Kinks Kinks (Vinyl, Sanctuary Records, 1964) *** The Kinks 20 Golden Greats (Vinyl, Pye Records, 1978) *****
The Kinks Face To Face (Vinyl, Sanctuary Records, 1966) ****
The Kinks Something Else by The Kinks (CD, Sanctuary Records, 1967) *****
The Kinks The Kinks Are the Village Green Preservation Society (CD, Sanctuary Records, 1968) *****
The Kinks Arthur (or the Decline and Fall of the British Empire) (CD, Sanctuary Records, 1969) *****
Genre: Pop, rock
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: I am not a Kinks Kompletist but I do have a fair smattering of their albums, so I'll divide my collection into decades. First up - the sixties output.
The Kinks started out in the mid-sixties by calling themselves Kinks and morphed into The Kinks after a few albums. Their first album in 1964 is just called Kinks.
As with The Hollies, The Beatles and others, The Kinks suffered from a multitude of album variables in different markets (different song selections, album titles, mono and stereo versions) and Pye, their original record company, made a plethora of compilations along the way.
The debut I have is a re-release with the UK track listing - as nature intended. It's often a high energy, punkish rush of adrenaline with Ray Davies sounding extremely feral at times. The production isn't great though and the R&B covers present an atypical picture of the band we came to know and love.
You Really Got Me is the clear standout and breakthrough moment for the band, but the rest of the album isn't very consistent.
As AllMusic says: The rave-up treatments of the R&B standards "Got Love If You Want It" and "Cadillac" were good, and the simple "Stop Your Sobbing" would eventually be covered by the Pretenders, but overall this is really patchy. I don't have any other early albums by the band (made up of Ray, his younger brother Dave on lead guitar, Pete Quaife on bass and Mick Avory on drums) but the snazzy compilation 20 Golden Greats fills in most of the gaps.
It starts with You Really Got Me and ends with Apeman from 1971. The journey through the other 18 A-side singles from 1964 to 1971 shows their prowess as a terrific hit machine. A few of Dave's solo singles add some spice.
Face to Face from 1966 is my next studio album. It was their fourth effort, and notable for a shift away from R&B to introduce a more music hall sound with Ray Davies kicking off his interest in observational/ satiric songs that are centred on English culture and the English social class structure (including 'toffs' in Ray's language).
Sunny Afternoon and Dandy were the successful singles lifted from the album. The former is a Kinks Klassic! The rest of the album was of a consistently high standard in both songs and musicianship. The band were having fun, and it shows!
Something Else by The Kinks is a work of genius in the year of Sgt Pepper. Clearly it was a peak year for British pop/rock. Something Else contains 13 superb songs - not a middling effort among them. The confidence was running high as the band (led by Ray's songwriting) performed a variety of genres with ease - from acoustic ballads, music hall numbers, R&B, to wig-out guitar numbers.
There are many highlights but David Watts, Dave's Death of a Clown, Harry Rag, Afternoon Tea, and capping it all off - Waterloo Sunset - all deserve special mentions.
The Kinks are the Village Green Preservation Society extended the forensic look at English society with a whole nostalgic album considering all of its quaint nooks and crannies.
The title track is another classic. It sets out the stall, and the rest of the album delivers with musical inventiveness that sets The Kinks apart from every other band.
Their final album of the sixties was Arthur (or the Decline and Fall of the British Empire). It was another freakily brilliant album - making three five-star albums in a row (I may have been a bit skimpy with Face to Face actually).
Arthur saw the introduction of new member John Dalton, who replaced Pete Quaife. The album has a concept in that its songs tell the story of Arthur - a Londoner, who decides to move to Australia during the aftermath of World War II.
It starts with the best song ever about Queen Victoria (Victoria), an absolute stunner, and proceeds to detail the story via some superb songs. Mr. Churchill Says, for example, is an excellent example of Ray's genius. It seems casual and easy to do but this song came from his brain and vision. I'm left with the impression that I could tell him a random phrase and within seconds he'd dash off a song that was fun and clever in equal parts.
Again, each of the musicians is in perfect sync with Ray's concepts and stories via his lyrics.
Where do they all belong? A brilliant sixties - could they sustain that quality control into the seventies?