Showing posts with label Small Faces. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Small Faces. Show all posts

Friday, September 9, 2016

The Small Faces - Selftitled (1967)

(U.K 1965-1969, 1975-1978)
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Within weeks of Small Faces' stage debut in 1965, this ultimate Mod group entered the UK Top 20 with 'Whatcha Gonna Do About It' - featuring Marriott's strangled and passionate vocals. The follow-up, Marriott and Lane's 'I Got Mine', missed the mark but, replacing Winston with lan McLagan, the outfit got back on course in 1966 with 'Sha-La-La-La-Lee', 'Hey Girl' and, their only UK Number 1, 'All Or Nothing'.

"My Mind's Eye' and 'I Can't Make It' marked time before a switch to Immediate in 1967 facilitated an intensely creative phase. 'Here Come The Nice', 'Itchycoo Park', Tin Soldier' and 'Lazy Sunday Afternoon' were all late Sixties hits and characterized Small Faces' particularly English style, merging R&B with cockney chirpiness and psychedelia. 'Itchycoo Park' was also the band's only significant US hit.

After the 'Ogden's Nut Gone Flake' album (1968) was followed by two moderate-selling singles 'The Universal' and 'Afterglow', Marriott left to form Humble Pie in 1969. Jones, Lane and McLagen continued as the Faces, recruiting Ron Wood and Rod Stewart from the Jeff Beck Group. Although successful, both Humble Pie and the Faces disbanded in the mid-Seventies.

Two subsequent Small Faces re-formation albums failed to chart. Lane's career was cut short by multiple sclerosis and Marriott's death in 1991 put paid to any further reunions.
[Taken from The Encyclopedia Of Rock by Michael Heatley, RD Press 1996.  p42]
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The Demise Of The Small Faces
A January 1968 Tour of Australia with The Who sowed the seeds of the Small Faces demise.
Road-rusty after a year in and out of the studio, the Small Faces’ poor performances created tension and resentment in the group, specifically between fiery singer-guitarist Steve Marriott and the more spiritually-inclined bassist-singer Ronnie Lane. In Australia Marriott cornered record exec Tony Calder.

“He said, ‘I’m not gonna give any more of my f***ing songwriting to Ronnie Lane,” Calder tells MOJO’s Mark Paytress. “I’d never realised there was a problem until then, or that Steve had been writing most of the [hit] songs.”

The tragedy was that in the studio the group were at the top of their game, with their first album on Andrew Loog Oldham’s Immediate Records – their third in total – yielding the astonishing (Tell Me) Have You Ever Seen Me and Show Me The Way, and the ardently loved Ogden’s Nut Gone Flake in the pipeline. Yet the Australia trip had broken something in the band, and it preyed on Marriott’s mind when a potentially make-or-break US tour was mooted.

“He wouldn’t go because he couldn’t face failure,” says Marriott’s mum Kay. “If they went there and weren’t accepted, it would have been dreadful for him. He was a coward in that way, bless him.”

Calder says it was also during the Australian tour that Marriott first came up with the idea of introducing Peter Frampton, the rising ‘Face Of ’68’ and guitarist/singer with The Herd, into a five-piece Small Faces. “Stevie said, ‘Go back to London and call him. I want him out of his contract.’ But it took time, maybe a year or more.”

“I love Pete,” says Small Faces organ maestro Ian McLagan, “but it wasn’t the right move for us. Maybe we should’ve got a trumpeter, not another guitarist!”

“Lazy Sunday messed things up for us. Just like Sha-La-La-La-Lee had done.”

While Ogden’s Nut Gone Flake was to reveal the copious creative life that remained in the group, MOJO’s cover story reveals surprising disharmony over its mix of psychedelic whimsy, searing soul-rock and daft cockney gurning. When managers Calder and Andrew Loog Oldham (still in recovery after his 1967 nervous breakdown) released the ebullient but polarizing Lazy Sunday as Ogden’s…’ first single in April 1968, another nail was knocked into the group’s coffin.



“We were all pissed off with that, because it messed things up for us,” McLagan tells MOJO. “Just like Sha-La-La-La-Lee had done.”

On New Year’s Eve 1968, Steve Marriott walked off stage mid-gig and broke up the Small Faces early the following year. Marriott and Frampton formed heavy rockers Humble Pie, while the rump of the band found another path to success, recruiting Ron Wood and Rod Stewart to constitute The Faces. But a quality that belonged to the Small Faces exclusively was lost.

