ua

ua

Thursday, November 30, 2023

Various: The Arf! Arf! Blitzkrieg 32-Track Sampler 1990-98 (1998)

                       


1998 is now upon us and ARF! ARF! has compiled a blitzkrieg, power-packed 32 track sampler (1

THE RISING STORM

representative cut from each release) showcasing what you're missing. Whether you're into '60s Garage/Psych, Incredibly Strange Music or Radically Fresh Soundz, it's all here waiting to lure you into amassing a sizeable ARF! ARF section in your personal library.

Just what the title says, a generous sampling of the various albums available in this small indie's
THE BOURBONS

catalog. Featuring Midwestern '60s bands, New England Teen Scene sides, Iowa/Great Lake reissues, flower power '60s rock, Incredibly Strange Music tracks (a great chance to score Tony Burrello's "There's a New Sound"), and new stuff, this is a great little label sampler of hard-to-find material.

Thirty-two track various artists CD of 28 different obscure garage and psych bands. In more cases
THE ELECTRAS

bands on this various artists title have at least one full album out. Rare songs for this Arf! Arf! label sampler from Rising Storm, The Bourbons (playing a Nightcrawlers cover), Lazy Smoke, Three Wylde Maniacs, the oddly-named Tommy Tucker & The Esquires, The Paupers (sort of reminded me of the Standells) and the awesome garage rocking gem by Powered By Love. Plus, I also should mention TNT - performing a Moving Sidewalks gem, the two heavy psych cuts by Pandora (not to be confused with the '80's all-female band, The Pandoras) and The Moving Parts - as the disc closes with four songs from the Space Negros. Essential.

I was really surprised at how clean these recordings are. No "snap, crackle and pop" like you'll find on
JACK MUDURIAN

many other comps of obscure 1960s Garage Bands. The songs are actually quite good and if they had received proper promotion could have been big hits. Many of these bands either had bad management or were sadly overlooked. The band called "The Electras" sound a lot like Paul Revere and The Raiders back in their heyday(probably a huge influence). So many good bands.

Another is the Continental Coets, an all female band that sound like they could have run rings around
WHITE LIGHTNING

the Go-gos and Bangles and their song is actually much better than either of those two 1980s bands ever wrote. I would like to review an entire comp of their work. "Trip on out" by Haymarket Riot sounds like it could've been released in 1967 or 1968. It's a very cool fuzzed out proto-psych number. Overall, you cannot go wrong with these samplers. I'm looking forward to more from this indie label! Highly recommended for fans of Garage Rock!

This CD has excellent sound quality,and the first 19 songs which are garage rock songs all apparently
LUCIA PAMELA

from the 1965-68 era, are so clear one who would not know might guess they were modern recordings in the style. If you like the Nuggets, Pebbles, Back from the Grave series you are going to like this CD as those first 19 songs are all very strong songs.

These first 19 songs cover the whole range from Paul Revere type straight garage rock to slightly
THE SPACE NEGROS

pschadelic stuff, then there is the girl band and a couple of those 60's harmony type songs. Of course there is the Beatle like and the Buddy Holly like song too. Some of these songs are standout quality and I will let you find them yourself.
                


Various – The Arf! Arf! Blitzkrieg 32-Track Sampler 1990-98
Label: Arf! Arf! – AA-068
Format: CD, Compilation, Sampler
Country: US
Released: 1998
Genre: Rock
Style: Garage Rock, Novelty, Psychedelic Rock

TRAXS

      



NEW ENGLAND TEEN SCENE
       
    
01. The Rising Storm – She Loved Me    3:44
02. Flat Earth Society – Four & Twenty Miles    1:58
03. The Bourbons – Little Black Egg    3:23
04. The Lost – Changes    2:09
05. Lazy Smoke – All These Years    3:27
06. Dry Ice – Mary Is Alone    1:51
07. Thee Wylde Maniacs – Why Ain't Love Fair    2:33

MIDWEST '60s BANDS 
      

08. The Electras – Action Woman    2:28
09. The Fredric – Federal Reserve Bank Blues    2:07
10. White Lightning - (Under The Screaming Double) Eagle    3:25

