Rolling Stones' manager Andrew Oldham Reviews the Singles of March 1965

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Yesterday's Papers

Yesterday's Papers

Жыл бұрын

Blind Date with Rolling Stones' manager Andrew Oldham. Andrew Oldham reviews the singles of March 1965.

Пікірлер: 299
@filipe-
@filipe- Жыл бұрын
You listen to some of these songs and understand straight away why the Beatles were so huge.
@GroovingPict
@GroovingPict Жыл бұрын
and why people are so quick to say that "music was better before", because absolute garbage like these records are of course long forgotten, just like the garbage of today will be soon forgotten as well and only the good stuff living on, perpetuating the "music was so much better before" myth
@nickydee569
@nickydee569 10 ай бұрын
George Martin called the pre India albums rubbish
@cassandramiller4477
@cassandramiller4477 Жыл бұрын
Andrew Oldham doesn't disappoint. I went in in guessing he'd hate pretty much everything, and there we go!
@ovalvox7888
@ovalvox7888 Жыл бұрын
To be fair most of those records did suck. I’m glad he gave Gerry and the Pacemakers a thumbs up.
@daddyagogo
@daddyagogo Жыл бұрын
In his defense, He got handed a bad stack of singles.
@cassandramiller4477
@cassandramiller4477 Жыл бұрын
@@daddyagogo Absolute truth, but his reputation for savagery was certainly on view!
@lukehauser1182
@lukehauser1182 Жыл бұрын
Yeah, it was like they were pranking him
@nomoremister
@nomoremister Жыл бұрын
@@daddyagogo I disagree. I like the Fairies and Jimmy Nicol records.
@SophieLovesSunsets
@SophieLovesSunsets Жыл бұрын
The Rolling Stones, The Beatles and The Kinks all flying high in the LP chart. Magic times. Loving your outro music, YP 😊💖
@YesterdaysPapers
@YesterdaysPapers Жыл бұрын
Glad you liked it, Sophie. Good stuff in the LP chart, no doubt. Two Kinks albums there, cool!
@SophieLovesSunsets
@SophieLovesSunsets Жыл бұрын
@@YesterdaysPapers 🎸😘❤
@bobsoldrecords1503
@bobsoldrecords1503 Жыл бұрын
Yes I Will by The Hollies was covered by The Monkees as I'll Be True To You a few months later in a vastly superior version
@rodrigodiaz2313
@rodrigodiaz2313 Жыл бұрын
Don' t forget Wnston Churchill, The real king of pop and rock...🤣🤣
@markvonwisco7369
@markvonwisco7369 Жыл бұрын
So many hot takes! You can really that Oldham was a producer based on his critiques.
@katbela3971
@katbela3971 Жыл бұрын
Poor Jimmy Nicol! 3:16 I have always been moved by his story. He had his quarter of an hour of fame with The Beatles, and then he was lost in nothingness. I wish him the best, wherever he is. Thank you very much, Yesterday's Papers. 😀😀😀
@michaelrochester48
@michaelrochester48 Жыл бұрын
Great to see The Seekers near the top of the charts, they were one of the best vocal groups of the 60s
@grokeffer6226
@grokeffer6226 Жыл бұрын
I always liked their music.
@paulgoldstein2569
@paulgoldstein2569 Жыл бұрын
I was a huge fan of The Seekers. I still mourn the sad loss of Judith.
@lindadote
@lindadote Жыл бұрын
@@paulgoldstein2569 …..The Seekers were very popular when I was young. They were all talented musicians and Judith Durham had a glorious voice.
@Ridersonthestorm8899
@Ridersonthestorm8899 Жыл бұрын
Yes Athol seemed to be the leader to me but they will always be Judith and that amazing voice, Seen In Green their 1967 album is gorgeous sunshine pop.
@deirdre108
@deirdre108 Жыл бұрын
Happy to see that Winston Churchill finally got into the British Top Ten. He was so underrated earlier.
@PeterPan-nh7yx
@PeterPan-nh7yx Жыл бұрын
@michael macbean But sadly he never topped the charts.
@deirdre108
@deirdre108 Жыл бұрын
@@PeterPan-nh7yx I’ve read that he peaked in the mid-1940’s and was off the charts for a while. This was WC’s (unfortunate initials) comeback album taking advantage of the British Invasion so a top ten was pretty good for an oldies act.
@PeterPan-nh7yx
@PeterPan-nh7yx Жыл бұрын
@@deirdre108 "mid-1940’s?" Slightly before my time. I remember, my dad told me, we tried to invade Britain those days, thanks to Winston & the RAF we failed. But never mention the war!
@deirdre108
@deirdre108 Жыл бұрын
@@PeterPan-nh7yx But the Germans (Hamburg?) got to hear the Beatles live way before the Americans did! Komm, gib mir deine Hand/Sie liebt dich!
@dazzlingdavedainty
@dazzlingdavedainty Жыл бұрын
He was big in Europe though
@nigden1
@nigden1 Жыл бұрын
Great instrumental take on Arthur Alexander's 'You better move on' at the end.
