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"...Dancing
Frog..."
Lincolnshire
lad Michael Weaver hailed out of Bolton and his weirdly named band WYNDER K.
FROG (with one 'g' mind you and never two) had a couple of albums of
instrumental keyboard-driven groovers in 1966 and 1968 on Island Records in the
UK and one belatedly on United Artists in the USA in 1970.
They
also managed some straggler tracks in movies, stand-alone singles beloved of
Mods and Club-Going Dancers alike and an ultra-rare unreleased second album
(recorded 1968) that makes its way into the public domain for the first time
ever via a Dub from a surviving-acetate (tracks 9 to 17 on Disc 3). For fans of
his groovy 60ts Hammond-Organ sound (the lad is still with us and provides new
liner notes for this release) - "Shook, Shimmy And Shake..." from RPM
Records has gathered together the whole caboodle and presented the shimmering
lot to us in this rather spiffing little 3CD Box Set.
At
times sounding not unlike a glorified Booker T & The MG's covers band from
South Ealing giving it some sugar-shaker on a Woolworths LP sporting a
scantily-clad nubile to pull in male shoppers on a Saturday afternoon - it’s
not all undiluted hippy-hippy-shake genius for sure. But the good stuff is
great fun, Island Records 7" singles fans will love those
catalogue-hole-filling tracks (great talcum powder shuffling B-sides like
"Zooming", "Dancing Frog", "Shook, Shimmy And
Shake" and "Baldy") and you have to say that the overall
presentation here is top notch (as it is with all RPM stuff). And who doesn't
love a cool Hammond Organ groove-tastic neck-jerker. Out of the fire and into
the frying pan – time to Boogaloo folks and do the Harpsichord Shuffle...
UK
released Friday, 23 February 2018 (2 March 2018 in the USA) - "Shook,
Shimmy And Shake: The Complete Recordings 1966-1970" by WYNDER K. FROG on
RPM Records RPMBX 540 (Barcode 5013929554009) is a 3CD Box Set containing three
period albums (1966, 1968 and 1970) along with other Bonus Material and plays
out as follows:
Disc
1 "Sunshine Super Frog" (46:50 minutes):
1.
Sunshine Superman [Side 1]
2.
I Feel So Bad
3.
Oh Mary
4.
Blues For A Frog
5.
Somebody Help Me
6.
Mercy
7.
Hold On, I'm Coming [Side 2]
8.
Shook, Shimmy And Shake
9.
Incense
10.
Walking Into New Orleans
11.
(Don't Fight It) Feel It
12.
Dancin' Pain (alias Dancing Frog)
Tracks
1 to 12 are the debut album "Sunshine Super Frog" - released December
1966 in the UK on Island Records ILP-944 in Mono only (no US release).
BONUS
TRACKS:
13.
Turn On Your Lovelight
14.
Zooming - Tracks 13 and 14 are the A&B-sides of a non-album UK 7"
single released July 1966 on Island WI-280
15.
Green Door (Mono Version) - non-album A-side of a UK 7" single released
February 1967 on Island WIP 6006 (Track 12 on the LP is the B-side)
16.
I'm A Man - non-album A-side of a UK 7" single released June 1967 on
Island WIP 6014 (Track 8 on the LP is the B-side)
17.
Henry's Panter - originally released 1966 on a UK 7" Flexidisc on Lyntone
LYN 1109 (credited to Wynder K. Frogg (And Henry) and has an Ed Stewart ‘Dog’s
Life’ spoken intro)
18.
Wade In The Water (BBC Radio Version) - originally broadcast 15 October 1966 on
the BBC's "Saturday Club"
Disc
2 "Out Of The Frying Pan" (56:19 minutes):
1.
Jumping Jack Flash [Side 1]
2.
Gasoline Alley
3.
Willie And The Hand Jive
4.
Harpsichord Shuffle
5.
Baby I Love You
6.
This Here
7.
Green Door [Side 2]
8.
Bad Eye
9.
Alexander's Ragtime Band
10.
Tequila
11.
The House That Jack Built
12.
Hymn To Freedom
13.
