Wednesday, March 25, 2026

Look through my window (The Mamas & The Papas) (LP 4417)

The Mamas & The Papas  Farewell to the First Golden Era (Vinyl, RCA Records, 1967) *****  

GenrePop 

Places I remember: Real Groovy Records

Fab, and all the other pimply hyperboles: Twelve Thirty (Young Girls Are Coming to the Canyon)

Gear costume: I Saw Her Again 

They loom large in his legend (The Album Collection playlists): Part 1Part 2Part 3Part 4Part 5Part 6Part 7

Active compensatory factors: Even though I have three compilations of this seminal sixties vocal group, I have only included this one because it was the first, released in 1967. Plus, the liner notes are written by Derek Taylor - reason enough to feature it on its own.

As a collection, it was intended to sum up the first golden era, but it worked out to be their only golden era. All the big hits are here: Dedicated to the One I Love; Go Where You Wanna Go; Words of Love; Monday Monday; Creeque Alley; Twelve Thirty (Young Girls Are Coming to the Canyon); I Saw Her Again; and California Dreaming

Where do they all belong? Many other collections would come after it, but this is the best one to my mind. One album - all killer, no filler.

Absolutely cuckoo (The Magnetic Fields) (LP 4416)

The Magnetic Fields  69 Love Songs (CD, Merge Records, 1999) ***   

GenreIndie pop, synth-pop 

Places I remember: Fopp

Fab, and all the other pimply hyperboles: World Love

Gear costume: All My Little Words

They loom large in his legend (The Album Collection playlists): Part 1Part 2Part 3Part 4Part 5Part 6Part 7

Active compensatory factors: My
initial experience of The Magnetic Fields, which is dominated by one guy - Stephin Merritt, is 69 Love Songs. Since then, Tom has used another album on MNAC as his album of the fortnight.

A colleague while I was at Cambridge High School, played 69 Love Songs a lot and a couple of the songs burrowed into my brain. So, I bought a copy while I was in England, in some ways to be hip and current. It's not a triple CD that I love or play often, although I do love and applaud the fool's errand idea. 

It's hard to digest 69 songs in a row. A consistently high-quality triple studio album cannot be done, I don't think. Even The Fabs didn't try to do that. A decent single vinyl album is in 69 Love Songs somewhere, but he'd need a new title which wouldn't be as school-boy naughty would it.

It's certainly not boring, as it features songs in many different genres, including country, synth-pop, free jazz even, and, yes, off kilter love ballads. Highlights other than my two choices above are I Don't Believe in the Sun, Asleep and Dreaming, Busby Berkeley Dreams, and Acoustic Guitar.

Where do they all belong? I'm glad I have a copy. It's one I'm return to in the future - maybe it will make more sense then.

Tuesday, March 24, 2026

In my head (The Lemon Twigs) (LP 4415)

The Lemon Twigs  Everything Harmony (Vinyl, Captured Tracks Records, 2023) ****  

GenreAlt rock, pop 

Places I remember: JB Hi Fi

Fab, and all the other pimply hyperboles: Ghost Run Free

Gear costume: Corner of My Eye

They loom large in his legend (The Album Collection playlists): Part 1Part 2Part 3Part 4Part 5Part 6Part 7

Active compensatory factors: The Lemon Twigs are two talented brothers - 
Brian and Michael D'Addario. Both brothers are vocalists, songwriters and play multiple instruments.

Everything Harmony is their fourth album and it is full of glorious harmony vocals and sympathetic arrangements to highlight the vocals. That means an acoustic bed and orchestral touches to lie on. There's still the power-pop inclinations that I love so much - hence my highlighted track - Ghost Run Free.

Where do they all belong? I'd buy more but I can't find any of their other albums in NZ record shops yet.

Son of a gun (The La's) (LP 4414)

The La's  The La's (CD, Polydor/ Go! Discs Records, 1990) *****  

GenreAlt-rock, pop 

Places I remember: Real Groovy Records

Fab, and all the other pimply hyperboles: There She Goes

Gear costume: I. O. U.

They loom large in his legend (The Album Collection playlists): Part 1Part 2Part 3Part 4Part 5Part 6Part 7

Active compensatory factors: The La's have become a legendary band because of main man Lee Maver's insistence on perfection. This is the band's only album. It's a brilliant one too.

It's very sixties sounding and the closest touch point is Ray Davies and The Kinks, but The La's sound like no one else.

As AllMusic pointed out, the album shows how The La's 'exist outside of time, suggesting the '60s in their simple, tuneful, acoustic-driven arrangements but seeming modern in their open, spacy approach'.

Where do they all belong? A true one-off.