@IMeMineWho
@IMeMineWho Жыл бұрын
Love the You Better Move On outro. Met Andrew with my bassist brother by proxy. Interesting guy.
@patgalvez4563
@patgalvez4563 Жыл бұрын
That 'The Voice of Winston Churchill' album was probably big at the discos..lol
@YesterdaysPapers
@YesterdaysPapers Жыл бұрын
"Dancing to Winston Churchill" would be a great song title!
@neilfriedman
@neilfriedman Жыл бұрын
Andrews comments were perfect for the selection of 'music' he was presented with.
@bugeanuflorin1531
@bugeanuflorin1531 Жыл бұрын
Excellent comments. Thanks for posting them. Good time for you
@wellsy1954
@wellsy1954 Жыл бұрын
Shows that the 60's wasn't completely full of great music, no matter how much we like to think so.
@PAULLONDEN
@PAULLONDEN Жыл бұрын
It actually *was* full of good music, you can't expect all the dross that record companies threw to a wall would stick. How can an era be "completely full of great music" anyway ?.......that's an impossibility . No one ever claimed that .
@wellsy1954
@wellsy1954 Жыл бұрын
@@PAULLONDEN Maybe 5-10% was great, 5-10% good. The rest-not so much. Count them in any top 40 you like and those percentages would be correct. In Australia I was lucky enough to listen to a great D.J. named Stan Rofe, who did have great taste.
@cuda426hemi
@cuda426hemi 5 ай бұрын
LOL Quote me who said the 60s was "completely" anything? You have ONE WEEK of goofy UK here and you think you made a point?? LOL OTOH, the 60s was full of the BEST music in the 20th century and so far into the 21st century. You can hide behind your "completely" cop-out but you got nothing better. How do you want your shut-up juice, by songs from the 60s or by bands? And then tell me which decade was "completely" even close to the 60s. 🎬
@wellsy1954
@wellsy1954 5 ай бұрын
Opinions are like arse-holes - everybody's got one.@@cuda426hemi
@buzzawuzza3743
@buzzawuzza3743 Жыл бұрын
Get Yourself Home by the Fairies is an amazing record and Loog is strictly a square for not getting that.
@YesterdaysPapers
@YesterdaysPapers Жыл бұрын
Yeah, that's a great track. He probably said he didn't like it because he saw it as competition.
@jonhillman871
@jonhillman871 Жыл бұрын
I really like the song Get Yourself Home by The Fairies. It sounds like The Pretty Things. John "Twink" Alder was in both groups. Raw rhythm and blues. It sounds much more like a passion project than an income generator. Everything Andrew Oldham hated about this record is exactly why I like it.
@YesterdaysPapers
@YesterdaysPapers Жыл бұрын
I love that song.
@paulgoldstein2569
@paulgoldstein2569 Жыл бұрын
The Pretty things originally recorded it, but it remained unreleased. It is now among the bonus tracks on the CD reissue of their first album.
@zvezdahouseofrock1784
@zvezdahouseofrock1784 Жыл бұрын
Oldham would hate a band like Pretty Things to follow the Stones so no wonder he smashed the record. It's a freakbeat classic today so Oldham can piss off.
@jamesfitzgerald6636
@jamesfitzgerald6636 Жыл бұрын
Two months later The Byrds Mr Tambourine Man, which still sounds fresh today
@Jacobhayes25
@Jacobhayes25 Жыл бұрын
Gerry and the pacemakers masterclass
@Ridersonthestorm8899
@Ridersonthestorm8899 Жыл бұрын
Blimey this guy makes Morrissey seem cheerful and agreeable lol. Love your videos Yesterdays Papers.😀
@davidellis5141
@davidellis5141 Жыл бұрын
As featured in The Warriors ... Nowhere To Run 🏃‍♂️ 🏃‍♀️ !! 🗽
@Zagneek
@Zagneek Жыл бұрын
Loog fact - he’s 2 days younger than Nick Mason of Pink Floyd who he went to the same school with
@johngleeson6747
@johngleeson6747 Жыл бұрын
This was one of the best so far, top work again, thank you so much.
@lindadote
@lindadote Жыл бұрын
Andrew lucked out with these. Decca refused to sign The Beatles yet has “The Voice of Winston Churchill” in the music charts, the mind boggles! Thanks YP. Your outro is typically excellent.
@heli-crewhgs5285
@heli-crewhgs5285 Жыл бұрын
Bear in mind, that Winston Churchill died in January of 1965.
@lindadote
@lindadote Жыл бұрын
@@heli-crewhgs5285 …..true. I just thought it was an odd inclusion in a music chart.
@YesterdaysPapers
@YesterdaysPapers Жыл бұрын
Thanks, Linda!
@lindadote
@lindadote Жыл бұрын
@@YesterdaysPapers ……if you get time to reply, I wondered if you composed the versions for all the outros in these videos yourself?
@YesterdaysPapers
@YesterdaysPapers Жыл бұрын
@@lindadote I record all the outros myself but most are adaptations or covers of songs from the 60s. In this case, it was a cover of "You Better Move On".