Hi-Heel Sneakers
Tracks
1 to 13 are their second studio album "Out Of The Frying Pan" -
released December 1968 in the UK on Island Records ILPS 9082 in Stereo and
April 1969 in the USA on United Artists UAS 6695.
BONUS
TRACKS:
14.
Jumping Jack Flash (Mono Version)
15.
Baldy - Tracks 14 and 15 are the non-album A&B-sides of an August 1968 UK
7" single released on Island WIP-6044
16.
Dancing Frog (Stereo Version)
17.
Blues For A Frog (Stereo Version) - Tracks 16 and 17 remixed from Mono into
Stereo and released February 1969 on the UK Soundtrack LP to "The
Touchables" on Stateside SSL 10271 (Stereo only)
Disc
3 "Into The Fire" (70:37 minutes):
1.
Into The Fire [Side 1]
2.
Howl In Wolf's Clothing
3.
F In Blues
4.
Cool Hand Stanley
5.
Eddie's Tune
6.
Why Am I Treated So Bad
7.
Hot Salt Beef
8.
Warm And Tender Love
Tracks
1 to 8 are their third and last album "Into The Fire" - released
April 1970 in the USA on United Artists UAS 6740 in Stereo. The album was to be
called "Accrington Mushroom" and due for UK release November 1969 on
Island ILP 9109 but was withdrawn (no test pressings have ever surfaced).
BONUS
TRACKS:
9.
Happy Jack
10.
We Can Work It Out
11.
Funky Broadway
12.
Loving You Is Sweeter Than Ever
13.
A Memory Of Bruce
14.
The House That Jack Built
15.
I'll Go Crazy
16.
Tequila
17.
Baldy
Tracks
9 to 17 are PREVIOUSLY UNISSUED - an unreleased second album recorded in 1968
and dubbed here from surviving acetate
To
my knowledge and outside of a long deleted CD reissue by Edsel in 1995 for the
second LP "Out Of The Frying Pan" – none of these Frog albums have
made it officially onto CD before - so well done to compiler and true son of
the Modfather JOHN REED for his bang up job at compiling what fans have been
after for decades. Each singular card sleeve repro’s the three rare album
covers and a tasty attention to detail had CD1 with the Red and White colour
scheme of the Island Records label from late 1966, CD2 is the Pink variant of
1968 and the third has the United Artists Orange and Pink colours of 1970.
The
28-page chunky booklet has wonderfully detailed liner notes courtesy of NICK
ROSSI that include valuable and first hand accounts by MICK WEAVER in new interviews.
These are complimented by the usual plethora of trade adverts, that rare
promo-photo of the six-piece band where Island misspell the name with two ‘g’s’
instead of one, repros of the those fab UK Island 7” singles, a Belgium single
on Philips and a cool French EP sleeve where Weaver is flogged as a teen-idol
singing Donavan’s "Sunshine Superman" alongside three other hits from
the first album. The band also featured on two desirable Island Records label
sampler LPs – "Green Door" on the 1967 compilation "British
Blue-Eyed Soul" (ILPS 9066) and "Gasoline Alley" on the
wonderful "You Can All Join In" from 1969 (IWPS 2 was yours for only
14/6d) – so they're both pictured. Traffic fans will love the Jimi Hendrix
London Tour Date Poster on Page 23 where on the 18th of February 1969 you can
see The Soft Machine and 'Mason, Capaldi, Wood & Frog' supporting the great
man at The Royal Albert Hall (2/6d for a ticket!). This ill-fated four-piece
moniker for Traffic (featuring Mick Weaver as the Frog and once muted to called
Wooden Frog) didn't last of course past this public appearance. There are also
photos of "The Touchables" soundtrack on Stateside and a US 45 promo
on UA of WKF doing the Stones hit "Jumpin' Jack Flash". It is indeed
a gas, gas, gas...
