Thanks for starting with the Pretty Things. I hope that one day they will be recognised as the great and influential band that they were
@airmark026 ай бұрын
Parachute
@neilfriedman6 ай бұрын
@@airmark02 my most listened to album. Been listening to Parachute Reloaded by the XPTs, really really good update
@BobVond6 ай бұрын
Completely recognised as such in my house. Only Dick remains - OK Viv Prince may actually remain but he ain't contributing.
@YesterdaysPapers6 ай бұрын
Agreed! Great, great band.
@MrKelleyzinho6 ай бұрын
SF Sorrow is the equal of Pepper, Piper, and Tommy.
@Transterra556 ай бұрын
I am floored by how many iconic British bands of the 70s debuted in this video… I was especially shocked to see Joey Molland of Gary Walker and the rain end up in the group Badfinger about a year later….. this video may be the most important introduction to future 70s band ever uploaded !
@miguelangeljuarez61966 ай бұрын
John Mayall descanse en paz el padre del blues Británico, maestro de muchos bluesmans del mundo, te hecharemos de menos, le mando un respetuoso abrazo a su familia desde Zacatecas México.
@cynthiafrank56386 ай бұрын
Yes, RIP I saw him in 1970 in Philadelphia. He did Room to Move. Great musician and artist.
@FedericoDLP6 ай бұрын
Generador de musicos para otros grupos.
@lindadote6 ай бұрын
It’s not only interesting to see the fledgling Genesis, Traffic et al, it’s amazing to learn just how many quality British bands were around at this time. Thanks to your excellent research, we can still enjoy this music and explore it further. Thanks YP, fabulous as always. RIP John Mayall.
@YesterdaysPapers6 ай бұрын
Cheers Linda!
@nvm90406 ай бұрын
I love this channel so much Just expanding my love of the sixities and psychedelia
@YesterdaysPapers6 ай бұрын
Thanks!
@hopebgood6 ай бұрын
Me too nvm mate. I love finding something new and I always find something new on Yesterday's Papers!
@nvm90405 ай бұрын
@@hopebgood indeed
@nvm90405 ай бұрын
@@YesterdaysPapers no problem
@dennisbenn20655 ай бұрын
I like when you show silent everyday footage of London at that time in the background. It reminds you this all happened, and for most people it was just another ordinary day.
@elmolewis91236 ай бұрын
You bring great memories back to many here. Terrific research and presentation.
@mysterbear6 ай бұрын
One thing I’ve learned from your excellent videos is the stultifying effect that the blue stocking BBC had on popular music, and what gave rise to the need for pirate radio.
@jeromehiggins91356 ай бұрын
Reminds me of the Catholic church in Boston in the same period
@Krzyszczynski6 ай бұрын
The original bluestockings (one word) were intelligent women. "Auntie" BBC was anything but.
@michaelpdawson6 ай бұрын
I wonder if the BBC also banned the Supremes' "Love Child," also from 1968, and on the same topic as the Troggs song.
@calvinguile13156 ай бұрын
@@michaelpdawson I wondered the same thing
@paulgoldstein25696 ай бұрын
@@michaelpdawson The BBC did not ban it.
@1962jet6 ай бұрын
Excellent episode with many to look up and listen to in full, before hunting for. Thanks!
@John_Fugazzi6 ай бұрын
I'm an American and there were so many great bands there that didn't really cross over here. This channel is a gold mine for discovering bands I never heard of.
@grandpavanderhof6 ай бұрын
Wow, Atomic Rooster, Genesis and Nick Drake on the same bill!
@YesterdaysPapers6 ай бұрын
Incredible!
@dreammachine20136 ай бұрын
Those were the days😅
@deirdre1086 ай бұрын
I’d love to hear live audio of Nick Drake. As far as I can determine, none exists.
@SuperNevile6 ай бұрын
@@dreammachine2013 Probably three shillings and six pence to get in.
@jonhillman8716 ай бұрын
@@deirdre108 I read Vashti Bunyan's book. she and nick were both managed by joe boyd (o.g. pink floyd manager) and she said nick could not sing and play at the same time. i wonder how they got around that...