@AspectRatioPolice
@AspectRatioPolice 2 ай бұрын
your outro song renditions are always amazing, this one even more
@pencilpauli9442
@pencilpauli9442 Жыл бұрын
The Voice of Winston Churchill No.8 in the album charts. March '65 really was a slow month! lol Oldham didn't drop on a good month for a blind date with that selection.
@andrewkatsinis4225
@andrewkatsinis4225 Жыл бұрын
1965 was a great year for music! ♥️🎸
@wolfetom10
@wolfetom10 Жыл бұрын
True, but obviously March was an off month.
@andrewkatsinis4225
@andrewkatsinis4225 Жыл бұрын
@@wolfetom10 Not in the States where ✋ "Stop In The Name of Love" ❤️ was number one on the Billboard charts. ✋ Think it over.......😉
@paulgoldstein2569
@paulgoldstein2569 Жыл бұрын
@@andrewkatsinis4225 But it got knocked off the U.S. number one by Freddie And The Dreamers' belated U.S. hit You Were Made For Me, a UK hit nearly two years earlier. But as the British Invasion took a while to explode in the States, a lot of UK hits of this genre were then back-released for the U.S. market. But why as long as this, when the softer sounding Liverpool bands of which Freddie & Co adopted the sound of, had already been out-fashioned in the UK by these harder edged sounding British Invasion bands from other parts of the UK. But that was this ever changing world of the sixties when musical trends were shifting fast and furious. But for once, the Americans were behind the British.
@prince13896
@prince13896 Жыл бұрын
He was 21 at the time... 21! Man, he knew a lot.
@samp.8099
@samp.8099 Жыл бұрын
As old as me and already managing the Rolling Stones... that sure makes me want to end myself...
@brucemarshall3446
@brucemarshall3446 Жыл бұрын
Brits didn't go to university like Yanks did. Or, if they did attend like Jagger, they dropped out early.
@SmartCookie2022
@SmartCookie2022 Жыл бұрын
It's almost a shame that Oldham didn't get anything particularly good to review that week, as I'd like to have heard his reviews of more popular songs to judge his foreseeable expert knowledge on.
@cruzcflores
@cruzcflores Жыл бұрын
He got “Nowhere to Run”. Who cares it shares a baseline with “Dancing in the Street”? It’s a great record.
@davidpanzer1166
@davidpanzer1166 Жыл бұрын
@@cruzcflores it’s also the song Keith stole to create Satisfaction.
@brucemarshall3446
@brucemarshall3446 Жыл бұрын
Oldham had his own label, Immediate, which specialized in putting out lame Motown style soul records. So, don't expect Loog to have good taste in that genre of music.
@richsackett3423
@richsackett3423 Жыл бұрын
What a hopeless lot of awfulness he had to wade through. My sympathies.
@thenoodlecat9595
@thenoodlecat9595 Жыл бұрын
You gotta love the honesty of these classic rock musicians and managers. Nowadays a musician would say something like "That''s good" to hide their disappointment for the song, but back then in the '60s, they just straight up said "This sucks" lol.
@michaelrochester48
@michaelrochester48 Жыл бұрын
The “leader of the laundromat” was actually song by none other than Ron Dante who five years later had a number one hit around the world as the Archies and “sugar sugar.”
@lindadote
@lindadote Жыл бұрын
Quite right. Sugar Sugar was played constantly on the radio at the time, I loathed the song! However, it’s interesting to note that the musicians who contributed to “The Archies” (and that song) included some of the finest American session-musicians available, including guitarist Hugh McCracken and bassist Chuck Rainey!
@davidpanzer1166
@davidpanzer1166 Жыл бұрын
Wilson Pickett did a great version of it!
@lindadote
@lindadote Жыл бұрын
@@davidpanzer1166 …..I loved Wilson but don’t know if even he could change my mind about that song.
@davidpanzer1166
@davidpanzer1166 Жыл бұрын
@@lindadote Give it a shot and let me know what you think! BTW, I played guitar for him from 1995 to 2000.
@lindadote
@lindadote Жыл бұрын
@@davidpanzer1166 ……oh, that’s cool! So, you’d have been with WP until not long before he died? I always liked Wilson but confess I haven’t heard him in years. Well, I gave the song a listen……I honestly didn’t think I could move past the corny lyrics but Wilson’s version is stunning! I’m not sure I could ever *like* the song but I’m genuinely amazed at the difference his soulful voice makes. WP hasn’t changed a thing yet somehow, it’s an entirely different song, if that makes any sense? Thanks for the heads up, I’m always interested in learning anything musically-related.
@Jacobhayes25
@Jacobhayes25 Жыл бұрын
Haha that was lucky, 30 seconds! Can’t wait to watch
@tomc642
@tomc642 Жыл бұрын
The Applejacks were given "Bye Bye Girl" after they refused to record "Chim Chim Chiree". The B-side "It's not a Game Anymore" is a much better song and was written by Pete Dello of Honeybus fame. He wrote several of their hits. The Applejacks actually made several good records, but stuck to the Beat phase when music evolved and got more experimental.
@HoorayTV21
@HoorayTV21 Жыл бұрын
Time for a Honeybus video on this channel!
