BBC Sessions 1964-1977 [Live] [Original recording remastered]
Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com
As live Kinks albums go, BBC Sessions is about as fine a representation of the quartet's inimitable sense of showmanship as exists. Yes, there's Live at Kelvin Hall from the '60s, Everybody's in Show-Biz from the '70s, and One for the Road from the '80s, but this double-disc of broadcast performances captures the Davies brothers at the peak of their powers--from 1964, when they burst on the scene with "You Really Got Me" to 1977, when their career was on the upswing. A veritable greatest-hits collection, BBC Sessions benefits from plenty of raw, sometimes clumsy energy. Ray once insisted, "The day we become professional is the day we are ruined," and the Kinks never did turn pro during this 13-year span. There's great fun throughout these two discs, but of particular note are the woozy '70s recordings where the group worked with a horn section whose music-hall adornments prove to be delightfully complementary. One can't help but get the sense that they were plugged into what the Stones and the Band were doing at the time, but regardless of the setting and surroundings, the Kinks were true originals. --Steven Stolder
BBC Sessions 1964-1977, Music, The Kinks, Album Rock, British Invasion, Hard Rock, Pop, Pop/Rock, Rock, Rock & Roll, Rock/Pop, Singer/Songwriter
Average customer rating:
- Korporation Kinks
- Simply Outstanding
- Long Live The BBC
- Great Live Kinks From Their Prime Period!
- Kinks at the BBC should be the last cd you buy
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BBC Sessions 1964-1977
The Kinks
Manufacturer: Sanctuary Records
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD
General
| Alternative Rock
| Styles
| Music
General
| Pop
| Styles
| Music
Singer-Songwriters
| Pop
| Styles
| Music
Pop Rock
| Pop
| Styles
| Music
Pop Rock
| Live Albums
| Pop
| Styles
| Music
General
| Rock
| Styles
| Music
General
| Live Albums
| Rock
| Styles
| Music
General
| Hard Rock & Metal
| Styles
| Music
Hard Rock
| Hard Rock & Metal
| Styles
| Music
British Invasion
| Classic Rock
| Styles
| Music
Album-Oriented Rock (AOR)
| Classic Rock
| Styles
| Music
General
| Classic Rock
| Styles
| Music
Similar Items:
- The Village Green Preservation Society
- Face to Face
- Preservation: Act 2
- Preservation: Act 1
- Everybody's in Showbiz
ASIN: B000059RWM
Release Date: 2001-03-20 |
Tracks:
- Interview
- You Really Got Me
- Interview
- Cadillac
- All Day And All Of The Night
- Tired of Waiting For You
- Ev'rybody's Gonna Be Happy
- See My Friends
- This Strange Effect
- Milk Cow Blues
- Wonder Where My Baby Is Tonight
- Till the End of the Day
- Where Have All The Good Times Gone
- Death Of A Clown
- Love Me Till The Sun Shines
- Harry Rag
- Good Luck Charm
- Waterloo Sunset
- Monica
- Days
- The Village Green Preservation Society
Tracks:
- Mindless Child of Motherhood
- Holiday
- Demolition
- Victoria
- Here Comes Yet Another Day
- Money Talks
- Mirror of Love
- Celluloid Heroes
- Skin And Bone/Dry Bones
- Get Back In The Line
- Did You See His Name
- When I Turn Off The Living Room Light
- Skin and Bone
- Money Talks
Amazon.com
As live Kinks albums go, BBC Sessions is about as fine a representation of the quartet's inimitable sense of showmanship as exists. Yes, there's Live at Kelvin Hall from the '60s, Everybody's in Show-Biz from the '70s, and One for the Road from the '80s, but this double-disc of broadcast performances captures the Davies brothers at the peak of their powers--from 1964, when they burst on the scene with "You Really Got Me" to 1977, when their career was on the upswing. A veritable greatest-hits collection, BBC Sessions benefits from plenty of raw, sometimes clumsy energy. Ray once insisted, "The day we become professional is the day we are ruined," and the Kinks never did turn pro during this 13-year span. There's great fun throughout these two discs, but of particular note are the woozy '70s recordings where the group worked with a horn section whose music-hall adornments prove to be delightfully complementary. One can't help but get the sense that they were plugged into what the Stones and the Band were doing at the time, but regardless of the setting and surroundings, the Kinks were true originals. --Steven Stolder
Customer Reviews:
Korporation Kinks.......2007-03-26
This 2CD trawls through what has survived of the 24 sessions that the Kinks recorded for the BBC between 1964 and 1977, providing an alternative view of the Kinks. Due to the time constraints and lack of overdubbing facilities, the results are probably far closer to their live sound of the times than the sound produced on their albums and singles.