@dreammachine20136 ай бұрын
Many thanks for another brilliant and mesmerizing video 👌 Great shout about Dave Mason's first single! Many fantastic records that month: I always loved Ten Years After's first single "Portable People/Sounds". Decades later I organised a concert with Alvin Lee in our club which broke the attendence record. When I came to fetch Alvin in his hotel room to drive him to the location just at this very moment the biggest radio station in Germany played "Portable People" and announced his gig in our club. A huge grin spread over Alvin's face🎉
@total.stranger6 ай бұрын
I loved "Portable People", too - and had to send away to England to get a copy, as it wasn't available anywhere in my area (Rhode Island/Massachusetts).
@dreammachine20136 ай бұрын
@@total.stranger Those were the days when you had to write letters to different countries in order to get the records you loved. And you paid by postal orders 😅 But it worked beautifully because most everyone in the business LOVED the music! That applied to most bootleggers as well. I remember I once received a broken Stones boot from the States. I just wrote a letter quoting Dylan "To live outside the law you must be honest" and received the money back as the bootleg was no longer available unfortunately.
@YesterdaysPapers6 ай бұрын
Cool story!
@lionvillelion6 ай бұрын
RIP John Mayall
@Joanna-il2ur6 ай бұрын
In the words of the Liverpool Scene ‘I’ve got those Chicken Shack, Fleetwood Mac, John Mayall, can’t fail blues’.
@BobVond6 ай бұрын
Indeed. Very sad. One of the last, or should that be the first?
@daisywrabbit6 ай бұрын
he is a legend. rest in peace 💙
@phatphat70895 ай бұрын
Geez I didn't even hear that he passed! RIP!
@Joanna-il2ur5 ай бұрын
@@phatphat7089 He was a couple of months short of his 91st birthday. He had a good run and was working until very recently. In the words of Neil Young, it’s better to burn out than to fade away.
@michaelholmes43746 ай бұрын
If I could turn back time to those better days love these videos 😊😊😊
@marikadicanio75764 ай бұрын
I get so excited with this series! Thanks for the great work 🤩
@YesterdaysPapers4 ай бұрын
@@marikadicanio7576 Cheers!
@wyliesmith42446 ай бұрын
For a statesider this batch of singles was mighty obscure. I love Up the Junction, but I had never heard the flip. Many thanks - I am also quite fond of Cubist Town by Tom McGuiness. I also never heard the Equals doing Get So Excited. I was only familiar with the version by the Grass Roots (I Get So Excited) which was about the only enjoyable tune on their Lovin' Things album. And thanks for including the Pretty Things, particularly this from my favorite period of the group. Just another well done posting.
@YesterdaysPapers6 ай бұрын
Cheers Wylie! Yeah, the Pretty Things single is the highlight of February 1968. Both sides are excellent.
@total.stranger6 ай бұрын
You may already know that Tom McGuinness was later a founding member of McGuinness Flint ("When I'm Dead and Gone", 1971).
@wyliesmith42446 ай бұрын
@@total.stranger Thanks! I did know as I was born in '48 and about to spend over 35 years working in a record store. And I did buy that album (Hughie Flint was on the Mayall & Clapton album - RIP John Mayall). Still my favorite Dylan album (along with Tim O''Brien's Red on Blonde).
@DeltaJazzUK6 ай бұрын
Manfred's brilliant 'Up the Junction' the pick of the crop this month I think. And RIP John Mayall, the Godfather of the British Blues Boom who died this week, and without whom many of these bands and records would never have existed.
@Zagneek5 ай бұрын
Cosmic vibes! 😎✌️ The Pretty Things were superb. I’d regard their track “London Town” from “ Get the Picture” released in 1965 as a very early example of psychedelic folk. As well as FS Sorrow, their Emotions and Parachute LPs are worth a listen too. They also recorded as The Electric Banana and I’ve got a reissue of that 1967 lp - it’s essentially library music and captures the Swinging 60s sound perfectly. Hearing the original Cold Turkey is a new one on me as I’m only familiar with it as a track on the superb “Give Daddy the Knife Cindy” by Naz Nomad & the Nightmares - AKA The Damned - who did a great parody back in 1984 of a 60s garage band. Thanks for the videos they are absolute gems! PS: a feature on Penny Valentine would be good.👍
@regscheuber10832 ай бұрын
Great stuff, and so many quality video clips. I began to wonder if I lived my teens thru an alternative sixties, so many I never heard of😊
@PT_English6 ай бұрын
"Rather dated and VERY noisy" and "A throbbing up-beat item" and "The room temperature goes up ten degrees" and "Fruity-voiced soloist" Cracks me up 16:54 Who's that girl? lol... 19:53 Wow - Bar Italia in the sixties and who is that band at 20:00 ???? Great great great video!!!!