IOWA GREAT LAKES REISSUES       
    
11. Tommy Tucker & The Esquires – Don't Tell Me Lies    2:16
12. The Noblemen – Things Aren't The Same    1:47
13. Continental Coets – Let's Live For The Present    2:39
14. Dee Jay And The Runaways – The Gorilla    2:06

WAY COOL '60s COMPS       
    
15. Prince And The Paupers – Exit    2:15
16. Haymarket Riot – Trip On OUt    2:22
17. Pinocchio And His Puppets – Fusion    2:29
18. The Misty Wizards – It's Love    2:08
19. Powered By Love – Powered By Love    2:18

INCREDIBLE STRANGE MUSIC       
    
20. Lucia Pamela – Walking On The Moon    3:07
21. Tony Burello – There's A New Sound    2:29
22. David Arvedon – Eliot Ness    1:17
23. Jack Mudurian – Chicago/Toot Toot Tootsie/Volare/Rose O'Day    1:31
24. Peter Donner – God Bless America    3:13

RADICALLY FRESH SOUNDZ       

25. Erik Lindgren – Train Of Thought    3:17
26. TNT – 99th Floor    2:13
27. Pandora – Space Amazon (Edited)    3:01
28. The Moving Parts–Anti - Aircraft Warning    1:54

THE SPACE NEGROS       
    
29. The Space Negros – Happenings Ten Years Time Ago (Revisited)    3:05
30. The Space Negros – Man To Man    0:48
31. The Space Negros – Booze Thang Meets The Wired Chain Gals (Featuring Birdsongs Of The Mesozoic)    3:05
32. The Space Negros – We Will Fall    2:17

Flac  Size: 450 MB

Tuesday, November 28, 2023

The Who: A Quick One 1966 + BBC Sessions 2000

 

One of the major bands of the rock & roll era, the Who straddle the gap separating art-pop and hard-rock, creating kinetic, exploratory music that helped expand the genre's lexicon. Arriving during the


second wave of the British Invasion, the Who came out of the R&B-besotted Mod scene and married that groove to the crunching power chords pioneered by the Kinks. After their debut single "I Can't Explain" cracked the U.K. Top Ten in 1965, the band quickly gained a reputation for their volcanic live performances, which could escalate into Pete Townshend violently shattering his guitar while Keith Moon destroyed his drum kit with glee.
                 

This volatility represented a new, dangerous streak within rock & roll and Townshend channeled this

angst and upheaval into his original songs, starting with the epochal "My Generation," where Roger Daltrey sneered "I hope I die before I get old." Townshend's provocations extended into playing with the form and sound of the pop single during the mid-'60s, an artistic restlessness that led to the groundbreaking conceptual 1967 album The Who Sell Out.
                      
                 

THE WHO - A QUICK ONE 1966

                    
A Quick One is the second studio album by the English rock band the Who, released on 9 December

1966. A version of the album with an altered track listing was released under the name Happy Jack on Decca Records in April 1967 in the United States, where the song "Happy Jack" was a top 40 hit.
                  

Unlike other albums by the Who, where guitarist Pete Townshend was the primary or sole songwriter,

A Quick One features significant songwriting contributions from all band members, with lead vocalist Roger Daltrey contributing one song, bassist John Entwistle and drummer Keith Moon each contributing two. The album also included a cover of the Holland–Dozier–Holland song "Heat Wave" and ends with a musical suite titled "A Quick One, While He's Away", which served as an inspiration for later rock operas that the Who would become known for.
                       

Rolling Stone's Steve Appleford said in 1995 that the album's cheerful pop style has an authentic

quality with trifles like "Cobwebs and Strange" that are reconciled by "absolutely perfect, poignant pop tune[s]" such as "So Sad About Us". The album was later described as "fascinatingly quirky" by the magazine. In Christgau's Record Guide: Rock Albums of the Seventies (1981), Robert Christgau included the album's American version in his "basic record library". Rolling Stone ranked the album number 383 on its list of the 500 greatest albums of all time, published in 2003, and 384 in 2012.
                    

