I remember that being a GREAT record. A guitar player I knew and I listened to it so much we could nail the accents. "Do the thins that I remember..."on "Don't You Fret." Wow. 1965...first year in college and away from home.
Printable View
Includes my favorite trax, proto-psychedelic "See My Friends" and garage/punk anthem "I Need You". Great band, so influential...
Kinks - s/t [1964.]
Attachment 52798Attachment 52799
Their first LP with hit singl You Really Got Me. Shame it doesn't includes other great singles like All Day and All of the Night or Set Me Free / I Need You.
Solid debut anyway :thmbsup:
Kinks - The Kink Kontroversy [1965.]
Attachment 52800
With great Till the End of the Day / Where Have All the Good Times Gone.
.
am a big TYA fan and didnt realize that I'd never heard their first album .... the lib has it on remastered CD ....wow, a great album , rather blusey ...some compare it with the DOORS first..they were mature and developed from the "git-go" ...a nice find. if anybody has it on vinyl , give me a PM,,lets deal ;)
L-1:spin::spin:'s are a perfect match for this CD :p
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00...pf_rd_i=507846
Steve Hillage -Motivation Radio
(1977, Atlantic) KENDUN V in the deadwax
http://i122.photobucket.com/albums/o...04/sh001-1.jpg
one of the inner sleeve pictures includes a look at TONTO, a large handbuilt polyphonic synthesiser, stands for "The Original New Timbral Orchestra", and was used on this album. produced and engineered by Malcolm Cecil, of TONTO's Expanding Headband and creator of the TONTO synthesizer. Guitar tracks were recorded on 7/7/77 "to give the record mystical relevance". :cool:
This is a second copy, I'd forgotten how dynamic and nicely recorded this prog rock record is. a 50cent pickup at HPB last week.
Kinks - Kinkdom
I agree, the Kinks were very inflluential and they were easily responsible for destroying as many transistor radio speakers ("You Really Got Me"; "All Day and All Of The Night") here in the States as the Stones (Satisfaction, Get Off My Cloud, 19th Nervous Breakdown) and the Lads from Liverpool (uh, every 45 they released starting in 1963...)
The Kinks - Greatest Hits!
(1966, Reprise) Mono
http://i122.photobucket.com/albums/o...kinks001-1.jpg
http://i122.photobucket.com/albums/o...4/kinks002.jpg
They already had an amazing numbers of hits, great songs by 1966. I have a later 1971 stereo pressing; re-channeled stereo. The mono wipes the floor with it.
Yes - Time And A Word
(1970, Atlantic)
http://i122.photobucket.com/albums/o...204/yes001.jpg
MOD FEVER :hyp:
THE WHO - s/t
[1966. Polydor]
German version of "A Quick One" Lp.
Attachment 52802Attachment 52803
My favorite Who Lp, with some changes in trax list. "So Sad About Us" and "A Quick One, While He's Away" replaced by four great trax: Circles, Disguises, I'm a Boy & In the City.
THE EYES - The Arrival of...
[1996. Essex]
Comp. of '65/'66 Recordings
Attachment 52805Attachment 52804
Cool stuff from this 60's underground mods. Listen... :dancin:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U1uhRIC2PSI
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LZ8s-Ni0cfY&feature=related
One more from...
THE KINKS - Face to Face [1966]
Attachment 52806
Maybe the first conceptual rock album :hmm:
The Who - Direct Hits
(1968, Track) UK pressing; Stereo
http://i122.photobucket.com/albums/o...4/who001-1.jpg
singles, B-sides, and album tracks recorded between '66 and '68.
Side One
1."Bucket T" (Altfield, Christian, Torrence) – 2:08
2."I'm a Boy" – 2:36
3."Pictures of Lily" – 2:43
4."Doctor! Doctor!" (Entwistle) – 2:53
5."I Can See for Miles" – 3:55
6."Substitute" – 3:47
Side Two
1."Happy Jack" – 2:11
2."The Last Time" (Mick Jagger, Keith Richards) – 2:50
3."In the City" (Entwistle, Moon) - 2:19
4."Call Me Lightning" – 2:19
5."Mary Anne with the Shaky Hand" – 2:05
6."Dogs" – 3:03
Kenny Dorham - Matador
(1962, United Artists) 1971 reissue
http://i122.photobucket.com/albums/o...04/kd001-1.jpg
with Jackie McLean, Bobby Timmon, Teddy Smith, J.C. Moses. A very hot session and dynamic record. A $1 pickup last month.
Gabor Szabo - Macho
(1975, Salvation) MASTERDISK G. Kong in the deadwax; mastered by Gilbert Kong at Masterdisk
http://i122.photobucket.com/albums/o...04/gs001-2.jpg
Szabo's improvisational runs and finger picking style on guitar are worth the effort to listen past the commercial mid 70s arrangements here with the keyboard stylings of Bob James and which sound like theme music from "Kojak" or "Baretta". a 99 cent pickup last month.
Steppenwolf - Gold: Their Great Hits
(1971, ABC Dunhill)
http://i122.photobucket.com/albums/o...04/sw001-1.jpg
http://i122.photobucket.com/albums/o...%204/sw002.jpg
a first greatest hits compilation for Steppenwolf. great heavy stuff and very nice sounding with good separation and crispness - example: the percussion solo in "Rock Me".
Chico Hamilton - The Further Adventures Of El Chico
(1966, Impulse!) VAN GELDER in the deadwax; Stereo pressing
http://i122.photobucket.com/albums/o...04/ch001-6.jpg
Chico Hamilton – drums; Clark Terry - trumpet; Gábor Szabó – guitar;
Ron Carter – bass
Nancy Sinatra - Country, My Way
(1967, Reprise)
http://i122.photobucket.com/albums/o...04/ns001-3.jpg
http://i122.photobucket.com/albums/o...%204/ns002.jpg
Nancy and Producer Lee Hazlewood join the bandwagon going to Nashville to record a country-pop album. Hazlewood brings in the real Nashville players including Wayne Moss and Charlie McCoy who played with Dylan on Blonde On Blonde. Hazlewood adds his unique baritone vocal on "Jackson" and "Oh Lonesome Me". a $1 pickup last month.
You got a lot of cool $1 pickups :applaud:
People try to put us d-down...
THE WHO - My Generation [1965.]
Attachment 52825
Pretty good debut for THE WHO. They rox harder than The Stones at time :banghead:
Shel Talmy’s production !
THE WHO - Meaty Beaty Big & Bouncy
Attachment 52826
Legendary best of Lp. The ultimate Who collection :thmbsup::thmbsup::thmbsup:
Fever Tree - self titled
(1968, Uni)
http://i122.photobucket.com/albums/o...04/ft001-1.jpg