@paulgoldstein2569
@paulgoldstein2569 Жыл бұрын
The Applejacks did make some good records. They were the first to release a version of a Ray Davies composition I Go To Sleep, although I cannot remember who had a hit with it in the Eighties. The Kinks already recorded a demo of it, not released at the time, but is now on a CD release of one of their early albums among the bonus tracks. The Applejacks also released a single version of Lennon/McCartney composition Like Dreamers Do, which The Beatles recorded among their January 1962 Decca label demos, after which Decca turned them down, but signed The Applejacks a few years later.
@ExplodingPsyche
@ExplodingPsyche Жыл бұрын
@@paulgoldstein2569 The Pretenders did a great version of it. I didn't even realize it was a Kinks song.
@paulgoldstein2569
@paulgoldstein2569 Жыл бұрын
@@ExplodingPsyche That was it, The Pretenders. But my knowledge on later years is weak here and there. I have now remembered they covered a track from The Kinks' first album, Stop Your Sobbing.
@ExplodingPsyche
@ExplodingPsyche Жыл бұрын
@@paulgoldstein2569 Yeah, I probably knew at the time it was a Ray Davies song but forgot it over the years!
@GenialHarryGrout
@GenialHarryGrout Жыл бұрын
#8 in the LP chart just shows you that the charts were very varied
@CoCotheTurtle
@CoCotheTurtle Жыл бұрын
Good point. A lot of times Billboard wouldn't use *any* even numbers. Every LP in the chart had an odd number, and as a result, no variety at all.
@samp.8099
@samp.8099 Жыл бұрын
Geez, "Nowhere To Run" was the only good song of the bunch - in fact I like it more than "Dancing In The Street". That last song sure was a cheeky pull on Melody Maker's part.
@francoispedro3694
@francoispedro3694 Жыл бұрын
"Good cover of You'd better move on, I'd say. Who's that? The Yesterday's Paper' Symphony Orchestra ? Yes, I've heard about them before. Not sure if it's gonna make a hit but it's a good record. I like it" 😉
@YesterdaysPapers
@YesterdaysPapers Жыл бұрын
Hahaha!
@The_Great_Darino
@The_Great_Darino Жыл бұрын
March of ‘65. The month and year of my birthday. ‘Eight Days a Week’ was number one, then.🎉
@sherrybirchall8677
@sherrybirchall8677 9 ай бұрын
Im so glad he liked Gerry and the Pacemakers. They've always been one of my favorite bands. I'm really getting the impression from so many of these English reviewers of the unpopularity, in England, of anything Motown. Oh, my gosh, that made me laugh, his comment on Clementine how they were all sitting around, after recording it, congratulating themselves that they had made a jazz record. 😅
@jackcone1124
@jackcone1124 Жыл бұрын
Great Video! Just a heads up in the description of the video it says 1967 instead of 1965! Big fan of the channel!!
@YesterdaysPapers
@YesterdaysPapers Жыл бұрын
Thanks for the heads up, I just corrected it. Cheers!
@darda2449
@darda2449 Жыл бұрын
I love your videos, Y.P. Always a nice little slice of musical history, and as Ray Davis once insisted, the music was the best part of those times.Well really, the Gerry and the Pacemakers single was very professional, and even though there were a couple quality artists amongst this load of rubbish, the records themselves were exactly as he described them. I sometimes think the staff at that magazine would sometimes say, "Let's give (Fill in the blank) a load of bollocks to review so we can get a good piss-take out of them for entertainment purposes! I mean, really?
@total.stranger
@total.stranger Жыл бұрын
I think that you're correct. It's all showbiz: create controversy and outrage - and attract eyeballs. Andrew was a master of it, so I'm sure that he understood the drill in doing this Melody Maker gig. That aside, his criticism was on target. He was smart, and he was good at what he did.
@mysterbear
@mysterbear Жыл бұрын
He was right about everything except for the Vandellas. What a terrible week. Poor guy.
@brgreg8725
@brgreg8725 Жыл бұрын
Had a resurgence, being played in The Warriors. I always like Nowhere to Run better. Bowie & Jagger probably ruined Dancing
@R3TR0R4V3
@R3TR0R4V3 Жыл бұрын
Nowhere To Run is a great tune.. classic Motown! FFS, who cares if they allegedly have "the same bass line" (they don't). 🤷🏻‍♂️
@robbalboni4179
@robbalboni4179 Жыл бұрын
wow, i guess he wasn't to thrilled with the selections, many of these were new to me because i don't think they made it to the states. i did like many of them though and wouldn't mind adding them to my collection. a lot of these were pleasant enough to my ears, to each his own, thanks again for sharing, always fun and interesting!
@danielbanic3738
@danielbanic3738 Жыл бұрын
To please Andrew the song needed to be recorded precise and clearly and it had to have a strong emotional message that hit the heart. That's why he loved Gerry & Pacemakers song "Ill be there" Some of the Stones hits were in that vibe too. That is always a key to a great hit , it has to have a strong emotional message that hits the heart. Great video , keep up the good work
@Robert_Presto
@Robert_Presto Жыл бұрын
What Oldham did with Billy Nichols was amazing !