@YesterdaysPapers6 ай бұрын
Thanks!
@eleni1968Ай бұрын
WOW Thank You for this!! I was wondering what was happening the month and year I was born. Cheers from NYC!!
@MasterJack646 ай бұрын
Nice of you to pay some attention to Ten Years After and Fairport Convention, two great bands!
@daisywrabbit6 ай бұрын
i love TYA. ⚡️
@YesterdaysPapers6 ай бұрын
Love them both
@wyliesmith42446 ай бұрын
This is the only time that I have seen Alvin Lee and 'fantastically underplayed guitar' in the same sentence. I saw TYA four times and, to my taste, Alvin was more excited by the speed of his playing rather than 'underplaying' to highlight the song.
@heinrichvonАй бұрын
I agree, but a slight mistake was made in the description of Fairport's history. Sandy Denny didn't join Fairport in 1969, but in May 1968, after she auditioned for the group. Her first album with the band, released in January 1969, was What We Did On Our Holidays, which was called that because it was actually recorded in the summer of '68: the "summer holidays."
@BeliaLastes6 ай бұрын
Sometimes I wish I grew up in that decade and in the UK 😢❤❤❤
@grokeffer62266 ай бұрын
Trippy!!! I especially like the Traffic and Jethro "Toe". 😂🤗
@charlesachurch72655 ай бұрын
All hail the Toe.
@tattyshoesshigure57316 ай бұрын
Another fascinating, impeccably researched episode! I’d not heard that interesting Love Sculpture record before, the B side ‘Brand New Woman’ is the Dave Edmunds I know & love… a superb guitarist & producer who I always felt didn’t receive the full recognition he deserved!
@YesterdaysPapers6 ай бұрын
Cheers! The Love Sculpture single is very good, both sides.
@TheEWFX295 ай бұрын
Another great video, one of my favorite channels on KZbin. Love these looks back on these old singles, finding so much great music I never heard before. Quality music and content for a long time here. Keep up the great work.
@classiclife72046 ай бұрын
Now I'm curious about that movie "Up the Junction". Anyway, thanks for the survey, as always. I've only heard of a few of these. I wish more British stuff had traveled to the States. "British Invasion"? Only kinda, evidently.
@kevhead15256 ай бұрын
Unrecognizable Fairport, Genesis, Tull. Very cool how the bands "progressed".
@YesterdaysPapers6 ай бұрын
Yep, it's interesting to see their evolution.
@steveleestewart0016 ай бұрын
I was 9 years old at the time but this was the year of my true music awakening and i absorbed the psychedelic sounds and its progression from that point as music evolved and moved on leaving small traces behind but really loved this sound and now i want to start collecting them no doubt its going to be a budget challenge but will try and thank you for putting these together a stimuli aural package that straps me up in the Time Machine and takes me back to these golden years - Thank you
@YesterdaysPapers6 ай бұрын
Cheers!
@immaterialimmaterial51956 ай бұрын
Norman Smith - producer - genius!!!
@dantean6 ай бұрын
Bidding farewell to the psychedelic era will be nearly as painful as having missed it the first time by some 10 years (for reasons of her own, I suppose, mom didn't let me drop acid and go to shows at age six). Thanks for this, and for The Pretty Things, who I foolishly never followed up on after hearing their brilliant songs covered on Bowie's Pinups many moons ago. I know those guys must have felt right at home a decade later when punk became a thing.
@dreammachine20136 ай бұрын
@@dantean 😂
@lakrids-pibe6 ай бұрын
The woman who dances to _Spooky_ is quite - ahem - remarkable
@jerrywatt68136 ай бұрын
Indeed !😊
@kennethnorman80796 ай бұрын
Now maybe a film about the Gary Walker & The Rain LP is in order. Nice job as always.