The Who – A Quick One
Label: Polydor – 589 800-2, Polydor – 589800-2
Format: CD, Album, Reissue, Remastered, Stereo, Disctronics
Country: Europe
Released: Apr 13, 2003
Genre: Rock
Style: Mod, Beat, Classic Rock

            


TRACKS

               


01. Run Run Run    2:42
02. Boris The Spider    2:28
03. I Need You    2:24
04. Whiskey Man    2:57
05. Heatwave   1:54

Written-By – Edward Holland Jr./Lamont Dozier/Brian Holland
06. Cobwebs And Strange    2:29
07. Don't Look Away    2:51
08. See My Way   1:52

Written-By – Roger Daltrey
09. So Sad About Us    3:01
10. A Quick One, While He's Away    9:10
11. Batman   1:34

Written-By – Neal Hefti
12. Bucket T   2:07
Written-By – Torrence, Atfield, Christian
13. Barbara Ann   1:59
Written-By – Freddy Fassert
14. Disguises    3:10
15. Doctor, Doctor    2:59
16. I've Been Away    2:07
17. In The City    2:21
18. Happy Jack (Acoustic Version)    2:51
19. Man With The Money   2:45

Written-By – Don Everly, Phil Everly
20. My Generation / Land Of Hope And Glory   2:03
Written-By [Land Of Hope And Glory] – Edward Elgar
Written-By [My Generation] – Pete Townshend

MP3 @ 320 Size: 142 MB
Flac  Size: 392 MB

THE WHO - BBC SESSIONS 2000

                  

        

BBC Sessions by The Who was released 15 February 2000 on Polydor Records internationally and

MCA Records in the U.S. It contains 24 songs and two jingles recorded live at the BBC studios in London. With the exception of the jingles being used to bookend the album, and the third track being misplaced, The Who's recordings are presented in chronological order. Most of the recordings are for the programmes Top Gear or Saturday Club and were recorded between 24 May 1965 and 10 October 1967. Tracks 20-23 were recorded on 14 April 1970 for the Dave Lee Travis Show while tracks 24-25 were recorded on 29 January 1973 for The Old Grey Whistle Test.
                    

This compilation culls eight years of live in-studio performances for the BBC, broken up with

introductions by the smooth and hearty Beeb announcers. The early Who romp through covers with breathtaking confidence -- there's nothing sedulous about the crashing, sugar-free "Good Lovin'." They turn the blues into a stately twist with James Brown's "Just You and Me, Darling" and play "Shakin' All Over" as properly spectral. Encompassing the Who's prime years, The BBC Sessions delineates how the band resolved social and musical anxieties of the age, youthful frustration careening like an

American muscle car on "Disguises," "Substitute," "I'm Free" and a funkified "Relay" (after which Keith Moon must have collapsed); British eccentricity takes a droll promenade with "Happy Jack," "A Quick One (While He's Away)" and John Entwistle's "Boris the Spider." But more than anything, The BBC Sessions highlights how mad, bad and dangerous the Who were in 1965

The Who – BBC Sessions
Label: Polydor – 547 727-2
Format: CD, Album
Country: UK & Europe
Released: 2000
Genre: Rock
Style: Mod, Classic Rock

DISC 1.

                 


01. My Generation (Radio 1 Jingle)    0:57
02. Anyway, Anyhow, Anywhere    2:44
03. Good Lovin'   1:49
Written-By – A.Resnick, R.Clark
04. Just You And Me, Darling   2:01
Written-By – J.Brown
05. Leaving Here   2:34
Written-By – B.Holland/L.Dozier/E.Holland Jnr.
06. My Generation    3:23
07. The Good's Gone    2:59
08. La La La Lies    2:11
09. Substitute    3:30
10. Man With Money   2:31
Written-By – D.Everly, P.Everly
11. Dancing In The Street   2:23
Written-By – I.J.Hunter, M.Gaye, W.M.Stevenson
12. Disguises    2:57
13. I'm A Boy    2:39
14. Run Run Run    3:16
15. Boris The Spider    2:13
16. Happy Jack    2:09
17. See My Way    1:50
18. Pictures Of Lily    2:34
19. A Quick One (While He's Away)    7:01
20. Substitute     2:12
21. The Seeker    3:04
22. I'm Free    2:24
23. Shakin' All Over/Spoonful (Medley)   3:41
Written-By – F.Heath, W.Dixon
24. Relay    4:56
25. Long Live Rock    3:52
26. Boris The Spider (Radio 1 Jingle)    0:10


MP3 @ 320 Size: 180 MB
Flac  Size: 429 MB

DISC 2.

