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Art's Gallery

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フォーマット CDアルバム
発売日 2025年03月28日
国内/輸入 輸入(イギリス盤)
レーベルTop Sounds
構成数 1
パッケージ仕様 -
規格品番 TSSCD007
SKU 5051078955827

構成数 : 1枚
合計収録時間 : 00:00:00
The Artwoods' only album was an enjoyable mixture of club-oriented soul, R&B, and jazz with a strong organ spice, although it found them falling seriously behind their contemporaries in the British R&B scene in a crucial respect. Not one of the dozen tracks was a group original, and their vocal and interpretive ability was not so strong as to make that shortfall an irrelevance. Still, it did give them a chance to stretch into some jazzy workouts and rave-ups that probably couldn't have been contained on 45s, particularly the swinging cover of "Walk on the Wild Side" (with excellent jazz organ by Jon Lord); Allen Toussaint's "Can You Hear Me," with an arrangement reminiscent of the Spencer Davis Group; and Bobby Bland's "Don't Cry No More," one of their best R&B covers. Once a plum British Invasion rarity, the LP has been reissued on CD by Repertoire and doubled in length with the addition of 14 bonus tracks, including most of their non-LP singles and all four songs from their rare 1966 EP Jazz in Jeans. That EP and their two post-Decca 1967 singles (also present on the disc) haven't been reissued elsewhere, and while this material isn't up to their best recorded output and is occasionally lame, there are some good moments among those rarities, such as the 1967 single "What Shall I Do" and the moody jazz-blues organ instrumental "Our Man Flint" (from Jazz in Jeans). It doesn't quite stand as the complete work of this minor British R&B/rock band, as it's missing four songs that only appeared on singles, including their very best track, 1965's "Oh My Love." For that reason, the Edsel best-of LP 100 Oxford Street still remains the best introduction to the band. And if you already have that LP and this CD, you don't quite have every last thing the Artwoods recorded, as the 1966 B-side "Molly Anderson's Cookery Book" doesn't appear on either of those releases. ~ Richie Unterberger

  1. 1.[CDアルバム]
    1. 1.
      GEORGE MELLY introduces the ARTWOODS
    2. 2.
      WORK, WORK, WORK (Naomi Neville)
    3. 3.
      OH MY LOVE (Terry Fox, Brian Smith)
    4. 4.
      OUT OF SIGHT (Ted Wright)
    5. 5.
      I AIN'T GOT NOTHING BUT THE BLUES (Duke Ellington, Don George)
    6. 6.
      I'VE GOT A WOMAN (Ray Charles)
    7. 7.
      SHE KNOWS WHAT TO DO (Gump)
    8. 8.
      SMACK DAB IN THE MIDDLE (Charles Calhoun)
    9. 9.
      THAT HEALIN' FEELIN' (Les McCann)
    10. 10.
      BRIAN MATTHEW reads a request
    11. 11.
      COMING HOME BABY (Tucker, Dorough)
    12. 12.
      BLACK MOUNTAIN BLUES (J.C Johnson)
    13. 13.
      HOW LONG, HOW LONG BLUES (Leroy Carr, Scrapper Blackwell)
    14. 14.
      OH MY LOVE (Terry Fox, Brian Smith)
    15. 15.
      DON'T CRY NO MORE (Malone)
    16. 16.
      GEORGE MELLY ends the programme

作品の情報

メイン
アーティスト: The Artwoods

オリジナル発売日:1966年

商品の紹介

60年代BBC音源集がCDリリース!