@alaintremaine33025 ай бұрын
My word! 'Little Girl' tells a story of a couple, as told by the man, who engaged in premarital adult relations. When they announced their intention to wed - the mother opposed. So, the unwed mother and father became parents of a little girl.
@piggycity6 ай бұрын
Great stuff! Really enjoyed the Gary Walker info post Walker Brothers. Cant wait for your next upload! Cheers!
@YesterdaysPapers6 ай бұрын
Cheers!
@GenialHarryGrout6 ай бұрын
I was tapping my feet to this video. Some great tracks were released in February 1968. The picture of Gary Walker & The Rain shows the band member Joey Holland which must be a typo because it is Joey Molland who went on to fame with Badfinger and is still performing today keeping the Badfinger legacy alive
@buzzawuzza37436 ай бұрын
Great video as always. I've always loved the "Up The Junction" soundtrack album but would never admit it to my pop-psych-freakout friends at that time because it wasn't hey-wire enough!! hahahaha it's true. We were all too busy DEFECTING GREY to give turntable time to such a gentle disc! Rock on!!!!
@YesterdaysPapers6 ай бұрын
Rock 9n Buzza!
@John_Fugazzi6 ай бұрын
Early '68 was also still paisley and psychedelic with songs like Just Dropped In (To See What Condition My Condition Was In) but that summer it all blew away and everything got heaavy.
@willminkorea20105 ай бұрын
So much new talent just getting started! Jethro Tull was about to join the giants!
@miguelangeljuarez61966 ай бұрын
Muchas gracias, hace mucho tiempo que esperaba este capitulo ya que yo nací el 16 de febrero de 1968, les mando un abrazote desde Zacatecas México.
@YesterdaysPapers6 ай бұрын
Saludos!
@Rochfordessex25 ай бұрын
Sitting here in Singapore, a long way from home, and thought I'd tune in to YP. I wasn't disappointed! Yet another very very cool and interesting session to spend some life time with. Cheers YP ;-)
@YesterdaysPapers5 ай бұрын
@@Rochfordessex2 Cheers!
@davidellis51416 ай бұрын
Excellent single from The Troggs !
@protozaba6 ай бұрын
Thank you for sharing Love Sculpture's River to Another Day, didn't know about them
@letter55home6 ай бұрын
Genial como siempre. Todo un lujo, gracias.
@markukeley29246 ай бұрын
Plenty of terrific records that should have gotten more exposure. Appreciate your diligence and your channel. Cheers!
@YesterdaysPapers6 ай бұрын
Thanks!
@alp-19606 ай бұрын
Psychedelia is dead, Long Live Psychedelia!
@grahampaulkendrick78456 ай бұрын
And psychedelic skiffle is born!
@ndogg206 ай бұрын
Didn't really die as just faded into the pop culture so much it wasn't even noticed. And on occasion would be labeled Space Rock or Ambient.
@VegetabIeMan6 ай бұрын
Look around you, LSD changed the world
@jonhillman8716 ай бұрын
@@ndogg20 also glam and punk.
@kooringagnd5 ай бұрын
@@jonhillman871Space rock and stoner rock.
@charlesachurch72655 ай бұрын
The Pretty Things WOW Check out their 70s album "Parachute ". Grrrreat presentation thanks xxx I wait with impatience for more .
@JoaninFlorida3 ай бұрын
I bought that album. I wonder where my copy might be today. We were clearly very hip kids. Lol
@alwayscurious4135 ай бұрын
Great video. Tempted to make a playlist of your recommendations here - just to get in the zone. It’s interesting how all these bands in their formative years were all trying to copy a certain ‘hip’ sound (that was psychedelia in this instance.). Later they’d all establish their own sound and trade on it but it looks like pretty much like everyone who was anyone came through the same psychedelic school. Even ‘Spinal Tap’ from what I recall!
@RingaDingDingDong3 ай бұрын
In the middle of the foreboding, thorny, tangled forest of life, there is a small clearing where green grass and wild flowers grow. That clearing is Yesterday's Papers. Thank you so much for making these. They're brilliant.
@YesterdaysPapers3 ай бұрын
@@RingaDingDingDong Cheers!
@noelsalisbury744813 күн бұрын
"And music played ever so loudly"❤
@MegaCirse5 ай бұрын
Cette époque était si cool et inventive , aucune période de ce nouveau siècle ne saurait l'égaler 🤯🤠🤓
@mrheem446 ай бұрын
that Pretty Things single is the greatest
@YesterdaysPapers6 ай бұрын
Awesome single.