@mackb909
@mackb909 Жыл бұрын
Ah, Loog. "Loog" helped make The Stones, who were a full-fledged sextet with a superb stage act putting out their version of blues and R & B at the Crawdaddy in RIchmond, Surrey, when ALO caught their act in residency in spring 1963. Brian Jones, with occasional help from fledgling gallerist Giorgio Gomelsky, was de facto agent/manager (and paid himself £5/week more than the others got for this reason) until ALO, an exact contemporary of Jagger and Richards (all born in 1943) came along. Given their talent and ambition, there is a good chance The Stones might have made it without Loog, but he certainly facilitated the process in the early going. First, he humored Brian while gently sidelining him as he helped Jagger and Richards ease into the leadership of the band- a good thing, on the whole, given that Brian, while enormously talented and creative, was also enormously emotionally unstable and behaviorally unpredictable (a fact that became all too sadly evident as the '60s wore on, and Brian succumbed increasingly to his alcohol, drug, and behavioral excesses). Second, Loog, acting on the premise that five was the absolute maximum for a viable rock/pop group (The Beatles, in whose organization Loog had briefly worked under Brian Epstein, were after all four, down from five in their Stu Sutcliffe days), demoted the talented pianist Ian "Stu" Stewart to session work and occasional live accompaniment and made him road manager (a job at which Stewart excelled, and a position he held until his untimely heart attack death at 47 in 1985). Third, with 6'2" 14-plus stone Ian Stewart now in a subsidiary position, Loog played up the lean-mean ominousness of the remaining five, the snarly, rebellious counterpart to the ostensible relative wholesomeness of the Fabs ("Would you late your daughter date a Rolling Stone?" Somewhat ironic, given that Mick, Keith, Brian, and to a certain extent Charlie were all relatively well-educated and well-read, and only Bill and Charlie came from true London working class backgrounds, whereas The Beatles all came from near-poverty and, in John and Paul's case, the death and/or absence of one or both birth parents when they were quite young). Fourth, ALO teamed up with the older and business-experienced Eric Easton to get things on a sound financial footing (ALO would later stiff-arm EE out of the business). So things went for a little less than four years. Then The Stones experienced the drug busts and complex legal problems of 1967, The Stones' near-annus horribilis, as they were targeted by corrupt right-wing elements of the British establishment, including thoroughly corrupt cops and their favorite Sunday rag, the reprehensible News of the World (later owned by Rupert Murdoch; no improvement; the paper later ceased publication, 2011 (a run of 168 years), after a scandal in which they hacked the phone of a murdered 13-year-old girl). And what was Loog's response? He fled, literally, to the States, paranoid about his own potential vulnerability to being busted, as Jagger and Richards and later Jones scrambled for viable legal representation and dealt with multiple court appearances and threats of lengthy prison sentences that, given the fast-moving, now-it's-in-now-it's-yesterday's-news trends of 1967 in pop and rock music, would have almost certainly sounded the death knell for the band. That was the last straw as far as The Stones were concerned. That, plus his utter lack of enthusiasm for their psychedelic projects from spring 1967 until the end of the year, when they released "Their Satanic Majesties' Request," a flawed album but much better than its subsequent reputation, spelled the end of The Stones' relationship with Loog. They fell into the web of Allen Klein, the scheming New York lawyer who enmeshed himself in the legal and financial affairs not only of The Stones but of The Beatles as well, essentially ripping off both bands for millions of dollars and/or pounds. They later extricated themselves, after much difficulty, in the 1970s, with the help of Prince Rupert Loewenstein. It's all the long ago past now, and Jagger, Richards, and Loog will all turn eighty this year. After all this time, have they let bygones be bygones (leaving aside the legal kerfuffles around The Verve's "Bitter Sweet Symphony," and ALO's involvement in it, in the late 1990s)? I have no idea. Do you?
@chrisbacos
@chrisbacos Жыл бұрын
Interesting to hear the perspective of a record producer and manager. Oldham almost makes Simon Cowell sound like your favorite uncle. It dawned on me that Andrew would be a good judge on Britain's Got Talent except he is not well known by the 18-34-year-old key demographic. That's how we measure here in the States. I think the Bachelors were pretty lame. I laughed when I saw and heard them.
@pcno2832
@pcno2832 Жыл бұрын
4:07 "I hate the record on principal, and the public should do the same." Then he almost trashes his own record at 5:28. Never a dull moment with Oldham. And I love the instrumental version of "You'd Better Move On" at the end. Great post.
@YesterdaysPapers
@YesterdaysPapers Жыл бұрын
Glad you liked it, thanks!
@Scotlanz
@Scotlanz Жыл бұрын
I saw Golden Lights in the charts and thought that Morrissey had invented a Time Machine. 😂
@YesterdaysPapers
@YesterdaysPapers Жыл бұрын
Yep, Morrisey covered that song. He was (I guess he still is) a big fan of Twinkle.
@procyonant6805
@procyonant6805 Жыл бұрын
Andrew says he has a small record collection. It would be doubly interesting to look at it.
