Monday, 6 February 2023

"The Immediate Singles Collection" - cd 5

This extravagant six-CD set documents the astonishing life span of the first pop independent label in the U.K., Immediate Records. Founded in 1965, Immediate flipped, flopped, and staggered its own way, competing against unhip American labels like EMI and Decca until late 1969...
...The label, and the documentary CD set, showcases in particular the Small Faces, who enjoyed a brief U.K. number one hit, Ogden's Nut Gone Flake. More familiar to American listeners will no doubt be the three-chord sock-hop favorite "Hang on Sloopy" by the McCoys, and a number of covers of familiar American folk-rock hits are present as well. The esoteric collector will appreciate inclusions by such café balladeers as the Poets and Les Fleurs-de-Lis, also signed by Immediate before the advent of the swinging London sound, marked by the Rolling Stones revolution and other mod developers influencing the pants off the tiniest studio cover bands. Immediate also helped sculpt the success of anguished bellower Chris Farlowe, soon to be joined by the similarly throaty vibrato of PP Arnold and, of course, manager/producer Andrew Oldham's best toss of the dice, the Small Faces, whom he ripped away from Decca. By the fourth disc, you are, in fact, in the throes of swinging London, featuring Farlowe's heart-stopping "Yesterday's Papers" and Arnold's "The First Cut Is the Deepest," written by the much-in-demand Cat Stevens. Most of the music is minimal and often out of tune, production at an early-time low, replete with tinny echoes and accidental outtake moments. The most successfully recorded instruments seem to be the sitars, baroque strings, and arpeggio harpsichord riffs that "translate" well under Immediate's studio circumstances. Notable moments: Small Faces' "Here Comes the Nice" and "Itchycoo Park," Murray Head's "She Was Perfection," and the Marquis of Kensington's Kinks/new vaudeville hybrid, "Changing of the Guard." This is a luxurious, overcollected document that could be easily managed on one museum-piece disc, although it would be hard cull dozens of small contributions by say, drop-ins Nico, Rod Stewart, and Mick Fleetwood. The jewel on the record is without question the Faces version (sung not by Stewart but by Chris Farlowe) of "Handbags and Glad rags": "They told me you missed school today/So I suggest you just throw it all away/The handbags and glad rags that your granddads had to sweat/So you could buy." Very British, very Immediate. - Review by Becky Byrkit
disc 5:
1 Little Miss Understood - Rod Stewart 2 So Much To Say - Rod Stewart 3 (If You Think You're) Groovy - P.P. Arnold 4 Though It Hurts Me Badly - P.P. Arnold 5 Tin Soldier - The Small Faces 6 I Feel Much Better - The Small Faces 7 Would You Believe - Billy Nicholls 8 Daytime Girl - Billy Nicholls 9 Lazy Sunday - The Small Faces 10 Rollin' Over (Part Ii Of Happiness Stan) - The Small Faces 11 Handbags & Gladrags - Chris Farlowe 12 Everyone Makes A Mistake - Chris Farlowe 13 The Last Goodbye - Chris Farlowe 14 Paperman Fly In The Sky - Chris Farlowe 15 Angel Of The Morning - P.P. Arnold 16 Great Train Robbery - The Outer Limits 17 Sweet Freedom - The Outer Limits 18 America - The Nice 19 The Diamond Hard Blue Apples Of The Moon - The Nice 20 The Universal - The Small Faces 21 Donkey Rides, A Penny A Glass - The Small Faces 22 On The Bombsite - Duncan Browne 23 Alfred Bell - Duncan Browne

3 comments:

RYP said...

"The Immediate Singles Collection" - cd 5
gitit! no pw
https://www.imagenetz.de/YeMYb

lemonflag said...

Thanks

Rhodb said...

Thanks RYP for next installment Regards