@spiritof66636 ай бұрын
Psychedelia wouldn't begin to slip out of vogue until around the middle of the year (I'd say "Jumpin' Jack Flash" in late May marks an inflection point), so there's still *plenty* of great singles in and around the genre at this time, as this clip proves: Traffic, The Pretty Things, Mike Stuart Span, Manfred Mann, Ten Years After (the flip side, "The Sounds", is great), Fairport Convention, Donovan, all fantastic stuff!!! I had never heard of the Paul & Barry Ryan or Nerves singles, both are interesting. As for what you missed, that would include Kytes' "Running In The Water", The Human Instinct cover of "Renaissance Fair", the great Bystanders B-side "Cave Of Clear Light" and the New Generation B-side "Digger". I love all the footage here--and shocked that you were able to find any of Mike Stuart Span, and in color to boot! London is still very much swinging at the time. Can't wait for what you come up with for March! I know we've got The Beatles, The Fire, The Status Quo, Nirvana, The End, Ice, The Spencer Davis Group, West Coast Consortium, The Idle Race and The Yardbirds (great final B-side!), among other delights. I know so many people (including myself) pour their love into '66 and '67, but '68 was just *fantastic* as well, no question!
@YesterdaysPapers6 ай бұрын
Cheers, Spirit! I agree, by the time Jumpin' Jack Flash was released, it seemed pretty clear that things were definitely changing.
@calvinguile13156 ай бұрын
@@YesterdaysPapers yeah, I hear from elders who were around then who said it was amazing the impact Jumpin Jack Flash had on everything…
@mackb9095 ай бұрын
Busy week for me, which is why I didn't get to your vid 'til Saturday (there are some glimmers of hope over here on the stateside of the Atlantic now, as I'm sure you're aware, rather than what seemed like our slow-motion zombie-like walk into barf-orange-tinted fascism, but still lots to worry about- and work against, and for). Thank you again for another beautiful flash back to early '68. Many songs I wasn't familiar with and hope to hear more of- sorry to end on prepositions. And of course some that I've had imprinted on my consciousness for over 50 years, especially Traffic's haunting "No Face No Name No Number." Looking forward to your review of March '68 and thank you again.
@kgarrett14046 ай бұрын
Interesting singles which are thankfully brought into the light by the excellent Yesterday’s Papers.
@YesterdaysPapers6 ай бұрын
Cheers!
@louisnewton42925 ай бұрын
It's been said, but wow! You really get a sense of the shift from 67's psychedelia to the musical landscape of the early 70's. The seeds have been planted and are slowly coming to fruition... "No Face, No Name, and No Number" wasn't on my radar until I read Pete Townshend's memoirs: at a solo gig in the mid 70's, her covered songs that he considered to be his favorites ("Amoureuse" was another one) and "No Face..." was one of them. Naturally this lead me to the original which blew me away. It lead me to '68 era Traffic and I'm excited to hear what you have to say (fingers crossed that you give a nod to "Shanghai Noodle Factory"! "Crying to be Heard" is another great deep cut.) "Spooky" is a great track. I liked the original, but I have to agree with the journalist who preferred Walker's "spin" on it. That Equals song sounded strangely familiar and it turns out I'd heard the version by an Irish band called The Real McCoy. I'd heard it in a Noel Gallagher interview and if my memory stands Johnny Marr was the one who turned him onto it!
@MrKelleyzinho6 ай бұрын
The Tom McGuinness B-Side, “Sleepy Hollow,” is great. Reminds me of the Lovin’ Spoonful’s “Coconut Grove”
@hobbayne6 ай бұрын
The Equals I get so excited, was covered in a live EP by The Truth in the 80's. They are best known for their hit Confusion Hits us Everytime.
@edlawn54815 ай бұрын
Eddy Grant ("Electric Avenue") was their guitarist.
@margies7356 ай бұрын
Those Boyd sisters knew how to snag a rock star and get a song named after themselves!😅
@calvinguile13156 ай бұрын
WOW , never heard Big Boy Pete, I’m really liking it! Another epic episode YP❤ I’m hearing an influence on T Rex with “My Love Is Like A Spaceship”
@YesterdaysPapers6 ай бұрын
Cheers!
