Sunshine Psych/Sunshine Pop

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OK, I got mailed a link to the 'old' FD message board, but it's a bit hard to navigate, so I've just combed it for the recommendations I was talking about upthread, and here they are. Some things already mentioned by others.

LPs
Jeffrey Comanor: Sure Hope You Like It
OST "Midnight Cowboy"
Stu Phillips: OST "Follow Me" (esp. 'Thru spray colored glasses' by Dino, Desi & Billy)
Stu Phillips: OST "Beyond The Valley Of The Dolls"
Margo Guryan: Take A Picture
Wendy & Bonnie: Genesis
5th Dimension: Magic Garden
The Millennium: Begin
Sagittarius: Present Tense; Blue Marble
Claudine Longet: Colors
Spanky & Our Gang: Like To Get To Know You
The Cowsills: We Can Fly
Eternity's Children: s/t
Chad & Jeremy: Distant Shores
Paul Williams: Someday Man

other artists
Alan Copeland Singers (esp. a surreal arrangement of 'Norwegian Wood' to a backing track of the 'Mission Impossible' theme)
The Lettermen
Roger Nichols & the Small Circle of Friends
Singers' Unlimited
The Carnivals
The Real Group
Electric Prunes / David Axelrod

Jeff W, Monday, 25 November 2002 18:34 (twenty-three years ago)

Great list Jeff,all the classics,nice to see Stu Phillips''Follow Me'Soundtrack get a mention.I got a copy of the master from the man himself,sounds amazing.I also got a 3CD volume of his work which has some great softpop on it.The Match's version of 'Thru Spray Coloured Glasses'is as good if not better than Dino,Desi & Billy's.

Paul R (paul R), Monday, 25 November 2002 19:05 (twenty-three years ago)

I recommend getting some records with covers like this:

The Love Generation - including "Groovy Summertime"

http://franklarosa.com/ThumbnailServlet?image=/vinyl/BigImg/lovegeneration.jpg&width=350&smooth=1

Curt (cgould), Monday, 25 November 2002 21:59 (twenty-three years ago)

Tom Bahler ROCKS!

Paul R (paul R), Monday, 25 November 2002 22:09 (twenty-three years ago)

Thanks everyone - I'll see what I can find!

Dr. C (Dr. C), Tuesday, 26 November 2002 10:05 (twenty-three years ago)

Fritz! I dreamed about the Free Design last night! Since I have no fear about pushing the outer limits of creepiness, I have to hear them now.

Sean (Sean), Tuesday, 26 November 2002 16:16 (twenty-three years ago)

Damn, this thread was made for me and I missed it. I agree with most of the recommendations above, get the Free Design comps on Siesta, unless you want to shell out $$ for the Japanese CD reissues or original LPs. The siesta comps have some nice design too. Get the Millenium. Get the Joey Stec album while you are at it (not sunshine pop but a great record, procduced by jimmy miller, pop tones reissue stil available I'm sure). Definitely get the Margo Guryan album (and the 25 Demos CD is decent too if you like the album). You would think you should get the Sunshine Company albums, but I find them a bit incosistent actually, I imagine the new comp on rev-ola is good though. There is some other good looking rev-ola stuff that I have yet to hear. As for the Assocaiation, avoid the ubiquitous Greatest Hits budget CD (bad sound) and maybe give the new 2 disc compilation a try. Finally, it starts to cross into bubblegum territory, but The Clique, Yellow Balloon, and Tommy Roe are all good too. Oh yeah, the three Andy Kim records on Steed are awesome, but somewhat hard to find. Someone should re-issue them but if you want, I can burn a CDR. You can find info on all this stuff on AMG, but email me if you have any questions...

g (graysonlane), Tuesday, 26 November 2002 16:50 (twenty-three years ago)

I LIKE the Free Design's subtle spookiness the same way I liked the Langley Schools Music Project.

mike a (mike a), Tuesday, 26 November 2002 17:14 (twenty-three years ago)

I'm frightened by the Lettermen.

Curt (cgould), Tuesday, 26 November 2002 19:44 (twenty-three years ago)

Also to be recommended: the Thomas & Richard Frost (re)release just out on Revola is simply the best music I've heard all year. Imagine if the Bee Gees (late-60s model) had been more pop-driven, less ballad-centric & you've just about got it. Keening harmonies, sumptuous arrangements, melodies melodies melodies. You'll love it.

In addition to those mentioned by others: The Smoke LP on Tower (a Michael Lloyd (WCPAExpBand) side project); Heaven Bound with Tony Scotti; Fifth Dimension's The Magic Garden; Harmony Grass-This Is Us; The Cyrkle-Neon; Chad & Jeremy-The Ark & 3 In The Attic soundtrack; The Groop-well, anything really.