@BleedBNG
@BleedBNG Жыл бұрын
He's right on all of them. Leader of the Laundromat with motorcycle revving?
@boomtownrat5106
@boomtownrat5106 Жыл бұрын
Disappointing that Oldham didn’t like The Fairies track. I liked their drummer John ‘Twink’ Alder who went on to the band The In-Crowd/ Tomorrow with guitarist Steve Howe. Twink contributed much to the UK psychedelic music scene.
@YesterdaysPapers
@YesterdaysPapers Жыл бұрын
Yep, I like that single as well. Good stuff, very remniscent of The Pretty Things.
@boomtownrat5106
@boomtownrat5106 Жыл бұрын
@@YesterdaysPapers Didn’t Twink replace The Little Things drummer (name I forgot) on their album S.F. Sorrow? I recall that the making of S.F. Sorrow was highlighted on this channel.
@YesterdaysPapers
@YesterdaysPapers Жыл бұрын
@@boomtownrat5106 Yes, Twink replaced their drummer in late 67 and played on S.F. Sorrow.
@christopher9152
@christopher9152 Жыл бұрын
He played in Syd Barrett's ill-fated "Stars" and later with the proto-punk Pink Fairies as well.
@VonL
@VonL Жыл бұрын
Amongst his “accolades” was being referred to as Twank by his former band mates.
@jbtownsend9535
@jbtownsend9535 Жыл бұрын
That was a rough group of singles!
@robertbell9935
@robertbell9935 Жыл бұрын
Wonder if, with the benefit of hindsight, he stands by his dismissal of Nowhere To Run now?
@kulturkriget
@kulturkriget Жыл бұрын
Lol. He hates everything. Probably the harshest so far. I actually liked a lot of it.
@paulcooper8818
@paulcooper8818 Жыл бұрын
Oh gosh that was funny! Poor Andrew really did get a Sack Of Woe.
@scottjackson1420
@scottjackson1420 Жыл бұрын
He was brutal. While the new releases were bad, the charts that week had GREAT music.
@SEGAClownboss
@SEGAClownboss Жыл бұрын
Andrew did "Get Yourself Home" dirty, oof. It's one of the highlights of the UK Nuggets!
@nurknanker6105
@nurknanker6105 Жыл бұрын
Who plays the instrumental You Better Move On at the end?
@philanthropist1241
@philanthropist1241 Жыл бұрын
Another wonderful look back at the 60s. Who/what is the soundtrack you play when showing the charts ? This one being You'd Better Move On ??
@YesterdaysPapers
@YesterdaysPapers Жыл бұрын
All the instrumentals at the end of these videos are recorded by me.
@philanthropist1241
@philanthropist1241 Жыл бұрын
@@YesterdaysPapers
@philanthropist1241
@philanthropist1241 Жыл бұрын
@@YesterdaysPapers Brilliant, they sound like the " Wrecking Crew " during the Brian Wilson/Phil Spector era
@YesterdaysPapers
@YesterdaysPapers Жыл бұрын
@@philanthropist1241 Thanks!
@karlsinclair9918
@karlsinclair9918 Жыл бұрын
Well, Martha was not a lousy production..most of these were bad..but the fairies get yourself home is dynamite. I think Andrew was snorting some arrogance powder even if he had a point 🤣
@bobwallace9814
@bobwallace9814 Жыл бұрын
Oldham opinions come with a lot of stroke. When he speaks, people listen. He earned it.
@MikeDial
@MikeDial Жыл бұрын
Ha, Mr. Sunshine that Oldham is. Look at the Kinks having two of the top ten albums!
@deeg8849
@deeg8849 Жыл бұрын
Ah Andrew. What a guy. Mr Negative ( even if he was right on most tracks) I think he lives to take the piss out of others. Interesting guy but yammers about himself a tad much I think he wanted to be an actual Stone more then anything (that or Phil Spector)
@steveshattah
@steveshattah Жыл бұрын
I think what went unsaid here is there's only one artist that Andrew likes. Fucking Andrew.
@EdKazO-Vision
@EdKazO-Vision Жыл бұрын
“Jimmy Nichol and The Footnotes”
@philt4346
@philt4346 Жыл бұрын
He sems like a nice chap.
@doctorrobert1339
@doctorrobert1339 Жыл бұрын
It sounds like early 1965 was not a good time for music releases huh, Help! was still a couple months away
@bobsoldrecords1503
@bobsoldrecords1503 Жыл бұрын
Yes I Will by The Hollies was covered by The Monkees as I'll Be True To You in a vastly superior version several months later
@AdrianDeVore
@AdrianDeVore Жыл бұрын
That was a mostly pitiful collection he had to review, except that "Nowhere to Run" was a great banger imo.
@chasjohn57
@chasjohn57 Жыл бұрын
Andrew is right! Congratulations should have been given to the Everly Bros. I'll Be There was recorded by Elvis at the Memphis sessions in '69.
@paulgoldstein2569
@paulgoldstein2569 Жыл бұрын
Latter, written and originally recorded by Bobby Darin.
@lupcokotevski2907
@lupcokotevski2907 Жыл бұрын
Golden and the Gingerbreads! The first all female band signed to a major label, with future rocker Genya Ravan, and Isis another all girl band formed in the early 70's. They were American.