@noscrubbubblez65156 ай бұрын
I think this was during a top-rated TV series called 'the Beverly Hillbillys'. A big role in the show was playing the large son of the family named Jethro. It's possible Jethro Tull may have used Jethro Toe to suggest the popular bare footed hillbilly? It's rough starting out and by the '70s Jethro Tull certainly deserved the highest respect.
@rjwh672205 ай бұрын
A double-ought spy.
@noelsalisbury744813 күн бұрын
And an English Agricultural Engineer called Jethro Tull did invent the Original Seed Drill in 1701 & his Drill-Plough around the year 1733. But not the Aqualung....😉
@timetraveler87775 ай бұрын
Great releases , Pretty Things are among my favorites bands those two singles are really cool ; Big boy Pete , Love Sculpture , Mike Stuart Span I had never heard them before and I liked them
@chuckdee666 ай бұрын
Top Shelf as ever. Always learn something new!
@timemerich5 ай бұрын
REALLY enjoyed this, thank you!
@aminahmed22206 ай бұрын
What a fantastic video have a wonderful day ❤😊
@shaunxthexmod7776 ай бұрын
loved the pretty things,, 🍄
@lumpi58315 ай бұрын
Thank You for the Music !!!
@cassandramiller44776 ай бұрын
Judy Dyble's sigh at the end of "Ribbon Bow" might be one of the sexiest sounds ever recorded.
@stephensmith7995 ай бұрын
Those scenes of London traffic reminded me of what the air smelled like then…. And the hard little bogies that the pollution led to, each day. It really struck this country boy visiting in 1966. A later colleague of mine had classified this particular bogey type as a ‘Blooter’. It was very satisfying to pick at😉😆. The first man dressed as a woman also struck me. She paraded West Ken every afternoon. Nobody turned to look. London was truly pathbreaking then. Still is really.
@giorgiocurcetti40015 ай бұрын
What a brilliant channel.
@rob-v1y6 ай бұрын
"....and the band was just starting to make a name for themselves in the club scene.." Unfortunately, that name was "Jethro Toe".
@Krzyszczynski6 ай бұрын
Ha ha haaah!! The curse of the "dark l" strikes again!! That's what they call that non-pronunciation of the final "L" in a word (so that "paddle", for instance, comes out sounding something like "paddaw"). Done to "Tull" it sounds very like how a Brummie especially would say "toe". Reckon someone somewhere misheard the name over the phone. They almost certainly wouldn't have heard of the 18th-century agriculturist who originally bore the name. Jethro to most people back then meant the character from TV sitcom The Beverly Hillbillies.
@dreammachine20136 ай бұрын
@@Krzyszczynski fascinating explanation!
@greenpublishing6 ай бұрын
It will be fascinating to see how music develops this year. Psychedelia was very much still alive in the early months of 68, but by Autumn heavy rock had become the new thing.
@johnnypoker466 ай бұрын
'No Face, No Name, No Number' and 'Silent Sun' are the best of the tracks I've heard before, with 'Jennifer Juniper' third. 'Magic Spectacles', both sides of the Ryans single, 'Up the Junction' and 'River to Another Day' are the best of the ones I haven't heard (although I have a Manfred Mann comp and it might have their song on it)
@heinrichvon5 ай бұрын
I love The Pretty Things, and there was certainly a lot of other good stuff that month. Looking forward to hearing The Penny Peeps' "Model Village," though I don't know in which month of 1968 it was released.
@heinrichvonАй бұрын
God, I love "Model Village." Jethro Tull's Martin Barre played on that track before he joined Tull.
@thomasrednour88576 ай бұрын
Another great episode. That Love Sculpture single sounds like it belongs on the Forms & Feelings album, not the blues heavy first album.
@gerardop9633Ай бұрын
Vi a Pretty Things en directo en un pueblo cercano a mi ciudad,estaria a 30 Km,el cantante era todavia Phil May,y el guitarrista,Derek Taylor, inolvidables,magnificod,yo soy un ingles 60s que ha nacido en España
@simonKagree6 ай бұрын
I first heard "Sunshine Day" and "If I Had A Ribbon Bow" on an LP anthology of neglected British singles from the period (almost 10 years later), and liked them both immediately. I remember there was something by John's Children, and the first single by Soft Machine (with Daevid Allen) as well. Quite an education, that record was.
