The Tremeloes Here Come The Tremeloes (Vinyl, CBS Records, 1967) *** The Tremeloes Here Comes My Baby (Vinyl, Epic Records, 1967) ***
The Tremeloes Suddenly You Love Me (Vinyl, Epic Records, 1968) ***
The Tremeloes World Explosion! (Vinyl, CBS Records, 1968) **
The Tremeloes Master (Vinyl, CBS Records, 1970) ***
The Tremeloes Shiner (Vinyl, DJM Records, 1974) ***
The Tremeloes Platinum Collection (CD, ST Music, ?) ****
The Tremeloes Ultimate Collection (CD, Castle Communications, 1990) ****
Genre: Pop
They loom large in his legend (The Album Collection playlists): Part 1; Part 2; Part 3; Part 4; Part 5; Part 6; Part 7
Active compensatory factors: The Tremeloes started out as Brian Poole and The Tremeloes from 1963 to 1966 but I have no albums by that iteration. That band is famous for winning the battle to get signed to Decca Records (it was either them or an obscure beat combo from Liverpool called The Beatles).
Instead, all of my albums are from 1967 onwards when the band continued as a foursome. The four: lead guitarist Rick Westwood, rhythm guitarist Alan Blakley, bassist Alan Howard (replaced in 1968 by singing bassist Len "Chip" Hawkes), and singing drummer Dave Munden.
I have written about their debut album before (Here Come The Tremeloes) so I won't include that one in my count. Since then though, I have managed to find the American version of the debut in Amoeba Music. Yes, just like The Beatles, The Rolling Stones, The Kinks et al, the band was the victim of seemingly random changes to their albums when released in America.
Suddenly You Love Me is an American release from 1968 and that hit song leads off the album (it was the only hit coming from it). It's a strange hybrid of pop songs like the title track and attempts at more current psychedelic sounds/songs like Suddenly Winter.
They are great on the pop songs and less convincing on the 1968 trippy ones but it's easy to judge in hindsight. They give everything a good go but you can't run from your Dagenham roots too much can you. The version of Reach Out, I'll Be There is ill-advised.
That points to a central problem for many bands like The Tremeloes - they didn't have a mega talented Lennon/McCartney writing pair, so they were heavily reliant on doing cover versions.
World Explosion! is another American release, also from 1968. It had four songs from Blakely/Hawkes including the hit song Helule Helule (from 1967) amidst the inconsistent cover songs. Two respectful covers of Buddy Holly songs are two too many! Following them with The Lion Sleeps Tonight is a snooze fest before Rag Doll (which at least has some awesome harmonies).
All of that, plus the terrible cover, just feels redundant in 1968. They very clearly needed another makeover before the world of oldies circuits or worse, cabaret, beckoned.
Master was their next studio album, in 1970. It was an attempt to update their image (all are pictured with beards and long hair) and music with a beefier rockier sound, but this time it wasn't quite like 1967 and Here Comes My Baby.
Although there are no hits on Master, it still sounds light years better than World Explosion! and is their most cohesive studio album (even with the meh Elvis impression during one song). It successfully toughens the sound while retaining enough Tremeloes' tropes from the poptastic past.
Shiner continues in the same vein and isn't quite as successful as Master because it goes for a glossier sound and a lighter touch with some bubblegum/glam moves (Big Bad Boogie sounds like Mud). It's still a very passable Tremeloes' album though.
That just leaves the two compilation albums which attempt a wider view. The Ultimate Collection album takes in the 1967 to eighties versions of the band with 24 tracks. It's not chronological so it's definitely hit and miss. Good having all the hits on one disc though.
Platinum Collection does take a more chronological route and has 26 tracks with a bonus selection from the Brian Poole version of the band.
As you'd expect, there is quite a lot of duplication between the two albums, especially the hits, but who cares. I'll continue to buy any compilation I can find from this band. I'm hooked!
Where do they all belong? The albums were patchy but the hits were peerless. They certainly continue to help make the bad times, good in Wozza's World. I'm still on the look out for a copy of Live in Cabaret in good condition as well as anything else I can find.