
Here is my personal mixtape for the estimable Retro Joe. He is a very cool mixtaper with a special flavour that I wanted to try and capture a little of in this mix. I have been enthralled by his mixes on MTC and ZeRO, particularly the compilations with not so obvious chart collections from the past. I will also be indebted to him for being the only person to email in and request a song while my band were doing a live webcast last year.
Anyhow, what I did was this. I searched for classic, great, not so great and downright odd singles that charted somewhere in the UK Top 40 between 1960 and 1970. To the best of my knowledge (and I did do much more research than I normally do for a mix) none of these 45s charted in the Billboard Top 100. Anyway, RJ, I really have tried to come up with something a little out of my comfort zone, and hopefully a little in your image. Hope you like it!
01 - Migil Five – Mockin' Bird Hill – Mar 1964 – 10
I truly can't remember anything about this band worth relating other than that we had the 45 at home and I kind of liked it.
02 – Georgie Fame – Seventh Son – Dec 1969 – 25
By 1969, Georgie Fame had all but abandoned the rootsy R&B he once favoured with The Blue Flames, as far as single releases went anyway, but this was a delightful look back to that kind of feel.
03 – The Pretty Things - Don't Bring Me Down – Oct 1964 – 10
In the swinging Sixties, my big sister used to work at the Etam boutique on Oxford Street. One of her co-workers was married to Viv Prince, drummer with PT. He was something of a dick apparently, which has nothing to do with this rather splendid sub Stones track!
04 – The Shadows – The Savage – Nov 1961 – 10
So much of The Shadows output was also recorded and released by US instrumental band The Ventures. There is something about Hank B Marvin's reverby guitar that makes the Shads special for me though.
05 - Lulu – Leave A Little love – Jun 1965 – 8
I actually believe Lulu had a good voice and was capable of making good records. Not sure this is one of them though!
06 – Pinkertons Assorted Colours – Mirror Mirror – Jan 1966 – 9
I was only 9 when this was out, but I was an avid Top Of The Pops viewer even then, and I can't remember this at all. I found it by accident loitering on Napster one afternoon!
07 – Family – No Mule's Fool – Oct 1969 – 29
I still love Family to this day, Roger Chapman is a favorite vocalist of mine, but I confess I only found out this had ever been a UK Top 40 single as I researched this mix!
08 – Emile Ford & The Checkmates – Slow Boat To China – Feb 1960 – 3
We had quite a few singles by this lot at home, all on the Pye International imprint. My Mum and dad liked this one a lot, always played it, so it is redolent of happy days at home for me.
09 – The Small Faces – Whatcha Gonna Do About It – May 1965 – 14
My sister Janice used to go out with a mod who rode a Lambretta and the two of them were into all the mod bands, including this lot, The Who and The Kinks. This is the first record here that I feel is an utter classic. Stevie marriott's vocals and feedback guitar are over the top in the best way. A shame that this did not chart in the US, a crime it only got to 14 in the UK
10 – Billie Davis – I Want You To Be My Baby – Oct 1968 – 33
I have written a few things for a UK magazine called "Beat" that covers the musicians of the 60s and 70s that are still out there gigging, and Ms. Davis has often been mentioned in that regard. This is one of those records that reminds you of ten other records that are better, but it is ok.
11 – Simon Dupree & The Big Sound – Kites – Oct 1967 – 9
Confession time. I do not have the original single version of this, the version I have is of a BBC Saturday Club recording made at the time it was in the charts. I include it because it is a classic pop song of the time, over orchestrated, over ambitious, but really rather lovely!
12 – The Nashville Teens – Tobacco Road – Jul 1964 – 6
Another classic. Bloody loud guitar for a 1964 recording too!
13 – Jeff Beck – The Tallyman – Aug 1967 – 30
This is just weird. An odd subject, an odd song. I think this was the follow-up to "Hi Ho Silver Lining", but with none of that songs bubblegum appeal. Weird that nothing from the Rod and Ron Jeff beck Group period ever charted, especially as Mickie Most, a hit producer of the period, produced that stuff!
14 – The Equals – Michael & The Slipper Tree – Apr 1969 – 24
And weirder still, but anything Eddy Grant ever did was of some interest!
15 – Manfred Mann – Ragamuffin Man – May 1969 - 8
Some of Manfred Mann's later stuff was so introspective, and I think of more interest than the earlier successful poppy stuff.
16 – Jet Harris & Tony Meehan – Diamonds – Jan 1963 – 1
These guys were ex members of The Shadows who had this one huge UK hit and then just a few nearish misses. there is a hardness to this that The Shads did not have. Also, this must be one of the few UK chart records from the era to feature a drum solo!
17 – Wayne Fontana – Pamela, Pamela - Dec 1966 – 11
very awful, but I still like it for some reason!
18 - Cream – I Feel Free – Dec 1966 – 11
This was on the USA version of the first album which did chart in the USA at 39, but the single was never released there!
19 – Boris Gardiner – Elizabethan Reggae – Jan 1970 - 14
Just magnificent. It does exactly what it says on the can!
20 – Traffic – No Face, No Name, No Number – Mar 1968 – 40
A fine example of a great band doing something not so great. An awful vocal from one of the finest ever vocalists. Chris Wood's pretty flute at the end saves it a bit though
21 - The Hollies – We're Through – Sep 1964 – 7
One of three bands coming up who charted a fair bit in the USA, albeit in The Hollies case, lower down the chart. This didn't though, despite being as good as a lot of things that did!
22 – The Rolling Stones – I Wanna Be Your Man – Nov 1963 – 12
Written by the Fabs, played by the Glimmers, yet released before they broke in the USA. A very muddy recording, but I love Keef's intro!
23 – The Who – Substitute – Mar 1965 – 5
A true classic, very funny lyrics, just everything about this is right!
24 – The Swinging Blue Jeans – Don't Make Me Over - Jan 1965 – 31
I suppose their time at the top had really run it's course by the ti,me this came out, yet I love the impassioned vocal.
25 - Jethro Tull – Love Story – Jan 1969 - 29
One of my obsessions. I love the overall sound of this, which I guess is the point.
Ok, Retro Joe, hope you like this. It has given me a very pleadsant three hour diversion from not so cool stuff. Enjoy!