@michaelpdawson6 ай бұрын
I know the exact LP you mean! It was called Rare Tracks.
@simonKagree6 ай бұрын
Cool! I wish I still had it. Casting my memory back, I think "Blues Helping" by Love Sculpture was on it too.
@christopherlawley18426 ай бұрын
Desdemonaaaa?
@johnpendarvis788527 күн бұрын
"The Traffic"...lol.
@doccyclopz6 ай бұрын
Thanks YT for another mind expanding video! RIP John Mayall
@SharonGarcia-ze3en3 ай бұрын
Great stuff!
@FedericoDLP6 ай бұрын
I love this 'magazine'.
@boomtownrat51066 ай бұрын
Those who have wondered how Genesis became a bunch of popsters, especially when guitarist Steve Hackett left, I tell them just go back to their first recording, From Genesis to Revelation, to see their pop origins. The song you featured, The Silent Sun, was an homage to The Bee Gees, since Jonathon King admired the singing of Robin Gibb. If you listen to Peter Gabriel’s (sigh…) vocals, he deliberately is singing in the style of Robin. You made this old girl very happy featuring early Genesis.
@YesterdaysPapers6 ай бұрын
Cheers! Yep, their early stuff is very poppy and remniscent of the Bee Gees. I definitely prefer their prog rock stuff but their first couple of albums have some good moments.
@boomtownrat51066 ай бұрын
@@YesterdaysPapers I agree, in,those early recordings there is a bubbling brilliance ready to come out. Their second album, Trespass, they make the nascent move to Prog. On that album, the song, The Knife, has been a fan favorite. For me, it was the song, Stagnation. Tony Banks’ pitch bending notes by turning the organ off and on is sheer brilliance. Not on that album, but the song, Twilight Alehouse, features that technique even more so to wonderful effect. I don’t think Tony gets the love like his contemporaries, Rick Wakeman, and Keith Emerson.
@spiritof66636 ай бұрын
@@boomtownrat5106 Tony eventually ended up outselling Wakeman and Emerson combined so I wouldn't be too worried about whether he was appreciated!
@dreammachine20136 ай бұрын
@@boomtownrat5106 "From Genesis to Revelation" Is a lovely album🙂
@boomtownrat51066 ай бұрын
@@spiritof6663 I’m sure Mr Banks is doing very well for himself. Monetary security is nice, but I think legacy would be just as important or even more so.
@MicheleTempera5 ай бұрын
Good job! Thanks!
@davidtoups46846 ай бұрын
Cool video! I was also released in February of 1968
@dreammachine20136 ай бұрын
@@davidtoups4684 😂
@familydogg123417 күн бұрын
As usual- very informative. Im from the US- the only single we would recognize is Jennifer Jupiter"- she would eventually marry Mick Fleetwood. I did not know " Spooky" was covered later.ATOMIC ROOSTER started after Carl Palmer left CRAZY WORLD OF ARTHUR BRIWN in 1969. There was an ad for AR in this 1968 music weekly- or was this later on??
@JohnShields-xx1yk6 ай бұрын
I was an 8 yr old Beatles fan, big rock fan still to this day I listen, only AM radio back then until FM came along much later, then it was like steely Dan sang, " No static at all "
@basskick6666 ай бұрын
Amazing as always.
@johndutchman5 ай бұрын
Feb '68 . . . I was 8 months in the womb . ready to pop out
@davidellis51416 ай бұрын
I've never heard Jennifer Juniper on US radio & that's a shame. A fine track by Donovan.
@BritInvLvr6 ай бұрын
Really? Because I heard it in Southern California during that time.
@97509396 ай бұрын
@@BritInvLvr Me too, in Denver.
@davidellis51416 ай бұрын
Sorry Gentlemen , I wasn't around in 1968 but I forget how literally things are taken on social media. I like that the Denver based reply is the first time the individual has ever posted on the channel. I suspect , No I know trolling is happening here. Get a life guys . 🙅♂️
@spiritof66636 ай бұрын
@@davidellis5141 I don't see any "trolling" here. I see you saying that you never heard the song on radio and then two responses simply stating that they had. It's not a knock on anything you said, it's just people factually stating their experience. I too, used to hear it on oldies radio in LA in the 80s and 90s. Try not to be so sensitive.
