman (complete with a witty false phonecall at the beginning) and the amazing 'we was passing cars like they were standing still' boogie of "Hot Rod Lincoln" by Johnny Bond will thrill Rhythm 'n' Blues and Rockabilly fans to the core. In fact despite the disparate sources – the Audio is uniformly great throughout and will warm the cockrels of collector's hearts.

Volume 8 opens with a Frat Rock classic guaranteed to see beer spilled on mummy’s clean carpet - "Shout, Shout (Knock Yourself Out)" by Ernie Maresca – a man who penned several hits for Dion & The Belmonts (mentions "Runaround Sue" in the lyrics of "Shout, Shout"). Vocals Groups come at you in tempos next – the bopping "Whispering Bells" by The Dell-Vikings while the lovely smooch of "We Belong Together" by Robert and Johnny feels like the kind of gem that's going to turn up in a teen romance movie real soon. You don't hear tracks like The Impalas "Sorry (I Ran All The Way Home)" anymore – but here is has fabulous audio. I’m loving the crazy cross-genre duo of "Bongo Stomp" by Little Joey & The Flips which comes on like a Jungle Rhythm Vocal R&B dancer with a man singing like a big girl's blouse – and the mad-as-a-dingbat rhythms in "Wicked Ruby" by Danny Zella who was six-foot-three and 20 stone (get out of the way ladies).

Beautifully clear Audio also accompanies the echo-laden smooch of "Tragedy" – an old-fashioned love song sung by the crooner Thomas Wayne while the spirit of Buddy Holly meets Vocal Groups pervades the wonderful vocal arrangements on "Here I Stand" by Wade Flemons – a record you try to pin down but can't (Finnis rates it as near perfect 50ts Pop and he has a point). The uber-rare "Gee" by the smitten 'love that girl' Crows vocal group is basic for sure but magical too. Time to bop and dance and give it some quivering lip with the fabulous jiver "Don’t Be Angry" by Nappy Brown – sounding just brill as that blasting Saxophone solo comes sailing in. And it doesn’t get more Street Corner Symphony than "Once Summer Night" by The Danleers – here in best ever Audio. Homegrown Hero Gene Vincent makes a welcome insertion with his great 'want your lovin' all the time' of "Lotta Lovin'" – properly great Rock 'n' Roll.

As I said of Volumes 1 to 7 – what’s wicked about these Ace CD compilations is the oddities – finding gems you just don’t know. The whip-crack-away Jerry Lee Lewis piano-pumping boogie of "Bullwhip Rock" by Cyclones is the kind of R&R instrumental that sends fans into frenzy (what a genius choice – Wayne Brooks, Jr. is the rocking pianist). Re-working the Muddy Waters classic "I Got My Mojo Working" – Larry Bright's fantastic "Mojo Workout (Dance)" sounds like an American Gene Vincent with just as much passion and gusto (stunning inclusion). Superb audio accompanies the weird yet wonderful 'take a little trip to China' of "Air Travel" sounding not unlike a souped-up version of Sam Cooke's "Another Saturday Night". And the 'she was mine...' Vocal Group romancer "Once Upon A Time" is a brilliant inclusion too – never heard it before but a winner nonetheless (collectors will dig this).

An Elvis quivering vocal and plinking guitar bolster up the heavily echoed voice of Sanford Clark as he explains that "The Fool" told his 'baby goodbye' (not a great move apparently) - while the sheer aural blast of "Speedoo" by The Cadillacs is bound to do your speakers some damage if you don't control that volume dial. Funny, politically incorrect and possibly even sexist claptrap – "My Wife Can't Cook" is great fun nonetheless as Lonnie Russ explains about his dearly beloved's lack of culinary skills with gravy and beans (a worry that). Loving the drama of the drums combined with the strangely miked vocals for "The Mountain's High" by Dick and DeeDee – another brilliant choice that most collectors won’t have. Beautiful is the only way to describe The Heartbeats gorgeous delivery of the Vocal Group ballad "A Thousand Miles Away" – Shep’s vocal soaring against a backdrop of perfectly pitched voices. Fun R&B comes in the shape of "Hey Girl, Hey Boy" by Oscar McLollie and Jeanette Baker giving it some 'da da' and 'wee wee' as they size each other up. But then you're clobbered with genuine Vocal Group majesty – the truly wonderful "Been So Long" by The Pastels - Finnis quite rightly describing it as having a 'timeless quality'...

Like Volumes 1 to 7 – instalment No. 8 is an adventurous, period evocative, cleverly paced compilation that barely puts a foot wrong. Loving the damn lot. 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