Small Faces - Greatest Hits: The Immediate Years 1967-1969

Sold Date: July 6, 2018
Start Date: May 21, 2018
Final Price: £12.98 (GBP)
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General Article name: Greatest Hits: The Immediate Years 1967-1969
Genre: Rock englischsprachig Product type: LP (Vinyl) Label: CHARLY Number of tracks: 17 Tracklist LP - 1 1. Small Faces - Here Come the Nice 2. Small Faces - Talk To You 3. Small Faces - Get Yourself Together 4. Small Faces - Become Like You 5. Small Faces - Green Circles 6. Small Faces - Itchycoo Park 7. Small Faces - I'm Only Dreaming 8. Small Faces - Tin Soldier 9. Small Faces - I Feel Much Better 10. Small Faces - Lazy Sunday 11. Small Faces - Rollin’ Over (Part 2 of Happiness Stan) 12. Small Faces - Mad John [Single Version] 13. Small Faces - Journey [Single Version] 14. Small Faces - Universal 15. Small Faces - Donkey Rides, a Penny a Glass 16. Small Faces - Afterglow of Your Love [Single Version] 17. Small Faces - Wham Bam Thank You Mam   Description Description

Okay, it's expensive as a four-CD set. And yeah, apart from "Itchycoo Park" and maybe "Lazy Sunday," not too much of what the Small Faces recorded ever made any lasting impression on American listeners. But there's a lot of good music here. The box opens up modestly enough with Steve Marriott's old band, the Moments, covering the Kinks' "You Really Got Me" and doing one other song, "Money Money." A few of the band's Decca tracks that seem to float between Decca and Immediate follow, and then we plunge into the group's Immediate history. Andrew "Loog" Oldham's independent label wasn't much more organized than the typical blues label from Chicago in the 1950s, and the Small Faces' tape library is a mess. But the producers have included everything -- every stereo and mono version of each song (where a different mix exists), the five official live tracks, the unfinished backing tracks, every known outtake. Anyone who thinks this is overkill doesn't know the Small Faces -- they weren't much less prolific than the Rolling Stones, and were better than the Stones as both a soul band and a psychedelic band (the Stones never really made the jump into drug songs too comfortably); and based on the evidence, they could have cut the Who to shreds most nights. The sound varies, although it's all been nicely cleaned up (mildly CEDAR-ized, actually), and while three versions of "(Tell Me) Have You Ever Seen Me" may seem like overkill, it's all fascinating stuff, watching certain songs change and evolve. This is where it ends for the serious fan. ~ Bruce Eder

Bruce Eder

Contributors Artist: Small Faces Record Label: Snapper UK Record Label: Sanctuary Records