@davidellis51416 ай бұрын
@spiritof6663 I know my situation & you don't. There is a specific reason I addressed these individuals. I'm not being " sensitive " being proactive. Notice they are silent 🤫 .. I'll leave it there.
@EdwinJack646 ай бұрын
Great bands pass by again, bands/singles to dig for, like Big Boy Pete who I haven't heard of. "40,000 Headmen" and "Up The Junction" are blistering songs! My only complaint is that it's too short 😂!
@YesterdaysPapers6 ай бұрын
Cheers Edwin!
@thereunionparty6 ай бұрын
Another great episode. I do like to hear Penny Valentine's record reviews. You can tell she really loved her subject matter. As a fan of Sandy Denny it was interesting to hear the Fairport Convention single with Judy Dyble as lead vocalist. I think I must have assumed she was kind of a Pete Best figure in the Fairport story but she had a really pleasant voice. Not as good as Sandy of course but who is? ps didn't those Boyd sisters do well for themselves?
@YesterdaysPapers6 ай бұрын
I love Penny's reviews too. I don't always agree with them but I love how passionate she was about music.
@barbarakirk30646 ай бұрын
Judy Dyble had quite a career post-Fairport Convention. She was also in Giles Giles & Fripp, and then Trader Horne with Jackie McAuley.
@SuperNevile6 ай бұрын
I like her version of "I Talk To The Wind" (she was Ian Mcdonald's girlfriend) recorded 1968.
@forgottenarchitecturalhistory4 ай бұрын
Glad "Silent Sun" by Genesis was included in this round up. A forgotten debut but hinting at the talents that would develop over the next few years
@Norshammar726 ай бұрын
Great as allways!
@ndogg206 ай бұрын
New YP vid shows up, make a list of new/old classic songs to listen to later. But this time around got over a dozen songs PLUS a film to check out: Up The Junction. I'll be out for the next few days. Thanks YP.
@YesterdaysPapers6 ай бұрын
Cheers!
@grahampaulkendrick78456 ай бұрын
Another great month, but ... Sandy Denny joined Fairport Convevtion in '68. Does anyone know the date? I was hoping you were going to feature Jeff Beck's 'Love Is Blue' (just for the B-side, which is great!)
@michaelpdawson6 ай бұрын
According to Pete Frame's family tree of Fairport, Sandy replaced Judy Dyble in May 1968.
@Robert_Presto6 ай бұрын
Magic Spectacles is a great '60s song. "sunk without a trace." I have no idea why it wasn't a hit. It's been comped on bootleg CD's since the early 2000's and for good reasons.
@YesterdaysPapers6 ай бұрын
Yeah, great track.
@ralph01496 ай бұрын
"Plant manager...a new 45? Right. What's the band name?...Speak up, I can't bloody hear you!...Jethro...Toe? Right. I'll get these out right away!"
@YesterdaysPapers6 ай бұрын
Hahaha!
@francoispedro36946 ай бұрын
This chanel... I can put a "like" even before I start to watch. Needless to say more.
@YesterdaysPapers6 ай бұрын
Cheers François!
@davepowell47406 ай бұрын
Best channel on KZbin
@YesterdaysPapers6 ай бұрын
Thanks.
@JasonTryp6 ай бұрын
UP THE JUNCTION Is a fabulous Psych Pop soundtrack, definitely a highpoint in Manfred Mann's career and should be more well known. Also, big fan of early GENESIS here, my favorite albums from them are in fact, FROM GENESIS TO REVELATION + TRESPASS.
@vampyros15 ай бұрын
As a naive youngster, I bought 'From Genesis to Revelation' as the band was getting a lot of buzz in the music press... I hated it, but made myself listen so I wouldn't feel so ripped off (as a teenager, I didn't have a lot of money...). And... it grew on me. And became one of my all-time favorite albums. I adore it. It truly 'paid' off! 'Up the Junction' is good, too.
@guidoerfen79446 ай бұрын
Gary Walker & The Rain's debut album is a fantastic psych gem! Too sad it originally only was released in Japan!