SATURDAY MATINEE MUSIC VIDEO “Here Comes My Baby” by Davy Jones (Monkees) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oNUQKtFgHgY
#davyjones #monkees #catstevens #tremeloes #mavericks #loafy #raulmalo #pparnold #davidalexander #johnnyjblair #skipkline #timbreon #jonking #avivamaloney #patrickstewart #music #britishinvasion #poprock #singersongwriter #markclarke #felipetorres
Five by Five is the second EP by the Rolling Stones and was released in 1964. Captured during a prolific spurt of recording activity at Chess Studios in Chicago that June, Five by Five was released that August in the UK shortly after their debut album, The Rolling Stones, had appeared. The title of Five by Five is a play on words—five tracks recorded by a band with five members.
In his book The Rolling Stones: An Illustrated History, British rock critic Roy Carr wrote that "along with the Beatles' Long Tall Sally four-tracker, 5 X 5 is unquestionably the first and last great EP." - Wikipedia
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W5MigxZaYYo&list=RDW5MigxZaYYo&start_radio=1
#RollingStones #Mod #Blues #BritishBeat #BritishInvasion #EP #Music #ChessStudios
Something Else from the Move is a five-track live EP by the English pop band the Move, released on 21 June 1968 through Regal Zonophone. The Move established themselves with a series of singles that reached the top-five in the UK singles chart, generating hype for an album. After rumours about a live LP began circulating, the Move's manager Tony Secunda pitched an idea about recording an EP of live performances at the Marquee Club in central London.
Reflecting the Move's setlist on stage, Something Else from the Move is exclusively made up of covers of songs by contemporary pop bands such as Love and 1950s singers such as Eddie Cochran. The EP has an eclectic blend between rockabilly and psychedelic music. - Wikipedia
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2Fl065L5lSA&list=RD2Fl065L5lSA&start_radio=1
#TheMove #TheByrds #Psychedelia #EddieCochran #Music #Beat #Mod #BritishInvasion #SpookyTooth #JerryLeeLewis
Emotions is the third album by the English rock group The Pretty Things, released in 1967.
Emotions Review by Matthew Greenwald
The Pretty Things were one of the most underrated rhythm & blues bands to come out of the mid-60's British rock explosion. So well-loved by Brits, they were often thought of in the same breath as The Rolling Stones. And, like a lot of great rhythm & blues based groups to come put of England, they stepped somewhat uneasily into the precarious psychedelic music explosion. However, in all fairness, The Pretty Things did come up with a pretty fine and original album, Emotions. Superbly well-orchestrated (especially the gorgeous "The Sun," one of the album's standouts), The Pretty Things didn't lose sight of their R&B leanings, as tracks such as "There Will Never Be Another Day" show.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=K_lYqTA-lj0&list=RDK_lYqTA-lj0&start_radio=1
#ThePrettyThings #Mod #Beat #Psychedelia #Music #BritishInvasion #1967inmusic
Get the Picture? was recorded quickly as a follow-up to Pretty Things' self-titled debut album. Jimmy Page cowrote the album's opening song "You Don’t Believe Me".
AllMusic wrote that Get the Picture? was "a record that's just a few notches short of Rolling Stones level in the charisma department" and that "Pretty Things approach Rolling Stones' territory, and even in their off moments, they're flying at the same level as the Kinks' album tracks." Uncut, in a review of the band's studio albums box set, said that the album "showed they were eager to grow". - Wikipedia
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HbdsJO1fLMA&list=RDHbdsJO1fLMA&start_radio=1
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