Thursday, March 19, 2026

See the world (The Kooks) (LP 4411 - 4413)

The Kooks  Inside In/Inside Out (CD, Virgin Records, 2006) ****  
The Kooks  Konk (CD, Virgin Records, 2008) ***** 
The Kooks  Junk of the Heart (CD, Virgin Records, 2011) *** 

GenreIndie rock 

Places I remember: Virgin Megastore (Dubai)

Fab, and all the other pimply hyperboles: Shine On (Konk)

Gear costume: See the Sun (Konk), Junk of the Heart (Happy)

They loom large in his legend 
(The Album Collection playlists): Part 1Part 2Part 3Part 4Part 5Part 6Part 7

Active compensatory factors: The Kooks is an alt rock group from Brighton. The band is 
Luke Pritchard (lead vocals, rhythm guitar), Hugh Harris (lead guitar), Max Rafferty (bass), plus Paul Garred (drums). Max was fired after the second album was recorded, he was replaced by Peter Denton for the third album.

Inside In/Inside Out was their debut album, released in the mid 2000s. The appeal for me comes from Luke's vocals, and the catchy pop songs the band write together in various combinations. All up, The Kooks create a charming sound together on the debut.

Second album, Konk, was recorded at Konk Studios - owned by Ray Davies and the location for the vast majority of The Kinks albums.

The debut was a confident set, but Konk surpasses it in terms of swagger and execution. Luke Pritchard is at his inspired best on this album, but so too is guitarist Hugh Harris. Konk is a superb pop rock album and the band's five star classic.

They tried to shake things up a bit with their third album, Junk of the Heart. It's okay to do that, of course, but I prefer the pop smarts of Konk and so my interest faded with Junk, and I haven't bought any successive albums.

Where do they all belong? That's enough Kookiness I think. The first two albums created their appeal for me.

20th century man (The Kinks) (LP 4407 - 4410)

The Kinks  One for the Road (Vinyl/CD, Arista Records, 1980) *****  

The Kinks  Give the People What They Want (Vinyl, Arista Records, 1981) ****  

The Kinks  State of Confusion (Vinyl, Arista Records, 1983) ***

The Kinks  Come Dancing with The Kinks: The Best of 1977 - 1986 (CD, Arista Records, 1986) *****

GenrePop, rock 

Places I remember: Real Groovy Records

Fab, and all the other pimply hyperboles: (Wish I Could Fly Like) Superman (One for the Road)

Gear costume: Victoria, David Watts (One for the Road)

They loom large in his legend 
(The Album Collection playlists): Part 1Part 2Part 3Part 4Part 5Part 6Part 7

Active compensatory factors: I truly, deeply, madly fell for The Kinks because of One for the Road - a live double album that sounds like one awesome continuous concert (in fact it's made up of the best versions from an American tour from 1979 to 1980).

Ray's stage announcements are judiciously chosen, pithy and entertaining. The music is muscular arena rock thanks to Dave Davies brilliant guitar attack and Mick Avory's drums. The influence of the latter is often forgotten - he is a versatile drummer who serves the song - the perfect foil for Ray's idiosyncrasies. The backing vocals from Jim Rodford, Dave and Ian Gibbons (keyboards) are another superb feature.

This is an amazing album - pretty much providing definitive versions of these songs from throughout the catalogue, from You Really Got Me to Low Budget.

The first studio album of the eighties, Give the People What They Want (1981) carried on the punkish hard-driving energy from the late seventies. I am happy to report that Ray's proclivities for solid hooks and a dry sense of humour were alive and well as the eighties started. 

State of Confusion
is The Kinks 20th studio album. Come Dancing was the big hit single from this album. It has a lovely warm glow of nostalgia about it. That success helped the album become commercially successful. It was also Mick Avory's last album as a Kink.

The cover image of the band sprinting away in different directions was a telling one. There is also way too  much synth on this album - that's 1983 for you. I haven't bothered with the albums released after State of Confusion.

Where do they all belong? That's it apart from the compilation album, Come Dancing with The Kinks: The Best of 1977 - 1986. It's a useful compilation of some fine songs between those years and a great place to start if you are unfamiliar with the albums.

The moneygoround (The Kinks) (LP 4396 - 4406)

The Kinks  Kinks - Part One, Lola Versus Powerman and the Moneygoround (Vinyl, Pye Records, 1970) *****  
The Kinks  Percy (Vinyl, Sanctuary Records, 1971) ***
The Kinks  Muswell Hillbillies (CD, RCA Records, 1971) *****
The Kinks  Everybody's in Showbiz (CD, RCA Records, 1972) ****
The Kinks  Preservation Act 1 (Vinyl, RCA Records, 1973) ***
The Kinks  Preservation Act 2 (Vinyl, BMG Records, 1974) **
The Kinks  The Kinks Present a Soap Opera (Vinyl, RCA Records, 1975) ***
The Kinks  The Kinks Present Schoolboys in Disgrace (Vinyl, RCA Records, 1975) ***
The Kinks  Sleepwalker (CD, Arista Records, 1977) ***
The Kinks  Misfits (Vinyl, Arista Records, 1978) ****
The Kinks  Low Budget (Vinyl, Arista Records, 1979) *****

GenrePop, rock 

Places I remember: Marbecks Records, JB Hi Fi, Real Groovy Records.

