Sold Date:
January 5, 2020
Start Date:
June 5, 2018
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The Walker Brothers - Sun Ain't Gonna Shine Anymore [New Vinyl] 180 Gram, Spain - Import
Artist: The Walker Brothers
Title: Sun Ain't Gonna Shine Anymore
Format: Vinyl
Attributes: 180 Gram, Spain - Import
Genre: Rock
UPC: 8435395501993
Condition: New
Release Date: 2018
Record Label: Smash Records
Album Tracks
1. THE SUN AIN'T GONNA SHINE 3:06
2. AFTER THE LIGHTS GO OUT 4:10
3. PEOPLE GET READY 2:41
4. EVERYTHING'S GONNA BE ALL RIGHT 2:19
5. OLD FOLKS 3:14
6. TAKE IT LIKE A MAN 2:33
7. (BABY) YOU DON'T HAVE TO TELL ME 2:43
8. I NEED YOU 3:16
9. MY LOVE IS GROWING 2:21
10. YOUNG MAN CRIED 2:37
11. JUST FOR A THRILL 3:39
12. DON'T FIGHT IT 1:55
Limited 180gm vinyl LP pressing. Digitally remastered reissue of The Sun Ain’t Gonna Shine Anymore, The Walker Brothers fourth studio album. Originally released in 1966 by Smash Records, The Sun Ain’t Gonna Shine Anymore, was the second American release by the band, following their US debut LP Introducing the Walker Brothers (1965). This album was prepared by Smash Records label (a Mercury subsidiary and home of James Brown, Jerry Lee Lewis and Frankie Valli, among others) in order to promote the group in the United States, where they weren’t as successful as they were in Great Britain. Produced by Johnny Franz with the help of veteran British arrangers like Ivor Raymonde (who also worked with Dusty Springfield), and Reg Guest, the album is full of orchestrated ballads and soul-R&B-oriented sides, with a young Scott Walker on both songwriting and singing duties. The Walker Brothers weren’t really British and weren’t really brothers, and their real name wasn’t Walker. They were Californians Scott Engel (best known as Scott Walker), John Maus, and Gary Leeds, and became huge stars in England at the peak of the British Invasion. The Walker Brothers provided a unique counterpoint to the British Invasion by achieving much more success in the United Kingdom than in their home country, in a period when the popularity of British bands such as The Beatles dominated the U.S. charts.