Another vote for: Paul Williams's 1st, Roger Nichols SCOFriends, Eternity's Children's 1st, Millennium's Begin (tho most of the demos CDs can be passed over), Free Design Sing For Very Important People, The Association-Birthday & Greatest Hits.

Greatest 45 of the whole genre: Tell Someone You Love Them by Dino, Desi & Billy.

harvey williams, Tuesday, 26 November 2002 20:48 (twenty-three years ago)

Wow! Good stuff Harvey - I'll certainly lookout for the Frosts thing - I saw it reviewed, but (sorry Doom-e!) I didn't take much notice because it was on Rev-Ola.

Dr. C (Dr. C), Tuesday, 26 November 2002 20:54 (twenty-three years ago)

I woke up dreaming that I had to put pinecones on top of my alarm clock to stop it from buzzing! No Free Design angle there, but I thought you'd like to know.

Fritz Wollner (Fritz), Tuesday, 26 November 2002 21:44 (twenty-three years ago)

I just came across a compilation on Soulseek, Alan Zweig's Mr. Dieingly Sad - US Psychedelic & Bubblegum 60s Collection. It appears to be MP3 only. In my book, not much of it is either psych or bubblegum. I would call it a cross between Sunshine Pop and Now Sounds, suggestive of dorky 'Up With People' type kids in matching sweaters tellin' the world how swingin' it is. Rather disturbing and fascinating, and redeemed by some truly beautiful arrangements.

Tracklist:

1. Critters - Mr. Dieingly Sad
2. Cyrkle - How Can I Leave Her
3. Sunrays - A Little Dog and His Boy
4. Match - Don't Take Your Time
5. Love Generation - Not Be Found
6. Elephant Candy - Close to Carmel
7. Cowsills - A Time for Remembrance
8. Sugar Shoppe - Privilege
9. Tokens - It's a Happening World
10. Fifth Dimension - Pattern People
11. American Breed - Before and After
12. Happenings - I Believe in Nothing
13. Brooklyn Bridge - Minstral Sunday
14. Bergen White - Look at Me
15. Peppermint Rainbow - I'll Be There
16. Association - Everything That Touches You
17. Hardtimes - Under the Sunlight
18. Blades of Grass - Happy
19. Orpheus - I've Never Seen a Love Like This
20. Harper's Bizarre - Come Love
21. First Edition - If I Could Change
22. Jay and the American - Something in My Eye
23. Thee Prophets - They Call Her Sorrow
24. Love Generation - Hey Look Around
25. Cowsills - Thinking 'Bout the Other Side
26. Association - The Time It Is Today
27. Match - Spray Colored Glasses

Curt (cgould), Wednesday, 4 December 2002 17:10 (twenty-three years ago)

revola is releasing the love generation. dr c there is a cool thread on i love everything with tim hopkins and i talking about revola and sunshine pop.

and there is a competition to win sunshine pop albums on www.revola.co.uk!

i heart revola.

doom-e, Wednesday, 4 December 2002 17:14 (twenty-three years ago)

(ILX is shortly to be renamed i love revola, incidentally)

Jeff W, Wednesday, 4 December 2002 17:17 (twenty-three years ago)

Alan Zweig is a collector who is on a private CD mail ring that I was on for a while. He made a film called "Vinyl" which is about collectors and is supposed to be good - it's for sale on the web if you're interested. Anyway, those comps circulated on the ring I was on and I think I've got them on tape somewhere. He just has tons and tons of that stuff and made several of those comps for us.

Kerry (dymaxia), Wednesday, 4 December 2002 17:56 (twenty-three years ago)

one year passes...
tell me about super stocks

*@*.* (gareth), Friday, 12 November 2004 20:16 (twenty-one years ago)

three months pass...
has anyone heard the Turn of the Century album?

charltonlido (gareth), Wednesday, 2 March 2005 10:49 (twenty-one years ago)

What is it?

Naive Teen Idol (Naive Teen Idol), Wednesday, 2 March 2005 17:36 (twenty-one years ago)

sorry to follow a question with a question, but does anyone have the Rhino Handmade thing? Either of them.

Ken L (Ken L), Wednesday, 2 March 2005 18:23 (twenty-one years ago)

im not sure what it is, but someone mentioned it the other day, when i was out. i think its from 1970

charltonlido (gareth), Wednesday, 2 March 2005 19:23 (twenty-one years ago)

Ken - yes I have Hallucinations. Absolutely fantastic! Worth the price for the WCPAEB, Glass Family and Next Exit tracks. I have shitloads of psych/freakbeat etc etc, but this album goes instantly into the top 5 best ever comps. I will have to get the other one asap.