                         

  
01. Pete Townshend Interview - Townhend Talks "Tommy"
02. Pinball Wizard

Written-By – P. Townshend
03. See Me Feel Me
Written-By – P. Townshend
04. I Don't Even Know Myself
Written-By – P. Townshend
05. I Can See For Miles
Written-By – P. Townshend
06. Heaven And Hell
Written-By – J. Entwistle
07. The Seeker (Version 2)
Written-By – P. Townshend
08. Summertime Blues
Written-By – E. Cochran, J. Capehart

MP3 @ 320 Size: 69.4 MB
Flac  Size: 131 MB

The WHO on Urban Aspirines HERE

Sunday, November 26, 2023

The Specials: The Best Of The Specials 2008

 

The Specials, also known as The Special AKA, are an English 2 tone and ska revival band formed in 1977 in Coventry. After some early changes, the first stable lineup of the group consisted of Terry Hall and Neville Staple on vocals, Jerry Dammers on keyboards, Lynval Golding and Roddy Radiation on


guitars, Horace Panter on bass, John Bradbury on drums, and Dick Cuthell and Rico Rodriguez on horns. The band wore mod-style "1960s period rude boy outfits (pork pie hats, tonic and mohair suits and loafers)". Their music combines the danceable rhythms of ska and rocksteady with the energy and attitude of punk. Lyrically, their work (often written by primary songwriter Dammers) presented overt political and social commentary.
            

If you were 12 in 1979, the Specials were easy peasy lemon squeezy the greatest band on the planet. The sort of band you can't quite imagine not existing before. Of course, style over substance is any easy sell in the pop charts, and you have to assume that the vast majority of the millions of catalogue rude

boy clones who cat walked the shithole of Britain’s high streets over the following few years were fashion victims of the lowest order (check Stereotypes or Do Nothing for the bands response). The difference being that, perfectly packaged as they were, the Specials were substance wrapped in checkerboard. Who else could mention the Irish Republican Army and the Ulster Defence Association in a dance track? It turns out I, and millions of others, nailed our colours to the right mast at the time, and try as I might I still can't find a single chink in the armour of The Specials legacy.
         

They looked fucking great. If you weren't there, Britain was transformed into a mail order version of

The Wailin Wailers album cover almost overnight, though it probably didn't know it at the time. Before the birth of the woeful sports casual, the working class dressed up for the weekend and the easily attainable and striking evocation of mid 60's Jamaica was too irresistible for those who founds punks sartorial alienation just that bit too alienating.
                    

In an age where teenage girls called Kate or Katie clog up the airwaves with songs about boyfriend trouble, (and that age is always), a number one about birth control seems highly unlikely. And it did

then. Add to that, a first tour supporting the Clash, their own label which proportionally was more about others than them, launching Madness, launching The Selector before they even existed, that Two Tone episode of Top Of The Pops, the tour that introduced the non ska wonders of Dexys Midnight Runners to a generation, a faultless and thoughtful back catalogue, opening barely formed minds to racial tolerance, their constant defiance of the ever present National Front.
               

With their expected (but heartbreaking) immaculate timing, the Specials couldn't have picked a more perfect time to split if they'd had a team of strategic scriptwriters to work out the elegance of a perfect

Hollywood ending. Their final release was not only the most prescient 45 ever, but also their most musically avant garde. They were no longer merely the greatest ska band around, Imagine Ghost Town being allowed anywhere near the charts today. Not only near the charts but No1. Not only No1, but a chart topper during the punch in the face that was the hideous experience of a Royal Wedding. Ghost Town hit the charts the week before the Toxteth Riots, somehow still journalistically given the tag of Race Riots, as if anyone riots because of their race. Let's face facts, a mixed race riot is a class riot.
                  
              
The anti-apartheid anthem "Free Nelson Mandela" became a Top Ten hit in England, but the album

stiffed, peaking at a tepid 34 on the U.K. album charts. The band's final single, "What I Like Most About You Is Your Girlfriend," failed to break the British Top 40, and Dammers dissolved the unit and pursued political causes such as Artists Against Apartheid.
              