Fab, and all the other pimply hyperboles: Low Budget

Gear costume: Celluloid Heroes (Everybody's in Showbiz)

They loom large in his legend 
(The Album Collection playlists): Part 1Part 2Part 3Part 4Part 5Part 6Part 7

Active compensatory factors: It was a strong, positive start to the seventies for The Kinks. 

In actual fact, the first two albums I ever bought by The Kinks were Lola Versus Powerman, and 2o Golden Greats while I worked at Marbecks. For quite a while I was content with those two albums. The years went by, until one day Roger Marbeck gave me a tape of The Kinks' One for the Road - a double live album. That was it! I had to hear more!

We'll get to One for the Road in the eighties post but in the meantime, there are quite a few studio albums to listen to before then.

Starting with Lola Versus Powerman and the Moneygoround from 1970. It's another Ray Davies' concept that drives the album. This time his target is the music industry itself generally and specifically song publishers, unions, the press, accountants, business managers, and life on the road. 

The lyrics balance anger with keen wit and the music is richer thanks to the expansion of the band to a five piece with John Gosling's arrival on keyboards. The big songs like Lola and Apeman are not the only highlights. I especially love This Time Tomorrow, A Long Way From Home and Powerman.  

Percy is a 1971 film soundtrack that Ray wrote for the British comedy film Percy (the name the lead character gives his penis). The soundtrack is a treat - some terrific rock songs (the blues!) and instrumentals (Lola is a delight). It remains an oddity in the Kinks Katalogue though.

Still in 1971, and Muswell Hillbillies continued the momentum and Ray's sense of being from another era entirely. The brilliant opening track (a real feature of all their albums) 20th Century Man tells us I'm a 20th century man, but I don't want to be here. Spot in self-analysis.

The album is a loose concept centering around the working class - hence the brilliant cover photo of the band in the corner pub. AllMusic sums up the album well: 
Throughout it all, Davies' songwriting is at a peak, as are the Kinks themselves. There are a lot of subtle shifts in mood and genre on the album, and the band pulls it off effortlessly and joyously.

Everybody's in Showbiz is a double album with two sides being a new studio album and then two sides live from a couple of nights at Carnegie Hall. The live album is a lot of fun but it's a weird combination with the studio set in some ways, and Ray's American drawl gets pretty old, pretty fast.

The theme this time is the rock star lifestyle and celebrity culture (he was ahead of his time). A melancholy mood is present in the studio songs - especially on Celluloid Heroes - another classic song by Ray.

Preservation Act 1 and Act 2 came from 1973 to 1974. Overall, it's a mess in terms of a concept and how it was presented. Act 1, acts more like an introduction to the characters, and all the story is condensed into the second album. I never quite know what's going on. But then again, I am not much of a musical theatre fan, even if it is The Kinks.

Although barking mad, at least Act 1 has some interesting songs that stand alone like Sweet Lady Genevieve, whereas Act 2 is beyond my understanding and taste - it's all over the shop.

The Kinks were expanded for these two act productions. Ray, Dave, Mick, John Gosling and John Dalton were joined by the brass section of Alan Holmes, Laurie Brown and John Beecham. All that plus a chorus. The 'over-egged' phrase comes to mind.  

The next musical theatre centred album, The Kinks Present a Soap Opera, wasn't as po-faced as the Preservation albums. It even kicks off with a good song (Everybody's a Star) featuring one of Dave's guitar riffs. 

Compared to Preservation, the whole concept of Soap Opera is much more manageable and understandable - how ordinary people can dream of becoming stars. Very relevant to the 21st century, if not 1975. The whole thing is camp and flamboyant and OTT. Which has an appeal! 

The Kinks Present Schoolboys in Disgrace
was also from 1975, and while still in their theatrical period (the title gives that away), it is a creative whole thanks to the 1950's musical direction - doo wop and rock'n'roll and its theme of education. That said, the camp excess was still a holdover from Soap Opera and so it has a limited appeal outside of Kinks fans. Thankfully, it was the last in this music theatre style.

That said, there are some cracking songs on the album. Highlights: Schooldays; I'm in Disgrace; and especially The Hard Way.

Sleepwalker,
from 1977 - the year of the punks, marked a return to straight-forward rock songs. The new label - Arista made it clear that they'd rather not have the camp concepts that had been Ray's go-to during the previous four years. It also marked John Dalton's last album as a Kink.

It's okay, but full of not particularly inspired rock songs. Better was to come with the next album - Misfits. Ray sounds much more interested in delivering some solid stuff. This album marked the end of John Goslings' time as a Kink.

The band and Ray mean it maan on Misfits. It's full of chunky rock guitar (Go Dave!!) and big rawk moments. Highlights aplenty on Misfits: Live Life; Misfits; A Rock'n'Roll Fantasy.

Things got even better still with Low Budget. It has a terrible budget cover but its songs hit a new peak in the seventies.

This was the first Kinks album with Jim Rodford on bass. Every song hits its mark with some brilliant lyrics from Ray. Many of the songs would end up on the 1980 live album - One for the Road. The first album in the next post.

Where do they all belong? Ray and the band were on a roll in 1978 - 1979 -the so-called arena rock era.