The
Audio comes courtesy of SIMON MURPHY over at Another Planet and these
notoriously crude recordings are full of beans even if the first album's Mono
has all the subtlety of an overworked transistor radio. They're not audiophile
but they are punchy and absolutely full of that 60ts shoutin' 'n' roarin'
party-hard shing-a-ling. Being an Acetate I’m amazed at how good that
unreleased LP sounds and the Stereo of the second LP is wonderful too. For sure
his one-dimensional instrumental-after-instrumental set up on the LPs may grate
some after a while – but I'm honestly loving how damn good much of this stuff is
- music I honestly haven't listened to in decades and now feel I've been
missing out on something fab and period-groovy.
Apart
from Syd Dale's "Blues For A Frog" (itself a derivative of a James
Brown groove), the Mick Weaver/Jimmy Miller penned "Dancing Frog" and
the Fallon/Miller track "Incense" - the other nine are R&B covers
and contemporary pop hits of the day - Donovan's "Sunshine Superman",
a variant of Jackie Edward's "Somebody Help Me" (a hit for The
Spencer Davis Group with Stevie Winwood), Owen Gray's fantastic "Shook,
Shimmy And Shake", Fats Domino's "Walking To New Orleans", the
Sam & Dave hit "Hold On, I'm Coming" penned by Isaac Hayes and
David Porter and so on. The six Bonus Tracks on Disc 1 are actually that – the
first four being killer Mod sides – Mono and Marvellous as they mumble through
Jim Lowe’s "Green Door" (a number 1 hit for Shakin’ Stevens in 1981)
– while the BBC’s Ed Stewart tries to sound cool as he sells some kind of dog
product on "Henry's Panter".
Album
number two does the same - the Stones "Jumpin' Jack Flash", Johnny
Otis' "Willie And The Hand Jive", Tommy Tucker's "Hi-Heel
Sneakers", The Champs "Tequila" and so on. But there are very
cool self-penned tunes like Weaver's own "Gasoline Alley" where both
he on the organ and Dick Heckstall-Smith of The Graham Bond Organisation on
Saxophone play up a storm. It's funny also to hear "Willie And The Hand
Jive" sound like The Benny Hill Show Theme song - but that's what happens
track after track - groovy organ and a driving rhythm section making you want
to strut your ancient stuff across some dancefloor somewhere making an unholy
tit of yourself. Weaver's own "Harpsichord Shuffle" is pretty much a
Ray Charles keyboard riff turned up a notch while Chris Mercer of The Keef
Hartley Band gives it some cool Sax and Kokomo's Neil Hubbard gets Ike Turner
funky on his guitar (what a belter). For sure "Alexander's Ragtime
Band" is a Hammond groove too far but that’s immediately followed by a
kick-ass take on "Tequila" that’s liable to make your mother shimmy
those voluminous hips as she vacuums Dad’s cigarette ashes off the living room
carpet.
But
the real surprise here is the American-only album that died a death on its
initial release. Weaver stumped up most of the instrumentals for the April 1970
LP "Into The Fire" which has a decidedly Funkier feel than the first
two albums - like his band just discovered Sly & The Family Stone and
Clarence Carter. Choppy guitars, sexy sax work and a backbeat that just won't
quit infest the songs. Favourites include the Bluesy Harmonica of "Howl In
Wolf's Clothing" - another fab workout - while "F In Blues" is a
rare excursion into actual Blues - a slow late-night lounge-lizard lurch on the
organ punctuated by great Sax blowing. I also dig his cover of The Staple
Singers stunning "Why Am I Treated So Bad" - a tune that still has
power even if there are no words to ram home the message of equality - his new
Hammond Organ sounding loud and clear. For sure there is an audible drop in the
sonic attack as we’re treated to The Who's "Happy Jack" and The
Beatles' "We Can Work It Out" from the Acetate of the unreleased
album - but it's not as bad as you would imagine. "Funky Broadway"
feels more of an inspired choice than the obvious Who and Fabs choices.
For
sure the band Wynder K. Frog and its main-man Mick Weaver are a footnote in
Pop's history and few in 2018 will probably know their names or even care.
But if you've any penchant for 60ts Groovers and that driving Hammond Organ Sound -
then the little 3CD Box Set "Shook, Shimmy And Shake" is the fried
hot potato that needs to be on your shopping list. Well done to RPM and all involved...