             
          
Shortly after the official breakup, various members of the band joined up with other ska revivalists (English Beat, etc.) to form a touring unit named Special Beat. By the mid-'90s, in response to the third-wave ska revival, a Dammers-less version of the Specials (featuring Roddy Byers, Lynval Golding,

Horace Panter, and Neville Staple) reappeared with a series of mediocre cash-in albums: Today's Specials (1996), Guilty Til Proved Innocent! (1998), and Conquering Ruler (2002). The Specials reunited again in 2008 with the full original lineup, except for Dammers, and toured in the United Kingdom, Europe, and the United States to great commercial success and positive reviews. The reunited band continued touring on and off until 2015, when drummer John Bradbury, the backbone of the 2-Tone sound, passed away in December at the age of 62. Trombonist Rico Rodriguez had died three months earlier, on September 4. He was 80 years old.
             

Death of Terry Hall

                         


On 19 December 2022, the Specials announced on social media that Hall had died at age 63 after a brief

illness which was later revealed to be pancreatic cancer. They had planned to record a new album in the United States before Hall's health deteriorated.
                    

THE SPECIALS ORIGINAL LINE - UP

                     


Terry Hall – lead vocals (1977–1981, 2008–2022; his death)
Lynval Golding – rhythm and lead guitar, vocals (1977–1981, 1993, 1994–1998, 2008–present)
Horace Panter – bass guitar (1977–1981, 1982, 1993, 1994–1998, 2000–2001, 2008–present)
Jerry Dammers – keyboards, principal songwriter, vocals (1977–1981)
Roddy Radiation – lead guitar, vocals (1978–1981, 1993, 1996–2001, 2008–2014)
Neville Staple – toasting, vocals, percussion (1978–1981, 1993, 1996–2001, 2008–2012)
John Bradbury – drums (1979–1984, 2008–2015; his death)
Dick Cuthell – flugelhorn, trumpet (1979–1984)
Rico Rodriguez – trombone (1979–1981, 1982; died 2015)


The Specials – The Best Of The Specials
Label: Chrysalis – CHRTV 20082, EMI – 50999 520398 2 9, EMI – 5099952039829
Series:    Sight & Sound
Country: Europe
Year: 2008
Genre: Rock, Reggae
Style: Ska, Rocksteady

TRACKS

                   

      
01. The Special A.K.A. – Gangsters   2:48

Producer – The Special A.K.A.
Written-By – J. Dammers
02. The Specials Feat. Rico – A Message To You Rudy   2:53
Engineer – Dave Jordan
Producer – Elvis Costello
Written-By – R. Thompson
03. The Specials – Nite Klub (Album Version)   3:23
Backing Vocals – Chrissie Hynde
Engineer – Dave Jordan
Producer – Elvis Costello
Written-By – J. Dammers, The Specials
04. The Specials – Concrete Jungle   3:19
Engineer – Dave Jordan
Producer – Elvis Costello
Written-By – R. Radiation
05. The Special A.K.A. – Too Much Too Young (Live)   2:06
Producer – Dave Jordan, Jerry Dammers
Written-By – J. Dammers
Written-By [Ack. To] – L. Chalmers
06. The Specials – Blank Expression   2:42
Engineer – Dave Jordan
Producer – Elvis Costello
Written-By – J. Dammers, The Specials
07. The Specials – Doesn't Make It Alright   3:25
Engineer – Dave Jordan
Producer – Elvis Costello
Written-By – D. Goldberg, J. Dammers
Written-By [Uncredited] – Mark Harrison (12)
08. The Specials – Rude Boys Outa Jail   2:39
Producer – Dave Jordan
Written-By – L. Golding, N. Staples, H. Gentleman
09. The Specials – Rat Race   3:10
Producer – Dave Jordan
Written-By – R. Radiation
10. The Specials – Man At C&A   3:36
Engineer – Dave Jordan, Jeremy (The Blade) Allom
Producer – Dave Jordan, Jerry Dammers
Written-By – J. Dammers, T. Hall
11. The Specials Feat. Rico With The Ice Rink String Sounds – Do Nothing (Single Version)   3:41
Producer – Dave Jordan
Written-By – L. Golding
12. The Specials – Stereotypes/Stereotypes Pt 2   7:24
Engineer – Dave Jordan, Jeremy (The Blade) Allom
Producer – Dave Jordan, Jerry Dammers
Written-By [Stereotypes Pt 2] – N. Staples
Written-By [Stereotypes] – J. Dammers
13. The Specials – International Jet Set (Album Version)    5:37
Engineer – Dave Jordan, Jeremy (The Blade) Allom
Producer – Dave Jordan, Jerry Dammers
Written-By – J. Dammers
14. The Specials – Friday Night, Saturday Morning    3:34
Engineer – J. Rivers
Producer – John Collins
Written-By – T. Hall
15. The Specials – Why?    2:56
Engineer – J. Rivers
Producer – John Collins
Written-By – L. Golding
16. The Specials – Ghost Town (Full Version)    6:01
Engineer – J. Rivers
Producer – John Collins
Written-By – J. Dammers
17. The Special AKA – What I Like Most About You Is Your Girlfriend (Album Version)   4:50
Mixed By – Jeremy Green
Producer – Dick Cuthell
Written-By – J. Dammers
18. The Special AKA – Racist Friend (Single Version)    4:02
Engineer [Executive] – Dick Cuthell
Producer, Arranged By – Jerry Dammers
Written-By – D. Cuthell, J. Dammers, J. Bradbury
19. The Special AKA – War Crimes (The Crime Remains The Same) (Single Version)    4:03