Dr. C (Dr. C), Sunday, 6 March 2005 12:19 (twenty-one years ago)

The Sunshine Company, anyone?

zeus, Sunday, 6 March 2005 14:22 (twenty-one years ago)

I have both Hallucinations and Come to the Sunshine, and they're both good, although I'm not quite as ecstatic as Dr. C is over the former, highlights excepted. The sound quality, of course, is superb.

There's been a ton of new compilations and reissues in the 2-1/2 years since this thread left off, especially in the Sunshine Pop/Soft Pop vein. Anybody who goes weak-kneed for Boettcher and Nichols should get the Bergen White and Mark Eric reissues on Rev Ola. I've been disappointed by much of the Soft Sounds for Gentle People series, but about half of Vol. 2 is fairly breathtaking.

How about any of these comps, anybody:
Piccadilly Sunshine
Spinning Wheel
Colour Me Pop
Pop In

Curt (cgould), Sunday, 6 March 2005 20:53 (twenty-one years ago)

So far Hallucinations is OK, but I'm not digging it nearly as much as the regular 4-disc Nuggets and Nuggets II.

Ken L (Ken L), Thursday, 17 March 2005 01:05 (twenty-one years ago)

i've put a shitload of sunshine psych mp3s up here


www.poptones.co.uk/webcast.htm

doomie x, Thursday, 17 March 2005 11:38 (twenty-one years ago)

doomie, that chris lucey, is he related in some way to the groop? not the midnight cowboy groop, but the groop that released jet song? it all seems a bit foggy and unclear

charltonlido (gareth), Thursday, 17 March 2005 12:54 (twenty-one years ago)

flowerpot men - peace album/past imperfect

john carter's lost '69/'70 masterpieces. rueful anti-war sunset psych with vox pop interviews in between tracks. like if the beach boys had done an explicit anti-vietnam record (as opposed to "student demonstration time").

Marcello Carlin (nostudium), Thursday, 17 March 2005 13:11 (twenty-one years ago)

no relation gareth ... he was just an oddball weirdo that was hyped to be the next arthur lee but had a tendancy to jump out of windows...

doomie x, Thursday, 17 March 2005 16:52 (twenty-one years ago)

one month passes...
still having no luck tracking down that stu phillips sndtrk to follow me

charltonlido (gareth), Wednesday, 4 May 2005 21:46 (twenty-one years ago)

slightly off topic but has anyone heard the Afternoon Tea Music compilations that came out(briefly) a couple years ago? Blows the "Soft Sounds" and even much of the Cafe Apres-Midi comps away; it draws from more than sunshine pop(lots of bossa nova, samba, lite jazz vocal, 60's french stuff, even a little latter day twee/cocktail pop) it's excellently curated without much regard for "representativeness".

tremendoid (tremendoid), Wednesday, 4 May 2005 22:30 (twenty-one years ago)

two months pass...
May I suggest a few more additions to the all of the already mentioned suggestions. Try "Spiced With Brasil" (Nancy Ames... Epic Records 1968)... The Doodletwon Pipers two albums, also on Epic Records (1968)... James Darren's "Love Among the Young" (Colpix Records and now Rhino(Collectible). And thanks for the "Follow Me" mention.

Stu Phillips

Stu Phillips, Thursday, 21 July 2005 14:29 (twenty years ago)

Man, have I been waiting for the opportunity to post these lists, courtesy Dave Bash over at Spectropop:

#1 Album-Chris & Peter Allen (Mercury, 1968)
The American Revolution-The American Revolution (Flick Disc, 1968)
A Symphony For Susan-The Arbors* (Date, 1967)
The Arbors Sing Valley Of The Dolls-The Arbors (Date, 1967)
I Can't Quit Her/The Letter-The Arbors (Date, 1969)
Are Not For Smoking-The Blades Of Grass (Jubilee, 1968)
Bound To Happen-Cashman, Pistilli, and West (ABC, 1968)
Chamaeleon Church-Chamaeleon Church (MGM, 1968)
The Cambridge Concept of Timothy Clover-Timothy Clover (Tower, 1968)
Rain And Shine-The Canterbury Music Festival (B.T. Puppy, 196?)
Peter Cofield-Peter Cofield (Coral, 1968)
The Collage-The Collage (Smash, 1967)
Colours-Colours (Dot, 1968)
We Can Fly-The Cowsills (MGM, 1967)
Captain Sad And His Ship Of Fools-The Cowsills (MGM, 1968)
II X II-The Cowsills (MGM, 1969)
Touch 'N Go With The Critters-The Critters (Project 3, 1968)
Daughers Of Albion-Daughters Of Albion (Fontana, 1968)
So Good-Don And The Goodtimes (Epic, 1967)
Edwards Hand-Edwards Hand (GRT, 1968)
Miss Butters-The Family Tree (RCA, 1969)
The Magic Garden-The Fifth Dimension (Soul City, 1967)
Five Man Electrical Band-Five Man Electrical Band (Capitol, 1968)
Elephant Candy-The Fun and Games (UNI, 1969)
Color Blind-The Glitterhouse (Dynovoice, 1968)
The Gordian Knot-The Gordian Knot (Verve, 1968)
Take A Picture-Margo Guryan (Bell, 1968)*
Blew Mind-The Hard Times (World Pacific, 1968)
Down To Middle Earth-The Hobbits (Decca, 1967)
Tic Tac Toe-The Jackpots (Sonet Svenska, 1967)
Jack In The Box-The Jackpots (Sonet Svenska, 1968)
Love Generation-The Love Generation (Imperial, 1967)
A Generation of Love-The Love Generation (Imperial, 1968)
Montage-The Love Generation (Imperial, 1969)
A Midsummer's Day Dream-Marc Eric (Revue, 196?)
Marshmallow Way-Marshmallow Way (United Artists, 1968)
Montage-Montage (Laurie, 1968)
Without Earth-The Moon (Imperial, 1968)
Mortimer-Mortimer (Phillips, 1968)
October Country-October Country (Epic, 1967)
Orange Colored Sky-Orange Colored Sky (UNI, 1968)
Will You Be Staying After Sunday-The Peppermint Rainbow (Decca, 1969)
Peppermint Trolley Company-Peppermint Trolley Company (Acta, 1968)
Hot, Cold, & Custard-Peter & Gordon (Capitol, 1968)
Procession-Procession (Smash, 1969)
Queen Anne's Lace-Queen Anne's Lace (Coral, 1968)
It's Happening-The Red Squares (Columbia Denmark, 1967)
The Robbs-The Robbs (Mercury, 1967)
It's Now Winter's Day-Tommy Roe (ABC, 1967)
Phantasy-Tommy Roe (ABC, 1967)
The Rose Garden-The Rose Garden (ATCO, 1968)
The Blue Marble-Sagittarius (Together, 1969)
The Smoke-The Smoke (Sidewalk, 1968)
Divided We Stand-The Split Level (Dot, 1967)
Captain Nemo-The Sundowners (Decca, 1968)
Basic Magnetism-Teddy & The Pandas (Tower, 1968)
Island In The Sky-The Tuneful Trolley (Capitol, 1968)
Twinn Connexion-Twinn Connexion (Decca, 1968)
For Women Only-Bergen White (SSS International, 1969)
Hair-Zen (Phillips Holland, 1969)
And Along Comes The Association-The Association (Warner Brothers, Japan)
Renaissance-The Association (Warner Brothers, Japan)
Insight Out-The Association (Warner Brothers, Japan)
Birthday-The Associaton (Warner Brothers, Japan)
This Is Us-Harmony Grass (EM Records, Japan)
Around Grapefruit-Grapefruit (Repertoire Records, Germany)
The Yellow Balloon-The Yellow Balloon (Sundazed, US)
Save For A Rainy Day-Jan & Dean (Sundazed, US)
The Cowsills-The Cowsills (Razor & Tie, US)
You're A Very Lovely Woman/Live-The Merry Go Round (A&M, Japan)
Give Me, Take You-Duncan Browne (Sony Special Products, US)
Would You Believe-Billy Nicholls (Sequel, UK)
Present Tense-Sagittarius (Sundazed, US)
Begin-The Millennium (Revola, UK)
Preparing For The Millennium-The Ballroom (Revola, UK)
Revelations/Attacking The Straw Man-New Colony Six (Listed as "Best Of
New Colony Six", but is in fact their two proper albums on
Mercury...Mercury,
Japan)
Would You Believe-The Hollies (EMI, UK)
For Certain Because-The Hollies (EMI, UK)
Evolution-The Hollies (EMI, UK)
Butterfly-The Hollies (EMI, UK)
The Parade-The Parade (A&M, Japan)
Walk Away Renee-The Left Banke (Mercury, Japan)
Odessey & Oracle-The Zombies (Big Beat, UK)
Now That Everything's Been Said-The City (Epic, US)
Ellie Greenwich Composes, Produces, and Sings (Raven, Australia)
Feelin' Groovy-Harper's Bizarre (Warner Brothers, Japan)
Anything Goes-Harper's Bizarre (Warner Brothers, Japan)
The Secret Life Of Harper's Bizarre-Harper's Bizarre (Warner Brothers,
Japan)
Kites Are Fun-The Free Design (Teichiku, Japan)
You Could Be Born Again-The Free Design (Teichiku, Japan)
Stars/Time/Bubbles/Love-The Free Design (Teichiku, Japan)
One By One-The Free Design (Teichiku, Japan)
Heaven/Earth-The Free Design (Teichiku, Japan)
Sing For Very Important People-The Free Design (Teichiku, Japan)
Spanky And Our Gang-Spanky And Our Gang (Vivid Sound, Japan)
Like To Get To Know You-Spanky And Our Gang (Vivid Sound, Japan)
Without Rhyme Or Reason-Spanky And Our Gang (Vivid Sound, Japan)
4-Harper's Bizarre (Warner Brothers, Japan)
The Clique-The Clique (Varese Sarabande, US)
All Strung Out-Nino Tempo & April Stevens (Varese Sarabande, US)
Bee Gees 1st-The Bee Gees (Polygram, US)
Horizontal-The Bee Gees (Polygram, US)
Idea-The Bee Gees (Polygram, US)
Salies Fforth..Plus-The Rainbow Ffolly (See For Miles, UK)
Outward Bown...Plus-The Alan Bown (See For Miles, UK)
The Pleasure Fair-The Pleasure Fair (Universal, Japan)
On-The 8th Day (Universal, Japan)
It's Been A Long, Long Time-The Hep Stars (Keystone Music, Japan)
Neon-The Cyrkle (Sony, Japan)
The World In A Sea Shell-The Strawberry Alarm Clock (Universal, Japan)
Wake Up, It's Tomorrow-The Strawberry Alarm Clock (Universal, Japan)
The World Of Oz-The World Of Oz (Si-Wan, Korea)