“I wish we could have stayed together,” Faces/Small Faces drummer Kenney Jones sadly concludes, “but Steve was gung ho.” [Article from MOJO Magazine, #244 March 2014]
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This post consists of MP3's (320kps) ripped from my prized $tateside vinyl and includes full album artwork along with label scans.  Although this album is a mono pressing it still has that nice 60's feel about it and all of the tracks (although not major hits) are enjoyable to listen to. So grab this album 'Immediately' (pun intended) while you can.
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Track Listing
01 - (Tell Me) Have You Ever Seen Me    2:15
02 - Something I Want To Tell You    2:06
03 - Feeling Lonely            1:30
04 - Happy Boys Happy            1:35
05 - Things Are Going To Get Better    2:36
06 - My Way Of Giving            1:38
07 - Green Circles            2:34
08 - Become Like You            1:55
09 - Get Yourself Together        2:17
10 - All Of Our Yesterdays        1:47
11 - Talk To You            2:05
12 - Show Me The Way            2:00
13 - Up The Wooden Hills To Bedfordshire    2:05
14 - Eddie's Dreaming            2:50

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The Small Faces were:
Steve Marriott (vocals, guitar)
Ronnie Lane (Bass, vocals)
Jimmy Winston (keyboards)
Kenney Jones (drums)

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The Small Faces Link (71Mb)  New Link 16/01/2025
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Tuesday, January 26, 2016

The Small Faces - Rarities (1984) plus Tin Soldier (E.P)

(U.K 1965 - 1969, 1977 - 1978)
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If  'The Who' were the mid-'60s heroes of West London's Mods, then The Small Faces sprang from their East London equivalent. In 1965 they broke into British charts with single "Whatcha Gonna Do About It?" and the whole country picked up on this physically small and sharply-dressed group, led by a former child actor Steve Marriott who was later to admit that he could barely play guitar in early days.
Original group contained Jimmy Winston on keyboards, but he was replaced by MacLagan immediately after first success and above was best-known line-up of band which continued to dominate U.K. singles charts over next three years. "Sha La La La Lee" was a second smash, followed by "Hey Girl", "All Or Nothing" (their first No. 1), and "My Mind's Eye" in 1966; "Here Comes The Nice", "Itchycoo Park", "Tin Soldier" (1967); and "Lazy Sunday" and "The Universal" in 1968.
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As time went by, group and Marriott in particular grew frustrated by label of Top 10 singles band. They tried hard with albums, but the results were never satisfying - not until the Ogden's Nut Gone Flake collection which charted at No. 1 in 1968. With its revolutionary circular cover, this has since been accorded quasi-classic status.
In 1969, Marriott left to form Humble Pie. Lane, Jones and MacLagan survived this near-fatal blow, eventually re-grouping as Faces with Ron Wood and Rod Stewart and going on to surpass Marriott's Pie in success and acclaim. Eventually both bands went sour.
Eight years later in March 1977, with Rick Wills in place of Ronnie Lane, Small Faces reconvened to make a fresh start. [extract from The Illustrated New Musical Express Encyclopedia Of Rock, Salander Press, 1977. p212-213]
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.Rarities - Linear Notes
Here come the nice... - fourteen rare tracks recorded by the great Small Faces between 1967 and 1969.
Sources: The songs featured on side one were all previously released on the 'From The Beginning' LP (Decca LK4879; identical German edition: 'Musik fur alle', Teldec ND153), both of them being non-original albums then, and deleted for many years now. Later on some of the gems appeared strewn around on other compilations here and there.
The eight takes on side two are sort of a mystery. Track one to seven were released for the first time in 1975 on a US low-budget album, falsely credited to "Rod Stewart & The Faces" (Springboard SP-4030, deleted as well), though there was neither Roddie nor The Faces on those tracks. Furthermore nearly all of them had been given wrong
The Small Faces Discography
titles, like "Anything" or "Sparkey Rides", to name but two. It was obviously the Small Faces playing somewhat obscure versions of their well-known compositions that did not appear anywhere else on record up to now. If's mostly longer alternative cuts, varied mixes and even a rough instrumental take of 'Tin Soldier". Track No. 8 was found on an Italian cheapo album credited to Rod Stewart again ("Ridin' High", Joker SM 3985), though if's the Small Faces with a different, prolonged version of "Wide-Eyed Girl On The Wall".
Nobody seems to know where the songs hail from but it's a fact that they are available again. And that's what counts [Linear Notes written by Bemd Matheja]
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This post consists of two parts: the first is a German only 14-track compilation LP of obscure and hard to find Small Faces rarities recorded between 1967 & 1969 with picture sleeve, featuring an instrumental take of their hit "Tin Soldier". The files are in MP3 (320kps) format, ripped from my "mint vinyl copy" which was still sealed in it's shrink wrap when I found it at a flea market some weeks ago, and full album artwork is included. 
The second part consists of FLACs ripped from my 'well worn copy' of their 1967 E.P entitled 'Tin Soldier' and again features full album artwork and label scans.
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RARITIES LP  
Track Listing
01. Come Back & Take this Hurt Off Me
02. Yesterday Today & Tomorrow
03. That Man
04. Baby Don't You Do It
05. Plum Nellie
06. You've Really Got A Hold On Me
07. Wham Bam Thank You Mam
08. Collibosher
09. Donkey Rides A Penny A Glass
10. The Hungry Intruder
11. Red Balloon
12. Tin Soldier (Instrumental)

13. The Autumn Stone
14. Wide-Eyed Girl On The Wall


The Small Faces:
Steve Marriott - vocals, guitar
Ronnie Lane - bass
lan MacLagan - organ
Kenny Jones - drums

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Rarities LP Link (93Mb) New Link 16/01/2025
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TIN SOLDIER E.P
Track Listing
01. Tin Soldier
02. Talk To You
03. Here Come The Nice 
04. Itchycoo Park
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Tin Soldier EP Link (65Mb) New Link 04/01/2024