@willieluncheonette5843
@willieluncheonette5843 Жыл бұрын
Just listened again to Nowhere To Run. Maybe I missed something. No, that is one boss beat and the group is in the groove. I love all their famous records. One LP on the UK charts very much surprised me. At #8 The Voice of Winston Churchhill. Was there a beat group backing his words? (Just kidding) Can't imagine something like The Voice of Dwight D. Eisenhower LP ever making the top 10 charts here in USA but it certainly says something adult and intriguing about the British public.
@R3TR0R4V3
@R3TR0R4V3 Жыл бұрын
Nowhere To Run is a _GREAT_ tune! ..Idk what he was smoking on that one. Sheesh! 😬 Otherwise, his critiques were fairly on, I suppose. 🤷🏻‍♂️
@YesterdaysPapers
@YesterdaysPapers Жыл бұрын
Hahaha! Winston Churchill backed by The Tornados and produced by Joe Meek. That would have ruled!
@willieluncheonette5843
@willieluncheonette5843 Жыл бұрын
@@R3TR0R4V3 agree.
@willieluncheonette5843
@willieluncheonette5843 Жыл бұрын
@@YesterdaysPapers LOL.....yes that would be totally dope!
@willsioux
@willsioux Жыл бұрын
Churchill had just died .. so they brought out some albums in the UK of his speeches ... Sold extremely well to the second world war generation ... You see them very frequently in charity shops nowadays...
@annamariaisland1960
@annamariaisland1960 Жыл бұрын
Hey Andrew - don't sugar coat your thoughts, let us really know what's on your mind!
@paulnolan4971
@paulnolan4971 Жыл бұрын
lol no Beatles singles in the chart 50 wtf were they having a week off
@Jacobhayes25
@Jacobhayes25 Жыл бұрын
At least Gerry got on there, one of his last he did
@mjanovec
@mjanovec Жыл бұрын
They were filming the movie Help at this time. Ticket to Ride would come out on April 9, topping both the UK and US singles charts.
@SH-ud8wd
@SH-ud8wd 28 күн бұрын
Leader of the Laundromat reminds me of Albert Kings Laundromat Blues. And who the heck is this Voice of Winston Churchill record?
@soulfoodie1
@soulfoodie1 Жыл бұрын
Nice version of 'You better move on' !
@YesterdaysPapers
@YesterdaysPapers Жыл бұрын
Thanks!
@paulnolan4971
@paulnolan4971 Жыл бұрын
That's a Kinky top ten
@jerrywatt6813
@jerrywatt6813 Жыл бұрын
Ha ha Oldham sure wasn't pulling any punches 65 he was in his prime thanks YP cheers !
@CoCotheTurtle
@CoCotheTurtle Жыл бұрын
Hahaha! Tell us how you really feel! Oh my god, I never wanted this to end; what a one-man bitchfest! I wish these had gone on into the 80's, so they could have thrown a stack of Thompson Twins/Soft Cell/Spandau Ballet records in front of Boy George! Thank you so much for these incredible videos!
@paulgoldstein2569
@paulgoldstein2569 Жыл бұрын
Why was this one-off Jimmy Page single She Satisfies not included here, as that was from this month, although it was heavily rumoured to be by The Kinks as not only did Jimmy Page sound like Ray Davies, but the riff was heavily borrowed from The Kinks' semi-instrumental, Revenge. They even looked alike.
@YesterdaysPapers
@YesterdaysPapers Жыл бұрын
It was released that month but not the same week. Blind Dates were mostly about the week's new singles.
@WedgePee
@WedgePee Жыл бұрын
@@YesterdaysPapers According to 45cat, Disc magazine gave a release date of 5 February 1965.
@WattisWatts
@WattisWatts Жыл бұрын
Mostly agree with Andrew except his dismissal of Nowhere to Run. But yeah, the bass is great (Jamerson?) on it.
@gemspa73
@gemspa73 Жыл бұрын
Carol Kaye probably says it's her.
@davidpanzer1166
@davidpanzer1166 Жыл бұрын
@@gemspa73 it’s so weird how she keeps saying that stuff. Just don’t get it. There were so many classics that she DID play on, so why make all these false claims?
@clipstone
@clipstone Жыл бұрын
You Better Move On instrumental on the outro...but not sure if it's The Andrew Oldham Orchestra.
@YesterdaysPapers
@YesterdaysPapers Жыл бұрын
I recorded the outro myself. Yes, the sound is inspired by the Andrew Oldham Orchestra. I love that kind of sound.
@clipstone
@clipstone Жыл бұрын
@@YesterdaysPapers So you MAKE music as well?
@paulnolan4971
@paulnolan4971 Жыл бұрын
Andrew hocks so many 'Loogies' lol
@brgreg8725
@brgreg8725 Жыл бұрын
Wonder what his review of Bittersweet Symphony by the Verve. Oh yeah that’s right
@YesterdaysPapers
@YesterdaysPapers Жыл бұрын
Andrew: "Oh, I produced that!".