Compilations, Single Artists:

There's Gonna Be A Storm-The Left Banke (Polygram, US)
Sittin On A Fence (The Immediate Anthology)-The Twice As Much (Sequel, UK)
Colonized!-The Best Of New Colony Six (Rhino, US)
It's About Time-The Kit Kats (Jamie, US)
The Complete Roger Nichols & The Small Circle Of Friends (A&M, Japan)
Eternity's Children-Eternity's Children (Revola, UK)
The Sunshine Company-The Sunshine Company (Revola, UK)
Let's Go To San Francisco-The Flowerpot Men (Repertoire, Germany)
The Best Of The Cowsills-The Cowsills (Rebound, US)
Choir Practice-The Choir (Sundazed, US)
Anthology-The Critters (Taragon, US)
The Very Best Of-The Arbors (Taragon, US)
You've Got To Be Loved-The Montanas (Sequel, UK)
Flight Recorder-Pinkerton's Assorted Colours/Flying Machine (Sequel, UK)
Major League-The Ivy League (Sequel, UK)
Up, Up, And Away, The Definitive Collection-The 5th Dimension (Arista, US)
Back To The Story-The Idle Race (EMI, UK)
The Enfields/Friends Of The Family (Get Hip, US)
The Sun, The Wind, And Other Things (Collectables, US)
The Best Of Paul & Barry Ryan (Repertoire, US)

Compilations, Various Artists

The Melody Goes On, Vol. 1-3 (M&M, Japan)
Ripples, Vol. 1-4 (Sequel, UK)
Sunshine Days, Pop Classics Of The 60s Vol 1-5 (Varese Sarabande, US)
Melodies For You-Universal Soft Rock Vol 1 (Universal, Japan)
Morning Glory Days-Universal Soft Rock Vol 2 (Universal, Japan)
History Of American Pops, Vol 2 (Warner Brothers, Japan)

Sang Freud (jeff_s), Thursday, 21 July 2005 15:00 (twenty years ago)

> The Doodletown Pipers two albums...

Man, everything ties into a Simpsons episode:

Homer: We don't have anything in common.
[opens the record cabinet, with "Marge" and "Homer" sections]
Look at these records: Jim Nabors, Glen Campbell, the Doodletown
Pipers. Now look at her records! They stink!

Daniel Peterson (polkaholic), Thursday, 21 July 2005 17:51 (twenty years ago)

xpost to Stu -- are you really Stu Phillips? You produced all those records you mentioned, right? That is very, very cool.

Sang Freud (jeff_s), Thursday, 21 July 2005 19:09 (twenty years ago)

The Electric Flag were NOT sunshine pop, but "Groovin' Is Easy" sounds like an odd attempt to cash in on it. Buddy Miles' drums are a little too heavy, and the song itself is kinda brooding, but the title and production sounds like they're trying to sound like a subversive Cowsills or something. I seem to remember Flag guitarist Michael Bloomfield telling Rolling Stone at the time that he was specifically trying to target the Top 40 charts with this tune.

Rev. Hoodoo (Rev. Hoodoo), Friday, 22 July 2005 02:32 (twenty years ago)

All Hail Al Kooper & Mike Bloomfield!

