Rock/Pop
LPレコード

Out Of The Shadows

0.0

販売価格

¥
2,890
税込
還元ポイント

廃盤

在庫状況 について

フォーマット LPレコード
発売日 2017年03月10日
国内/輸入 輸入
レーベルWax Time
構成数 1
パッケージ仕様 -
規格品番 772097
SKU 8436542019538

構成数 : 1枚
合計収録時間 : 00:00:00
エディション : Reissue

  1. 1.[LPレコード]
    1. 1.
      The Rumble

      アーティスト: The Shadows

    2. 2.
      The Bandit

      アーティスト: The Shadows

    3. 3.
      Cosy

      アーティスト: The Shadows

    4. 4.
      1861

      アーティスト: The Shadows

    5. 5.
      Perfidia

      アーティスト: The Shadows

    6. 6.
      Little 'B'

      アーティスト: The Shadows

    7. 7.
      Mustang

      アーティスト: The Shadows

    8. 8.
      Bo Diddley

      アーティスト: The Shadows

    9. 9.
      South of the Border

      アーティスト: The Shadows

    10. 10.
      Spring Is Nearly Here

      アーティスト: The Shadows

    11. 11.
      Are They All Like You?

      アーティスト: The Shadows

    12. 12.
      Tales of a Raggy Tramline

      アーティスト: The Shadows

    13. 13.
      Some Are Lonely

      アーティスト: The Shadows

    14. 14.
      Kinda Cool

      アーティスト: The Shadows

    15. 15.
      Shotgun

      アーティスト: The Shadows

作品の情報

メイン
アーティスト: The Shadows

オリジナル発売日:1962年

商品の紹介

The Shadows' second album is one of the group's better efforts, though not a very hard-rocking one. By this time, the Shadows were moving in a direction similar to that of Cliff Richard, aiming for a wider, more mature audience that was attuned to more than rock & roll. Much of what's here, including "Perfidia," "Spring Is Nearly Here," and "Some Are Lonely," could pass for adult pop music more easily than rock & roll, though there is some of that, what with numbers like "The Rumble," "Tails of a Raggy Tramline" (a "Telstar"-like instrumental), the Hank Marvin-Bruce Welch "Kinda Cool," and Brian Bennett's "Little 'B'" (a great drum showcase that doesn't wear out its welcome at all). That material is augmented by the presence of several country & western-style (!) numbers, by way of the Kennedy-Carr songwriting team ("The Bandit," "South of the Border") and the group's own composition efforts, most notably "1861," which would have been a great theme for a Western television series of the era -- the latter showcases lead guitarist Marvin's precise and elegant picking. This repertory seems to have been the group's and producer Norrie Paramor's attempt to tap into the folk music boom of the period, and "The Bandit" is a moment of genius, with the group harmonizing almost like the Kingston Trio. Regardless of the idiom in which they're working, the playing is lean, tight, and melodic, displaying the same qualities that the group brought to Cliff Richard's recordings during the first half-decade of his career. Marvin and Welch play their guitars like they're the same person, and Bennett proves himself perhaps the best full-time band drummer in England at the time, providing tasteful fills and little percussion embellishments that were beyond the ability of most rock & roll drummers at the time, and outdoing himself on "Little 'B'." The one grotesquely weak moment here is the cover of "Bo Diddley" -- the band should have known better than to attempt it, and Paramor, if he understood rock & roll at all, should have declined to release it, instead giving the world what has to be the wimpiest version one is ever likely to hear. There are, indeed, a few too many soft instrumental numbers breaking up the rock & roll that does work, but the album holds up. ~ Bruce Eder
Rovi

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