@brgreg8725
@brgreg8725 Жыл бұрын
@@YesterdaysPapers the sad thing is nobody would’ve ever known “the Royal Orchestral” version of “The Last Time” without that song
@ricardoediza2690
@ricardoediza2690 Жыл бұрын
Yo guys, just a question, who was the better Stones producer, Andrew or Jimmy?
@YesterdaysPapers
@YesterdaysPapers Жыл бұрын
Jimmy Miller, no doubt. But I like Oldham's productions as well.
@gemspa73
@gemspa73 Жыл бұрын
Oldham was a chancer when it came to production. Jimmy Miller was the real deal.
@zvezdahouseofrock1784
@zvezdahouseofrock1784 Жыл бұрын
@@YesterdaysPapers Oldham's productions we really the production of studio engineers who were working with Stones. Like Dave Hassinger.
@YesterdaysPapers
@YesterdaysPapers Жыл бұрын
@@zvezdahouseofrock1784 Yep, and Glyn Johns.
@3rdmm
@3rdmm Жыл бұрын
Oh wow, 58 years ago. But how isn't there a Beatles single in the Top 50?
@PAULLONDEN
@PAULLONDEN Жыл бұрын
Although the Shapiro track was rubbish . Oldham being a producer himself should know that Norrie Paramor deserves respect for his great "widescreen" Cliff and Shadows productions.
@ajvonline
@ajvonline Жыл бұрын
What an earful poor Andrew got. Is it good or bad that he had nowhere to run?
@thewkovacs316
@thewkovacs316 Жыл бұрын
they clearly gave him the worst tracks of the week to review because they knew it would be hilarious
@hifijohn
@hifijohn Жыл бұрын
3:35 looks like Paul McCartney on the left.
@seanconlon2408
@seanconlon2408 Жыл бұрын
@@sg-yq8pm Couple of weeks actually. Ringo was sick and Epstein didn't want to cancel any bookings.
@brucemarshall3446
@brucemarshall3446 Жыл бұрын
One of the biggest differences between British and American bands of that era is the role managers played. US groups pretty much managed themselves; they created their own look and sound. Managers mainly handled finances and bookings. The Beatles, Rolling Stones , The Who etc.might never have achieved their level of success without Epstein , Oldham and Lambert. Outside of Elvis , I can't think of a major US manager ( I exclude the teen idols, on both continents, who were mainly creations by promoters). AO was still a teenager when he took over The Stones!
@ndogg20
@ndogg20 Жыл бұрын
The Fairies in 1965 were just a couple of years ahead of their time or maybe decades. That bombastic guitar jamming could easily fit in with the upcoming Acid Rock of 67, the Heavy Metal soon to follow or with that look and sound could fit in with any CBGB Punk band. Yet Andrew was right, while they were ahead of their time, they would be awful in any era.
@YesterdaysPapers
@YesterdaysPapers Жыл бұрын
I like that single but they sounded like they were copying The Pretty Things. Ironically enough, their drummer Twink joined the Pretty Things later in 1967.
@KeizerHedorah
@KeizerHedorah Жыл бұрын
Andrew Oldham > Andrew Newham 💯
@delbertstringbreaker7686
@delbertstringbreaker7686 Жыл бұрын
Good to hear Saturday Club mentioned again as it hadn't crossed my mind for decades - probably for the reason Andrew alluded to - namely 85% of the programme was rubbish!
@maurice8607
@maurice8607 Жыл бұрын
How on earth can Andrew hate Nowhere to Run? Incredible. And the Fairies? Crazy. Maybe they were too Stones sounding. I don't know. Certainly sounded dead ringers for the Pretty Things.
@YesterdaysPapers
@YesterdaysPapers Жыл бұрын
Yeah, that song sounds a lot like what the Pretty Things were doing at the time.
@davidpanzer1166
@davidpanzer1166 Жыл бұрын
And it was the basis for Satisfaction. Almost direct copy except for the fuzz tone
@michaeldunne3379
@michaeldunne3379 8 ай бұрын
Don’t beat about the bush, Andrew, tell us what you really think.
@sashamoghilla2919
@sashamoghilla2919 Жыл бұрын
It was kinky Kinks times, but they didn't get Andrew to listen to them then. :)
@grokeffer6226
@grokeffer6226 Жыл бұрын
There were some good songs on the charts that week (Donovan, Yardbirds, Kinks, Hollies, Seekers, Animals, etc.), but the songs they gave him to review really weren't that good.
@jeffmcdonald9004
@jeffmcdonald9004 Жыл бұрын
Nowhere to Run? Andrew?
@jean-marcknight8816
@jean-marcknight8816 Жыл бұрын
Andrew Oldham forgot he produced Congratulations, B side of Time Is On My Side a few month before. Listening to both versions shows you the abysmal pit between his work and that lousy one (a sin 😂🤣😂) Btw: nice take on Out Of Time
@John_Fugazzi
@John_Fugazzi Жыл бұрын
March of 1965 was a great time for music. It's a shame they couldn't find better records for Oldham. With his producer's sense he would be very critical, but really, why make him judge "Leader of the Laundromat"?
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