Psychedelic Times | Cool British Singles from November 1967

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  • Опубликовано: 2 июл 2024
  • In previous videos, we revisited some cool British singles released during the second half of 1967. Now, it's time to revisit some cool British releases from November 1967. And november was definitely a great month for singles. Enjoy!
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Комментарии • 407

  • @YesterdaysPapers
    @YesterdaysPapers  Год назад +33

    PLAYLIST | Cool British Singles from November 1967: ruclips.net/p/PLZiczFvWkHKHGm9A4feTXMENRXJ9ZPVCl

    • @calvinguile1315
      @calvinguile1315 Год назад +1

      Thanks for the link 👍

    • @darda2449
      @darda2449 Год назад +1

      Thank you for the list, mate - Absolufabumazing! Old favorites and now, some new fabs!

    • @nathalieplum2137
      @nathalieplum2137 Год назад

      I don't know on what planet I was but I just discovered that I can save the playlist you linked to and listen to it on RUclips Music, which I subscribe to. Super Cool!

    • @katbela3971
      @katbela3971 Год назад +1

      Great video. Thanks so much for the playlist. Cheers, YP.🤗😀

  • @janewhite4486
    @janewhite4486 Год назад +10

    For me this may be THE coolest site on the internet ! I am 72 ,and American who never got to hear the UK pirate. radio shows from pirate ships . Rock on !

    • @pencilpauli9442
      @pencilpauli9442 Год назад +2

      The channel is totally fab! I'm British, but was only 8 at the time, and while many of the bands are familiar to me now, it's fascinating to see them and discover other acts.

    • @YesterdaysPapers
      @YesterdaysPapers  Год назад +1

      Thank you very much, Jane!

    • @YesterdaysPapers
      @YesterdaysPapers  Год назад +1

      Thank you very much, Pencipauli!

  • @heinrichvon
    @heinrichvon Год назад +24

    I'm in awe! Beatles, Floyd, The Moodies, The Pretty Things, The Nice, Tintern Abbey, Zombies... I bend the knee. We'll never see their like again!

    • @multiverser9585
      @multiverser9585 Год назад +4

      And quite a lot of cool records failed to chart! Back then, charting a single was everything.

  • @spyderlogan4992
    @spyderlogan4992 Год назад +32

    Never creases to amaze me are the pictures of the actual singles(45s) being referenced. Extreme Kudos to Mr. Yesterday's Papers~!

    • @mnbv990
      @mnbv990 Год назад +2

      agreed.

    • @MarkPMus
      @MarkPMus Год назад +3

      Obviously Hello Goodbye/IATW is a front runner in amongst this lot, many of which I think are trying too hard to follow a trend. But Care of Cell 44 by the Zombies is the only other single in this collection worth pausing the video for and looking up on Apple Music. I’m ashamed to say I have been alive 54 years and only just (via this channel) in the last few weeks found out about the Odyssey and Oracle album. But it’s superb, a great companion to Sgt Pepper and Pet Sounds.

    • @DrWrapperband
      @DrWrapperband Год назад +1

      Discogs?

  • @TexRenner
    @TexRenner Год назад +7

    I had just turned 14 then. This was all very important to me; fun to look back on.

  • @darda2449
    @darda2449 Год назад +70

    SF Sorrow was the first concept album, period. My totally hip, cool younger sibling introduced me to this band over forty years ago. It's good to know they lived to see themselves acknowledged for their vast influence. (RIP Phil May) I loved the interesting singles and albums, some of which from groups I didn't know, for me to look up and listen to; it's one of the greatest bonuses of your excellent and informative videos!
    P.S. - Can we all take a moment to appreciate that Yesterday's Papers has some of the best, most professional, straightforward narration on RUclips!

    • @YesterdaysPapers
      @YesterdaysPapers  Год назад +5

      Thank you very much, Darda!

    • @shadowstealer2790
      @shadowstealer2790 Год назад +3

      I concur!

    • @danieleyre8913
      @danieleyre8913 Год назад +4

      Yes I agree. I love SF Sorrow and have been saying how underrated and sadly unrecognised it is since I discovered it as a teenager. It predated Mark Wirtz’s stuff and The Who’s Tommy and the Kink’s Victoria and was really something avant garde and of good quality.

    • @Truckngirl
      @Truckngirl Год назад +3

      That's the truth!

    • @mellowvids9637
      @mellowvids9637 Год назад +1

      Eden Ahbez did one much earlier than The Pretties

  • @raymondroberts8709
    @raymondroberts8709 Год назад +13

    1967: my lifelong favorite year for music! 💖

  • @bobair2
    @bobair2 Год назад +9

    Truly an amazing year was 1967 and my favorite for music overall in the 55 years since,simply magical!

