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1.1 Take Me for What I'm Worth - the Searchers1.2 Morning's Calling - Peter ; Gordon1.3 Come and Stay with Me - Marianne Faithfull1.4 Follow Me - the Tony Jackson Group1.5 It's Your Turn to Cry - Terry Kennedy ; John Carter1.6 Rejected - the Fenmen1.7 I Love Her Still - the Poets1.8 Frosted Panes - the Kytes1.9 Golden Lights - Twinkle1.10 I Won't Be Round You Anymore - the Chosen Few1.11 Absolutely Sweet Marie - the Factotums1.12 Hey Woman - Kenny Bernard1.13 Hey Mama You've Been on My Mind - the Caravelles1.14 Don't Go Away - the Zombies1.15 Now the Sun Has Gone - the Beatmen1.16 Think About the Times - the Times1.17 Penny Arcade - Michael Leslie1.18 Beyond the Risin' Sun - Marc Bolan1.19 Till You Say You'll Be Mine - Olivia Newton-John1.20 Go Away - the Mirage Featuring Graham Nash1.21 It's All Leading Up to Saturday Night - the Knack1.22 You've Cooled - Five Steps Beyond1.23 There's Just No Pleasing You - the Epics1.24 Splendor in the Grass -Gullivers People1.25 Mr. Smith - the Foresters1.26 It's All Over Now Baby Blue - the Cops 'N Robbers2.1 Like a Rolling Stone - the Other Side2.2 Well, How Does It Feel? - Barbara Ruskin2.3 Lovers of the World Unite - David ; Jonathan2.4 Catch the Wind - Donovan2.5 Age of Corruption - Alan Klein2.6 Blessed - Guy Darrell2.7 That Man's Got No Luck - Gary Benson2.8 It's Good News Week - Hedgehoppers Anonymous2.9 Bells - Dave Helling2.10 Very Last Day - the Hollies2.11 Sometime Never Day - Bill Fay2.12 Don't You Cry Over Me - the Slade Brothers2.13 When the Ship Comes in - Folk Blues Incorporated2.14 Wake Up My Mind - the Uglys2.15 Please Don't Switch Off the Moon Mr. Spaceman - Nicholas Hammond2.16 The Protest Singer - Micha2.17 Square Peg - the Four Pennies2.18 Gotta Make Their Future Bright - First Gear2.19 The Bells of Rhymney - Murray Head2.20 Don't Talk to Me of Protest - Jonathan King2.21 Dejection (Demo Version) - Five's Company2.22 That's Not My Kind of Love - Mick Softley with the Summer Suns2.23 Don't Sing No Sad Songs for Me - the Sorrows2.24 Rattle of a Toy - Tommy Yates2.25 Talkin' Denmark Street - John Cassidie2.26 The Times They Are A-Changin' - the Ian Campbell Folk Group3.1 You've Got to Hide Your Love Away - the Silkie3.2 Wait Till the Summer Comes Along - the Kinks3.3 Don't Make Promises (You Can't Keep) - Peter Nelson3.4 Cheryl's Going Home - Adam Faith3.5 If You Gotta Go, Go Now - Manfred Mann3.6 I'm Looking Through You - Davey Graham3.7 Night Comes Down - Jon-Mark3.8 Early Morning Rain - the Settlers3.9 Sadness Hides the Sun - Greta Ann3.10 Thank You Boy - Dana Gillespie3.11 Love Minus Zero No Limit - the Compromise3.12 Day Must Come - Justin Hayward3.13 The Clown in the Alley - Meic Stevens3.14 I'm on Your Side - the Frugal Sound3.15 London Town - the Pretty Things3.16 Picking Up the Sunshine (Aka Bert's Blues) - Beverley3.17 Corrina Corrina - the Nightshift3.18 Listen People - Sarah Jane3.19 Four Strong Winds - Chad ; Jeremy3.20 So Sad (To Watch Good Love Go Bad) - the Greenbeats3.21 Don't Think Twice It's Alright - Heinz with the Wild Boys3.22 Today Is the Highway - the Ramblers3.23 Love Is Strange - the Overlanders3.24 Subterranean Homesick Blues - Chas McDevitt ; Shirley Douglas3.25 Mary Anne - the Shadows3.26 The Carnival Is Over - the Seekers |
 | Number of discs: |
3 |
 | Extra-Infos: |
.. Coincidence: The British Folk-pop Sound Of 1965-66 |
 | Description: | Prior to the early Sixties, folk and pop musicians inhabited largely different worlds. There were folk records that had become crossover pop hits, but in essence there was little or no common ground in terms of instrumentation or ideologies. But in the wake of the British beat/R&B boom (or, if you were in America, the British Invasion) and the emergence of Bob Dylan, such barriers were broken down for good. With British acts making music that, for the first time in nascent pop history, matched the quality of their American counterparts, suddenly everything was grist to the mill and musical cross-pollination was almost de rigueur. Dylan and The Beatles impacted heavily on each other, while The Byrds were pitched midway between the two - although their combination of jingle-jangle guitars and world-weary harmonies was heavily indebted to folk-pop pioneers The Searchers. By 1965, the folk-pop nexus was at it's glorious peak. That was particularly true in Britain, which saw many variations on the basic pop-meets-folk theme (in America, folk-rock had a relatively homogenised sound). Across three CDs and 79 tracks, Gathered From Coincidence examines every aspect of the British mid-Sixties folk-pop boom, incorporating Dylan-inspired singer/songwriters with a commercial pop sensibility, the more introverted beat groups, Marianne Faithfull-inspired female chanteuses and R&B hoodlums in newly-pensive mode, all bound together by the 6 or 12-string thrum or Rickenbacker clang. Ranging from massive chart hits to records that barely sold in double figures, Gathered From Coincidence includes the true believers, the musical dilettantes, the young wannabes, the cash-in merchants, the old guard looking to resuscitate a fading career and, of course, the earnest protest singers - and, just for good measure, we've also rounded up a handful of folksploitation discs from those positioning themselves for roughly three minutes as anti-protest protesters. With a significant number of tracks making their CD debut and even a couple of previously unissued cuts, Gathered From Coincidence is a fascinating, even revelatory overview of a still largely-neglected stitch in pop's unending tapestry: that curiously downbeat two-year period between the dying embers of the beat boom's irresistible exuberance and the arrival of psychedelia's swirling multi-coloured hues. |  | No. of tracks: |
78 |
 | Manufacturer No.: |
CRSEGB43 |
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Ten Dance Media GmbH Boxhagener Str. 106, 10245 Berlin, DE gpsr@tendance.de |  |
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