オルガンにのちDEEP PURPLEのJON LORD、ドラムスにBLUESBREAKERSほかのKEEF HARTLEYの強烈コンビが参加、極めつけにRON WOODの実兄にしてBLUES INCORPORATED周辺でも活動していたART WOODSのダミ声でもってブイブイ・ブリブリ言わせていた英国きってのヒップなオリジナル・モッド・R&BバンドTHE ARTWOODS。

65年3月13日のSATURDAY CLUB音源、65年4月19日のHOLIDAY POP音源、66年1月8日のJAZZ BEAT音源のBBCに残された3回の番組からのトラックをコンパイル。アップビートなジャズ"THAT HEALIN' FEELIN"や"SMACK DAB IN THE MIDDLE"に、スロウ・バーンなブルース"HOW LONG, HOW LONG BLUES"や"BLACK MOUNTAIN BLUES"、ソウルフル・グルーヴァー"OUT OF SIGHT"に"I GOT A WOMAN"、ピュア・モッドな"COMIN' HOME BABY"などなど、クールに熱い全13曲を収録しています。

24ページ・ブックレット。
発売・販売元 提供資料(2025/03/25)

The Artwoods' only album was an enjoyable mixture of club-oriented soul, R&B, and jazz with a strong organ spice, although it found them falling seriously behind their contemporaries in the British R&B scene in a crucial respect. Not one of the dozen tracks was a group original, and their vocal and interpretive ability was not so strong as to make that shortfall an irrelevance. Still, it did give them a chance to stretch into some jazzy workouts and rave-ups that probably couldn't have been contained on 45s, particularly the swinging cover of "Walk on the Wild Side" (with excellent jazz organ by Jon Lord); Allen Toussaint's "Can You Hear Me," with an arrangement reminiscent of the Spencer Davis Group; and Bobby Bland's "Don't Cry No More," one of their best R&B covers. Once a plum British Invasion rarity, the LP has been reissued on CD by Repertoire and doubled in length with the addition of 14 bonus tracks, including most of their non-LP singles and all four songs from their rare 1966 EP Jazz in Jeans. That EP and their two post-Decca 1967 singles (also present on the disc) haven't been reissued elsewhere, and while this material isn't up to their best recorded output and is occasionally lame, there are some good moments among those rarities, such as the 1967 single "What Shall I Do" and the moody jazz-blues organ instrumental "Our Man Flint" (from Jazz in Jeans). It doesn't quite stand as the complete work of this minor British R&B/rock band, as it's missing four songs that only appeared on singles, including their very best track, 1965's "Oh My Love." For that reason, the Edsel best-of LP 100 Oxford Street still remains the best introduction to the band. And if you already have that LP and this CD, you don't quite have every last thing the Artwoods recorded, as the 1966 B-side "Molly Anderson's Cookery Book" doesn't appear on either of those releases. ~ Richie Unterberger|
Rovi

The Artwoods' only album was an enjoyable mixture of club-oriented soul, R&B, and jazz with a strong organ spice, although it found them falling seriously behind their contemporaries in the British R&B scene in a crucial respect. Not one of the dozen tracks was a group original, and their vocal and interpretive ability was not so strong as to make that shortfall an irrelevance. Still, it did give them a chance to stretch into some jazzy workouts and rave-ups that probably couldn't have been contained on 45s, particularly the swinging cover of "Walk on the Wild Side" (with excellent jazz organ by Jon Lord); Allen Toussaint's "Can You Hear Me," with an arrangement reminiscent of the Spencer Davis Group; and Bobby Bland's "Don't Cry No More," one of their best R&B covers. Once a plum British Invasion rarity, the LP has been reissued on CD by Repertoire and doubled in length with the addition of 14 bonus tracks, including most of their non-LP singles and all four songs from their rare 1966 EP Jazz in Jeans. That EP and their two post-Decca 1967 singles (also present on the disc) haven't been reissued elsewhere, and while this material isn't up to their best recorded output and is occasionally lame, there are some good moments among those rarities, such as the 1967 single "What Shall I Do" and the moody jazz-blues organ instrumental "Our Man Flint" (from Jazz in Jeans). It doesn't quite stand as the complete work of this minor British R&B/rock band, as it's missing four songs that only appeared on singles, including their very best track, 1965's "Oh My Love." For that reason, the Edsel best-of LP 100 Oxford Street still remains the best introduction to the band. And if you already have that LP and this CD, you don't quite have every last thing the Artwoods recorded, as the 1966 B-side "Molly Anderson's Cookery Book" doesn't appear on either of those releases. ~ Richie Unterberger
Rovi

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