  • @joshgoldstein3991
    @joshgoldstein3991 Год назад +36

    'I Am The Walrus' by The Beatles is a psychedelic masterpiece! Love that acid poetry by John Lennon, and the music is still trippy and weird as ever.

    • @Frauditor420
      @Frauditor420 Год назад +4

      I'm 43 and I tripped out to the Beatles as a teen. Used to take a LOT of mushrooms lol

    • @poempadgett4664
      @poempadgett4664 Год назад +3

      It is one of my very favorites by the Beatles (and Sir George Martin) and, for me, an astonishing and utterly unique work of aural-art. Mind-blowing…🦭💕

    • @YesterdaysPapers
      @YesterdaysPapers  Год назад +6

      Agreed, "I Am the Walrus" is one of my all-time favourites by the Beatles. What an amazing song.

    • @deirdre108
      @deirdre108 Год назад +6

      "...and here's another clue for you all, the Walrus was Paul."

    • @nathalieplum2137
      @nathalieplum2137 Год назад +4

      @@YesterdaysPapers Any chance, with that fab Revolver remixing that just came out, you could look into a Yesterday's Papers around the release of that legendary Beatles album? I wouldn't dare make a request, it's just a thought. I'm so impressed by your curation and editing work. ☺

  • @paulnolan4971
    @paulnolan4971 Год назад +6

    I love them 7 Moodies albums from Days to Sojourn. What a run. What covers ! I'm proud of my collection of them alone.

  • @birchward
    @birchward Год назад +4

    I was lucky enough in march 1967 , to visit a local club , The ricky tick houslow / london , the friday night was P.P.ARNOLD and the NICE ,the saturday night was PINK FLOYD ( who had just released Arnold Layne , and I was standing just a few feet from Syd Barrett , watching / stealing ideas from him ) and sunday night was CREAM ( one of our old guitarists John Simms , went on to play in bands , with Ginger / Kofi baker ! and each night was 10 shillings to get in ! Jimi Hendrix and the Experiance , played their first gig there for £ 25 , ironicaly , Jimi , shared a flat in nottinghill gate , with Pat Arnold , and Ronnie Wood . Jimi meet Mitch Mitchel , ( who was taught drums , by Jim Marshall ) while visiting Jims shop in nearby Hanwell , to get get a 100watt stack , mitch was the shop assistant there ! ha , ha great days / video cheers , thankyou guys , from france . ritchie .

    • @hopebgood
      @hopebgood Год назад

      You lucky old fart! 😉 *hug*

  • @victorhawkins3461
    @victorhawkins3461 Год назад +8

    The poster for the Hendrix/Move/Pink Floyd package tour also showed a band called The Eire Apparent...an Irish band, I believe, produced by Hendrix, who also played on their first elpee. I saw The Eire Apparent open for Eric Burdon and The Animals in the (very) old and (very) long-gone city auditorium in Jackson, Mississippi sometime in Spring '68. Eric Burdon and The Animals were touring in support of either "San Franciscan Nights" or "Sky Pilot." I forget which. But thanks for allowing me to dredge up memory!

    • @YesterdaysPapers
      @YesterdaysPapers  Год назад

      Very cool, that must have been a great show.

    • @edwarddriscoll6814
      @edwarddriscoll6814 Год назад

      Brill album..pop psych..j.h.plays on it also...they played here sept 68...J.H.EXP...V.FUDGE....
      SOFT MACHINE and EIRE APPARENT...search album

    • @deargdoom8743
      @deargdoom8743 4 месяца назад +2

      Henry McCulloch was the lead guitarist. He once lived in a caravan outside my home town Enniskillen in Northern Ireland. My grandfather used to laugh recalling Henry playing guitar in the morning to the herd of cattle in the neighbouring field. Stoned, no doubt. No idea how the cows reacted to his playing. He went on to join Paul McCartney and Wings a few years later. RIP, Henry!

  • @marrrtin
    @marrrtin Год назад +6

    Such a fertile scene that there just wasn't space for it all.

  • @jeffneptune2922
    @jeffneptune2922 Год назад +7

    Another fantastic episode for us pop music history buffs. At the time , I thought the British music scene was a little bit cooler than the US and Canada. Thank you.

  • @Truckngirl
    @Truckngirl Год назад +19

    I know you must be busy, but these are never long enough or frequent enough for me. Your curation is amazing. I was aware of pop and psychedelic music at that time but was 10 years old and in Lake Tahoe with only two stations, where I got a taste of it, but nothing like what you present. Thank you for your enlightenment! I am a huge Syd Barrett fan and appreciate your acknowledgement of his brilliance.

