LP ARTWOODS Art Gallery (Re) RED VINYL Hifly Sound HIFLY 8019 (Deep Purple)
Sold Date:
October 4, 2015
Start Date:
September 14, 2015
Final Price:
€19.99
(EUR)
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LP ARTWOODS
Art
Gallery
Limited Edition
In Red Vinyl
Country of release: Liechtenstein, 2015
Original
released: 1966
Label: Hifly
Sound
Catalogue
number: Hifly 8019
Barcode:
6501203913615
Klappcover/Gatefold
Sleeve: Nein/No
Condition Record:
MINT
Condition Cover: MINT
LP ist noch
verschweißt / LP IS STILL SEALED
!!!
(Photo von meiner eigenen
LP / Photo taken from my own copy)
Tracks
Side 1:
1. Can You Hear Me (2:54)
2. Down In The Valley (2:57)
3. Things Get Better (2:24)
4. Walk On The Wild Side (5:32)
5. I Keep Forgettin' (2:26)
6. Keep Lookin' (3:03)
7. Oh My Love (2:05) (Bonustrack, Single
A-Side, 1965)
8. Big City (2:05) (Bonustrack, Single
B-Side, 1965)
9. If I Ever Get My Hands On You (2:01) (Bonustrack, Single A-Side, 1964)
10. Sweet Mary (2:53) (Bonustrack, Single
B-Side, 1964)
Tracks Side 2:
1. One More Heartache (3:09)
2. Work, Work, Work (3:30)
3. Be My Lady (3:02)
4. If You Gotta Make A Fool Of Somebody (2:01)
5. Stop And Think It Over (2:57)
6. Don't Cry No More (3:52)
8. I Feel Good (2:42) (Bonustrack, Single A-Side, 1966)
7. I Take What I Want (2:54) (Bonustrack, Single B-Side,
1966)
Listen At
YouTube:
In contrast to the commercially-successful but
artistically-bankrupt pop sensations of the UK’s 1960s beat era there was a
small hardcore of bands in the UK who couldn’t get arrested record-sales-wise
but whom other musicians would cross continents to catch playing live.
Frequenting the trendy London club scene and playing funky tunes that oozed
git-up-and-dance, they usually centred round a deft practitioner of the Hammond
organ, and comprised the said keyboard god plus fellow musicians who refused to
compromise their musical integrity and their blues and jazz influences.
Alongside the likes of Graham Bond’s Organization, Georgie Fame’s Blue Flames
and the Peddlers could be found the Artwoods, who despite their undeniable
talent would have a brief career and only some of whom would find wider success
in later combinations.
Vocalist and leader Arthur “Art” Wood was the
elder brother of Ronnie, then guitarist with the Byrds and later star sideman to
Jeff Beck, Rod Stewart and the Glimmer Twins. Having served his on-stage
apprenticeship with Alexis Korner’s Blues Incorporated, Art set about putting
together his own band in 1963, finally settling with Derek Griffiths (gtr),
Malcolm Pool (bs), Jon Lord (org) and Keef Hartley (drs). (A couple of familiar
names there, then, but not till a few years later.) Eschewing the straight R’n’B
of the Yardbirds, the Stones and the Animals, the Artwoods stuck out for the
jazz-inflected soul mix that would soon be in vogue on the Soho club circuit,
covering material by Jimmy Smith, Lieber & Stoller, Eddie Floyd, Allen
Toussaint, Isaac Hayes and David Porter, and Solomon Burke. For four years they
rocked the live club circuit until the trend towards psychedelia began to edge
them out; unlike many of their contemporaries they declined to make that shift,
electing instead to split in ’67.
The Artwoods did make records; over
their four years they issued six singles plus – despite its cheesy title and
homespun cover design – this splendid studio album. Predictably, none of these
sold worth a damn: perhaps because the band’s oeuvre consisted almost completely
of covers, albeit superb ones; perhaps because the recorded product lacked the
visceral excitement of their live performances. The singles are indeed a little
humdrum, given their attempts to polish their raw sound for commercial purposes,
but the album is a gem of ensemble musicianship with flashes of individual
brilliance. Recorded in a tiny basement studio in London’s Denmark Street under
the tutelage of master Decca producer Mike Vernon, it clearly features the live
set and gets as close as one could ask to the live vibe, only limited by the
need to trim the tracks down to radio-friendly length. There’s a lot of variety
available; the standout tracks include Burke’s “Down In The Valley” done in
impeccable Stax style, Floyd’s “Things Get Better” as a superb garage soul opus
with Merseybeat harmonies and raw-nerve fuzz guitar, and a scintillating cover
of the Jimmy Smith instrumental “Walk On The Wild Side” in the middle of which
the band lapse into a pure swing jazz groove and Lord produces an orgasmic solo
that presages what he’d do with Deep Purple. Apart from a pedestrian reading of
“If You Gotta Make A Fool Of Somebody” there’s not a dull moment amongst the
twelve original tracks. Art’s rough-as-a-badger’s-arse vocal is a guilty
pleasure and Messrs Lord and Hartley shine throughout.
The subsequent
careers of Lord and Hartley are well documented, but Art himself enjoyed far
less success. He briefly formed a new outfit in ’69 with the musicians who would
become the Faces; perhaps predictably for an outfit called Quiet Melon, it sank
without trace. Art moved into a new career in graphic design with his other
brother Ted and Malcolm Pool, singing only occasionally thereafter as a hobby
musician till his premature death from cancer in 2006. ( ) (Len, November 27th,
2012/therisingstorm.net)
Art Wood - Vocals
Derek Griffiths -
Guitar
Malcolm Poole - Bass Guitar
Jon Lord - Organ
Keef Hartley -
Drums
Versand innerhalb Deutschland (versichert mit GLS - generell innerhalb von
24 Stunden) 5,00 Euro
Egal wieviele LPs
gekauft werden, Versand immer 5,00 Euro. Keine weiteren Versandkosten ab der
zweiten LP!!
Shipping within
EEC & Oversea (AIRMAIL) 5,00 Euro
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