SoHoLa (SoHoLa), Friday, 22 July 2005 03:08 (twenty years ago)

Even though Kooper wasn't a member of the Electric Flag (who I was talking about up above), he's cool with me - All Hail Kooper & Bloomfield!!!!

Rev. Hoodoo (Rev. Hoodoo), Friday, 22 July 2005 11:03 (twenty years ago)


It must be "autistic people post her entire music collection online day".

Or is it "let's re-live the nineties" day, because lord knows the nineties weren't awful enough the first time around.

crown victoria (dymaxia), Friday, 22 July 2005 16:07 (twenty years ago)

one month passes...
what a fantastic page

Thorben Petersen, Tuesday, 23 August 2005 14:28 (twenty years ago)

two months pass...
A heads up that the two Rhino Handmade CDs mentioned upthread have just been put out again by Warners with different titles* in standard jewel cases but a budget price. (Fopp has them both for £5 each!)

*e.g. the "Come To The Sunshine" one has been retitled "A Whole Lot of Rainbows" - seems to be the exact same track list tho'.

Jeff W (zebedee), Tuesday, 15 November 2005 19:59 (twenty years ago)

I just want to brag that I bought What Can The Matter Be/Evil Overshadows Joe by the Poppy Family this weekend in a 2nd hand shop in Gibsons, BC for $1. Best part is it's signed by both Terry and Susan Jacks.

everything, Tuesday, 15 November 2005 20:31 (twenty years ago)

that's so awesome! i love them.

carly (carly), Tuesday, 15 November 2005 20:38 (twenty years ago)

one year passes...
Stu Phillips posted on this thread

Do you like the Michele album? its a bit folkier/hippier than the softpop i like, but song to magic frog is nice

should i pick up the love generation's montage LP?

Storefront Church (688), Wednesday, 17 January 2007 09:31 (nineteen years ago)

i like the montage album. i don't know if you would love it though. it should be cheap.

scott seward (scott seward), Wednesday, 17 January 2007 12:17 (nineteen years ago)

do you own the chaemeleon church album, gareth? such a dreamy record. that list is pretty good up top. has some clunkers on it though. that timothy clover record is pretty clunky. same with the cashman, pistili, and west if its the one i'm thinking of.

scott seward (scott seward), Wednesday, 17 January 2007 12:22 (nineteen years ago)

well it has theme from how sweet it is, and a beautiful sleeve, just hope the rest of it is as good

Storefront Church (688), Wednesday, 17 January 2007 12:37 (nineteen years ago)

i've been enjoying those white whale singles comps that rev-ola put out. not everything is great, but still a pretty cool time-capsule.

vol 1:

Dalton And Montgomery - All At Once
The Brothers - The Girl’s Alright
The Clique - Soul Mates
Liz Damon’s Orient Express - You’re Falling In Love
Dalton And Montgomery - Tomorrow’s Women
Nino And April - You’ll Be Needin’ Me Baby
Lyme And Cybelle - Song #7/ Lyme And Cybelle - Write If You Get Work
The Everpesent Fullness - Darlin' You Can Count On Me
Laughing Gravy - Vegetables
Triste Janero - Rene De Marie
Triste Janero - In The Garden
The Committee - If It Weren’t For You
Sugar And Spice - Not To Return
Bittersweet - The Shadow Of You Love
The Dillards - One Too Many Mornings
Nino And April - The Habit Of Lovin’ You Baby
The Brothers - Love Story
Keith Colley - Enamorado
Dobie Gray - Do You Really Have A Heart
Horses - Freight Train
Matthew Moore Plus 4 Codyne
Matthew Moore Plus 4 You've Never Loved Before
Freddie Allen - We’ve Only Just Begun
The Hangtown Fry - The Quiet Side Of Love

vol.2

“Little Girl, Little Boy” - The Odyssey
“I’ll Be In” – The Answer
“Blackmail” - Dalton and Montgomery
“Superman (45 mix)” - The Clique
“Fine and Dandy (45 mix)” - Everpresent Fullness
“Why Do You Smile” - The Answer
“Goin' It Alone” - The Bears
“Work It Out That Way” - The Bears
“(It'll All Wash Away) With The Rain” - The Brothers
“Today Is Today” - The Brothers
“Out Of Nowhere” - Nino and April
“Break OF Dawn” - JK and Co.
“Little Children” - JK and Co.
“Make Me Laugh” - The Rainy Daze
“Space Walker” - The Space Walkers
“Just You Wait” - Walter Scott
“Honey, You Can Take It back” - Dobie Gray
“What A Way To Go” - Dobie Gray
“Beautiful People” - Kenny O'Dell
“Groovy Relationship” - Kenny O'Dell
“Cheyenne” – Horses
“Two Of Us” – Shake
“Christmas Is my Time Of Year” - The Christmas Spirit
“Will You Still Believe In Me?” - The Christmas Spirit
“The Room” - The New FBI Band

scott seward (scott seward), Wednesday, 17 January 2007 12:44 (nineteen years ago)

i havent heard any of those but it looks like my heart would be filled with a single ray of sunshine from each and every track

Storefront Church (688), Wednesday, 17 January 2007 12:54 (nineteen years ago)

This is WAY, WAY off the beaten path, but have you ever heard "Groovin' Is Easy" by the Electric Flag?