On their early Pye studio recordings, session men such as Bobby Graham (drums), Jimmy Page (rhythm guitar) and Jon Lord (organ) were drafted in by Shel Talmy to flesh out the sound, but here are the band proving more than capable of cutting it live. They are augmented in the early sessions only by the occasional background vocals of Rasa, Ray Davies' girlfriend and later wife, who also sang on the records, and from 1967 to 1968 by keyboardist extraordinaire Nicky Hopkins.
Many of these have survived only thanks to the BBC Transcription Services that sent World Service programmes to broadcasters around the world in disc form for subsequent transmission, as the original British programmes for which the sessions were recorded, and the session tapes themselves, have been long lost. This means that some have the over-enthusiastic and embarrassingly attempting to be "hip" voice-overs of Brian Matthew (born 1928, and currently to be heard in the UK presenting Radio 2's Sounds Of The Sixties on a Saturday morning in a rather more muted style), as well as his fatherly chats with the band about the length of their hair.
Dave Davies is the featured vocalist on six of the songs up to 1970, all but one on disc one. One of these is his version of Spider Koerner's Good Luck Child, an otherwise unreleased adaptation.
Of particular interest on disc one are their version of Cadillac, the only recording on this set from their very first session for the BBC, and barely a month newer than the studio version on their first album (it was also a single in Germany); Ev'rybodys Gonna Be Happy, considerably changed from the then newly-learnt single version; This Strange Effect, a Ray Davies song only previously known in the hit version by Dave Berry since the Kinks never recorded it or performed it live; and The Village Green Preservation City, also reworked from the album version, but still claiming Disney's Donald Duck as a peculiarly British phenomenon.
The second disc dashes from 1970 to 1977 in just ten tracks including a lengthy excerpt from a 1974 In Concert recording, before backtracking to 1968-1969 for a couple of recordings for BBC-TV and ending with John Peel session versions of songs featured earlier in the In Concert segment of the disc. Though perhaps less essential than the first disc, it nevertheless ably demonstrates the bands' ability to reflect the times whilst remaining uniquely individual, largely due to Ray Davies' ambitious and deft songwriting abilities.
The booklet is annotated with admirably full radio session details and comprehensive notes, but some numbering errors cause confusion for the second disc, so for clarification track 1 is from Dave Lee Travis Show, broadcast 31 May 1970; 2 and 13 are from John Peel, 16 May 1972; 3 and 14 are from John Peel, 11 July 1974; 4 to 9 from In Concert, 27 July 1974; 10 for Old Grey Whistle Test/Sight And Sound In Concert, 24 December 1977; 11 for BBC-1's At The Eleventh Hour, 1968; and 12 for BBC-2's Where Was Spring, 1969.
Simply Outstanding.......2005-06-05
This CD is a true gem. There are many clever versions of their big hits-Tired of Waiting, All Day and All of Night, Victoria, Where Have All The Good Times Gone, You Really Got Me, and my personal favorite Celluloid Heroes.
Besides the big hits there are numerous super album tracks. Demolition is a spunky tune with super background vocals and pulsating keyboard embelleshments. Like the subject matter of the Real Estate scene which still sounds fresh today. Both versions of Skin and Bones and Money Talks stand strong. The Kinks really sound super doing jazz inflected tunes such as When I Turn Off The Living Room Light, Holiday, and the charming Mirror Of Love. The Dave Davies tunes are quite good as well.
This is a great CD compilation which is so rich in style that will entertain you until the end of the day.