Engineer [Executive] – Dick Cuthell
Producer, Arranged By – Jerry Dammers
Written-By – J. Dammers
20. The Special AKA – Nelson Mandela (Album Version)   4:15

Producer – Elvis Costello
Written-By – J. Dammers

NOTES


01. Single released 28th July, 1979 on 2 Tone catalogue number CHS TT 1  1979
02. Single released 27th October, 1979 on 2 Tone catalogue number CHS TT 5 Digital remaster  2002
03, 04, 06, 07 Taken from the album Specials Digital remaster  2002
05. Single released on 26th January, 1980 2 Tone catalogue number CHS TT7  1980
08, 09. Single released on 24th May, 1980 2 Tone catalogue number CHS TT 11  1980
10, 12, 13 Taken from the album More Specials Digital remaster  2002
11. Single released on 13th December, 1980 2 Tone catalogue number CHS TT 16.  1980
14. to 16. Single releaed on 20th June, 1981 2 Tone Chatalogue number CHS TT 17  1981
17, 20. Taken from the album In The Studio Digital remaster  2002
18. Single released on 3rd September, 1983 2 Tone catalogue number CHS TT 25.  1983
19. Single released on 22nd November, 1982 2 Tone catalogue number CHS TT 23.  1982

GHOST TOWN LYRICS

                          



This town, is coming like a ghost town
All the clubs have been closed down
This place, is coming like a ghost town
Bands won't play no more
too much fighting on the dance floor

Do you remember the good old days before the ghost town?
We danced and sang, and the music played in a de boomtown

This town, is coming like a ghost town
Why must the youth fight against themselves?
Government leaving the youth on the shelf
This place, is coming like a ghost town
No job to be found in this country
Can't go on no more
The people getting angry

          



This town, is coming like a ghost town
This town, is coming like a ghost town
This town, is coming like a ghost town
This town, is coming like a ghost town



MP3 @ 320 Size: 181 MB
Flac  Size: 495 MB   
    

THE SPECIALS - BBC SESSIONS 1998 

 

In Session With John Peel 29/5/79

   
01. Gangsters    3:03
02. Too Much Too Young    2:07
03. Concrete Jungle    3:20
04. Monkey Man    2:41

In Session With John Peel 22/10/79
    
05. Rude Boys Outa Jail    2:56
06. Rat Race    3:10
07. The Skinhead Symphony In Three Movement    (5:48)
Long Shot Kick The Bucket
Liquidator   
Skinhead Moonstomp
    
In Session With John Peel 01/12/80
    
08. Sea Cruise    3:12
09. Stereotype    6:16
10. Racquel    1:40

In Session With John Peel 12/09/83
    
11. Alcohol    3:46
12. Lonely Crowd    3:22
13.Bright Lights    4:11

David "Kid" Jensen Session 1980   

14. Blank Expression    1:53
15. You're Wondering Now    2:23
16. Friday Night, Saturday Morning    3:14


 
MP3 @ 320 Size: 123 MB

My EAC Program Doesn't convert it in Flac (After the third track)