I know no band which counted Buddy Miles, Michael Bloomfield and Nick Gravenites as members should even REMOTELY be considered sunshine pop, but this track sounds like a hamfisted attempt at shooting for Spanky & Our Gang's crowd. The drums are heavier and the vocals sound a little too cynical, but otherwise, you can tell that the sunshine market is what they had in mind. Bloomfield even implicitly admitted, in Rolling Stone, that he was going for the flower-pop thing with this one (he said that since "groovin'" seemed to be the Top 40 catchword at the time it was recorded, in late '67 or early '68, he figured it would be a natural for the AM airwaves). It's on their A LONG TIME COMING album, and was the first single.

Rev. Hoodoo (Rev. Hoodoo), Wednesday, 17 January 2007 13:15 (nineteen years ago)

endlessmike and chocoreve have been posting a lot of pop psych stuff recently (the Pebbles series, among others.)

don weiner (don weiner), Friday, 19 January 2007 00:38 (nineteen years ago)

one month passes...
ok so the 4 Soft Sounds for Gentle People compilations,

...should i?

688, Friday, 2 March 2007 12:37 (nineteen years ago)

yes. as long as you can accept that they're not all kick-ass all the way through. soft sounds 4, which is probably easiest to get right now, is somewhat spotty but has a handful of excellent tunes.

if you can find the special all-dudes one they did called mystic males it's worth getting.

GOTT PUNCH II HAWKWINDZ, Friday, 2 March 2007 12:49 (nineteen years ago)

It's all about the Fading Yellow series... And the Pop-In comps too.

Saxby D. Elder, Friday, 2 March 2007 15:40 (nineteen years ago)

well, christ, I didn't mean to kill the thread, it's not ALL about them!

Saxby D. Elder, Saturday, 3 March 2007 04:57 (nineteen years ago)

Dana Gillespie's Foolish Seasons is, in the shallow digging I've done in this area, the best thing I've heard. Looking forward to finding some of this other stuff.

Devin King., Saturday, 3 March 2007 05:27 (nineteen years ago)

the Ripples series is really great too, I forgot that one...

Saxby D. Elder, Monday, 5 March 2007 04:32 (nineteen years ago)

The Tin Tin/Bee Gees connection was basically that Maurice Gibb produced both their albums. "Toast And Marmalade For Tea" came out as a single and was a big radio hit but didn't chart. I agree they deserve rediscovery, along with Sing Sisters Sing which Robin Gibb told Mojo he was going to "look into reissuing" five years ago...

Oh, and if it counts, the newly-reissued In A Beautiful Place by Catherine Howe (from 1971) is something of a sunshine marvel.

Marcello Carlin, Monday, 5 March 2007 13:30 (nineteen years ago)

"Toast And Marmalade For Tea" came out as a single and was a big radio hit but didn't chart

It charted pretty big in the U.S., believe it or not...

Saxby D. Elder, Monday, 5 March 2007 14:54 (nineteen years ago)

No, that's easy to believe - the Bee Gees in general were much bigger in the States than they were here in the early seventies.

Marcello Carlin, Monday, 5 March 2007 14:56 (nineteen years ago)

seconding the Catherine Howe recommendation. In particular "It Comes with the Breezes" is pretty great sunshine pop, sort of English bossa actually. Bobby Scott, who co-wrote "He Ain't Heavy" for the Hollies, plays piano and arranged/produced. It's sort of like a cross between Jackie DeShannon (whose "Brighton Hill" is certainly sunshine pop) and Nick Drake, maybe.

whisperineddhurt, Monday, 5 March 2007 15:41 (nineteen years ago)

According to the sleevenotes she and Scott had a bit of an affair at the time but it got scuppered by distance and the legal issues which arose with the record.

The extra CD track "In The Hot Summer" - the demo which got her the RCA deal, though it's so fully arranged it doesn't sound like a demo - is eerily beautiful and would still be a hit for anyone today.

She doesn't quite have Dusty's pipes - who does? - but Dusty Sings Drake wouldn't be a bad summation of the mood of the album in general.