Long Live The BBC.......2004-08-24
As with other giants like Bruce Springsteen, Bob Dylan or Elvis Costello, each Kinks release lends its own contribution to the band's reputation and sound. Albums like "Face to Face" or "Arthur" established the Kinks' ability to weave songs into a larger narrative fabric without sacrificing the quality of the music, while "Sleepwalker" or the pitifully neglected "Word of Mouth" and "Phobia" proved that these guys can hammer out as riveting a collection of singles as any band from their era -- no matter how old they get. One of many revelations unique to the BBC Sessions is the breadth of the Kinks' material. A handful of songs here never appeared on studio albums despite being every bit as good as anything from the band's most famous works -- songs like "Harry Rag" and "Strange Effect." One of the Kinks' claims to fame -- though jaded critics wilfully turn their eyes from it -- is that they put more quality music to tape over a longer period of time than The Stones, Who, Beatles or whichever other 60s rock band you want to name. With its treasure-chest of unreleased material, The BBC sessions further confirm this achievement. Similarly, Dave's own songs and guitar work demonstrate that there was a lot more to him than "Death of A Clown" back then, as his sublime "Strangers" proved on 1970's "Lola . . ." album. Dave's interpretation of "Milk Cow Blues" as well as his rollicking "Wonder Where My Baby is Tonight" and "Love Me 'Til The Sun Shines" suggest that, at the top of their game, the Davies' brothers were every bit as fierce a songwriting tandem as Lennon/McCartney or Jagger/Richards. Contrary to the Amazon staff reviewer's assertion, this is hardly a "greatest hits" collection. There is a lot here to savor for Kinks fans new and old, and plenty of surprises waiting for members of both camps. Most delightful of all are the few fleeting moments of commentary from the Davies' back in the early days: confessions that their music is neither R&B nor Rock but rather "expression music" or that they wear their hair long because "the girls go for it." Well, the girls may or may not be going for it anymore, but one thing is for sure: plenty of people will go for these BBC Sessions with the Kinks if they're willing to give them a chance.
Great Live Kinks From Their Prime Period!.......2003-01-27
The BBC Sessions by the Kinks is an excellent live document of the band from this time period and contains many of their best tracks. Fans of the band will especially be excited with the inclusion of three rare cuts "This Strange Effect", "When I Turn Off The Living Room Lights" and "Good Luck Charm". These cuts are as good as the Kink's other material from this period especially "This Strange Effect". The material ranges from raucous versions of well-known tracks like "You Really Got Me", "All Day And All Night", Dave's "Love Me 'Til The Sun Shines" and a cover of "Milk Cow Blues" to Ray's more introspective material like "See My Friend", "Waterloo Sunset", and "Days". I am also glad favorites like "Tired Of Waiting For You", "Where Have All The Good Times Gone?", "The Village Green Preservation Society", "Victoria" and Dave's "Death Of A Clown" were included. The second disk contains later era favorites like "Here Comes Yet Another Day" and "Celluloid Heroes" with the later tracks augmented by a horn section. The booklet is excellent and contains detailed information about the history of the Kink's BBC sessions.
There are a couple of drawbacks to the set. Occasionally the host of the show talks over the beginning and ending of songs which can become annoying after a while. In addition the songs "Skin And Bone" and "Money Talks" appear twice on the second disk (each version is from a different session). The disks themselves are only about 50 minutes each so more material could have been added. The detailed booklet mentions that songs like the previously unissued Chuck Berry cover "Little Queenie" along with great tracks like "David Watts", "Autumn Almanac", "Suzannah's Still Alive", "King Kong", "Dedicated Follower Of Fashion", "A Well Respected Man", "Sunny Afternoon" and even "Lola" were performed at some of these sessions but none of these is included here. Perhaps the tapes were too bad to use or lost.
Despite these omissions this is still a worthwile set and would prove to be a valuable purchase. The rarities and differences from the studio versions will please the avid fans while set provides a sort of anthology of great songs for the new Kink's fan. Now that this is finally out when will they get around to issuing the Rolling Stones BBC sessions!
Kinks at the BBC should be the last cd you buy.......2002-04-05
"When I Turn Off The Living Room Light" is brilliant. The rest of this CD features vastly inferior versions of tunes from the Kinks 60s and 70s catalog. I would avoid this one and buy a nice Kinks reissue with bonus tracks from the 6-Ts period.
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