Marcello Carlin, Monday, 5 March 2007 15:49 (nineteen years ago)

yeah no doubt, but fwiw, I don't think anyone here (except maybe within the radio industry) knew that Tin Tin had anything to do with the Bee Gees. It was just one of those top 40 records like Ocean or Mouth & McNeal, no real backstory to the radio listener. Hell, I was 10, for all I know, Creem might have had them on the cover!

Am investigating Catherine Howe as we "speak"... thx for the tip on that! :-)

Saxby D. Elder, Monday, 5 March 2007 16:17 (nineteen years ago)

eight months pass...

The Split Level's first untitled album has some stunning tracks. Absolutely worth tracking down for an awesome (almost dancey) number called "I'm on the right track" (or "there seems to be a way", maybe?) and the knock-out string-laden female ballad that follows it. The rest is interspersed with some odd interludes, one of which is a bizarre (and quite hilarious) vocal-only not-quite-choral piece that goes 'Shut up, Shut up, Shut up, Shut uhhhp!!!'.

And how about Corliss? Silverbird? Steam?

(just to add to the list of obscure bands on here that are without discussion)

And what about that Maypole album on Anopheles?

Michael Dudikoff presents Action Adventure Theatre, Monday, 26 November 2007 14:15 (eighteen years ago)

the newly-reissued In A Beautiful Place by Catherine Howe
Minor correction: this is called What A Beautiful Place.

James Redd and the Blecchs, Monday, 26 November 2007 14:18 (eighteen years ago)

other split level cut that i love dearly dearly: "Can't Complain."

ian, Monday, 26 November 2007 20:56 (eighteen years ago)

Don't forget James Taylor's first LP. It's really good soft pop.

leavethecapital, Tuesday, 27 November 2007 00:06 (eighteen years ago)

The Sundowners' "Always You" hasn't been mentioned yet. All sunshine pop, no psych; how it failed to be a hit is beyond me. Airy Association-ist arrangement, fab harmony vox, detailed and tight lyric - one of my favorites.

Joseph McCombs, Tuesday, 27 November 2007 05:43 (eighteen years ago)

two years pass...

http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/515VPAu1uCL._SS400_.jpg

loving this.

got lured in by the presence of a few david axelrod productions, but to be honest, my fave is the cliche heavy vibes of 'i think i'll go out and find me a flower' by the moonpark intersection (great name !) and the left hand turn @ 15 seconds into this never ceases to give me a happy buzz :

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hi-1NXEFSQc

mark e, Wednesday, 27 October 2010 10:05 (fifteen years ago)

three months pass...

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ToDZ_iFcCvA&feature=player_embedded

ship_rex (+ +), Monday, 7 February 2011 01:32 (fifteen years ago)

I would have to go with Sunshine Girl.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z8Pz1_2sGMA

billstevejim, Monday, 7 February 2011 02:00 (fifteen years ago)

The Third Wave have a lot in common with Wendy & Bonnie, I think. each group was made up of teenage sisters from California who recorded a single pop album in 1969 with the backing of prominent jazz musicians (George Duke vs. Gabor Szabo) only to vanish shortly after its release. their vocal harmonies are very similar in spots.

the highlights on the Third Wave album tend to be its softer moments. they have an annoying habit on some tracks of harmonizing brashly at the top of their lungs, but when they get into a low-key groove in "Waves Lament" and "Stormy" and "Once There Was a Time", the result is an eerie, amateurish, almost old-timey beauty that doesn't have too many parallels from either then or now.

unregistered, Monday, 7 February 2011 02:32 (fifteen years ago)

almost old-timey

"old-timey" in a '50s soft jazz vocal group sense, I mean. it's hard to tell whether the album was being targeted toward slightly conservative teens or slightly open-minded old people. maybe neither.

unregistered, Monday, 7 February 2011 02:43 (fifteen years ago)

one year passes...

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lLa3X3IHXls

Hans von Jerkoffsky (WilliamC), Thursday, 1 November 2012 15:33 (thirteen years ago)

Wow, I am so into this stuff now!! Grooooveee!

โตเกียวเหมียวเหมียว aka Dannon's Yogurt Dumplings and Pam Poo (Mount Cleaners), Thursday, 1 November 2012 15:53 (thirteen years ago)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=349NslZdJTM

haven't seen these guys mentioned here. sunny, upbeat goodness.

Spectrum, Thursday, 1 November 2012 18:05 (thirteen years ago)

ten months pass...

my waking-up music this saturday is sagittarius's present tense and joe byrd & the field hippies' the american metaphysical circus.

the cure is worse than the frizz-ease (get bent), Saturday, 28 September 2013 21:54 (twelve years ago)

excellent albums. the millenium's begin goes really well with present tense

reggie (qualmsley), Saturday, 28 September 2013 22:23 (twelve years ago)


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