  • @appledoreman
    @appledoreman Год назад +23

    What I like about your videos (apart from the superb music & rare video footage) is the obscure information imparted, eg 'Thoughts of Emerlist Davjack' (one of my favourite psychedelic singles) became the theme tune of a British TV series, 'Flames' was part of Led Zeppelin's early repertoire, 'Meditations' was recorded in a church, etc. Great research on your part, well done.

    • @YesterdaysPapers
      @YesterdaysPapers  Год назад +3

      Thank you, Tom..

    • @marshlanderdumarais264
      @marshlanderdumarais264 Год назад

      Some great singles including one or two I didn’t know, thank you! I’d completely forgotten that The Nice featured in Tyrant King. Thanks for the reminder of a very enjoyable series from my childhood. I connected with the series, because I travelled all over the underground by myself and visited the museums in Exhibition Road. “Follow the tyrant king … “ I count myself as lucky to have seen The Nice at the Fairfield Halls in Croydon. Keith Emerson played the venue’s pipe organ and asked the audience, “Do you think they’d mind if I stuck knives in this one?”

  • @Frauditor420
    @Frauditor420 Год назад +57

    What the pretty things did was 100% Punk. They never get the credit. The Ramones, pistols, Richard Hell or whoever always get the credit for punk.

    • @danieleyre8913
      @danieleyre8913 Год назад +6

      You couldn’t get further from punk than the emotions album.

    • @Mojorising1328
      @Mojorising1328 Год назад +9

      Lol those bands didn't invent shit. The 60's were pure magic. Damn near every genre was covered by the second part of the decade.

    • @randybackgammon890
      @randybackgammon890 Год назад

      @@danieleyre8913 Blimey,I've always loved that album.Didnt know any one else had heard of it

    • @danieleyre8913
      @danieleyre8913 Год назад

      @@randybackgammon890 I like the songs on emotions. Especially house of ten. But I’m not such a fan of the production, especially the brass section.

    • @billkingston4402
      @billkingston4402 Год назад

      Yes, bloody great band

  • @grokeffer6226
    @grokeffer6226 Год назад +3

    I'd only been familiar with a few of these songs. That was a truly great year.

  • @morebenxyz4262
    @morebenxyz4262 Год назад +12

    Happy to see a song from the moody blues!!

    • @Annie-cb
      @Annie-cb Год назад +4

      A phenomenal album, which still has a very special place in my heart ♥️

    • @Frauditor420
      @Frauditor420 Год назад +2

      Something about that song. I could almost imagine a maiden in medieval England singing the song beneath a tree lol.

  • @Bizinxis.
    @Bizinxis. Год назад +5

    Yknow I remember being pretty confused when I listened to SF sorrow for the first time. But I was absolutely blown away when I heard defecting gray. It’s so trippy, heavy and aggressive, it’s truly great.

  • @andrewlove9566
    @andrewlove9566 Год назад +5

    Thanks for don't forget about Elmer Gantry's Velvet Opera. One of my loving bands from 60's. Fantastic 1st album. Very interesting video.

  • @francoispedro3694
    @francoispedro3694 Год назад +7

    Very very good, one more time. Somebody said you're very professional. I completely agree.
    "Defecting grey". I had the luck to see the Pretty Things in my town, five years ago. They still played this one, in a pretty good way.
    And I had the luck to talk to Phil (RIP) and Dick too. Fabulous gentlemen.
    You made my day with that one.

    • @YesterdaysPapers
      @YesterdaysPapers  Год назад +2

      Thank you, François! I saw the Pretty Things in 2017 or so and it was a fantastic show.

    • @marshlanderdumarais264
      @marshlanderdumarais264 Год назад +1

      I saw The Pretty Things a few times in the 70s. Excellent band. Some friends of mine were the support act on one tour. They said they only had to take a couple of breaths in their dressing room and they came out buzzing 😂

  • @JustineLaLoba
    @JustineLaLoba Год назад +6

    S.F Sorrow is a masterpiece period.

  • @samp.8099
    @samp.8099 Год назад +5

    Looking forward to a part two

  • @LannieLord
    @LannieLord 6 месяцев назад

    Some really beautiful songs on the Elmer Gantry album !! Flames did not scratch the surface.

  • @EdwinJack64
    @EdwinJack64 Год назад +2

    Great episode! I am amazed at how many brilliant singles failed to chart. How come? 'Nights In White Satin' reached number two in the Netherlands in January and February 1968! I liked to see the image of the single, exact the same is in my father's single collection! And what a fabulous single by Tintern Abbey! Thank you!

  • @steffanhoffmann8937
    @steffanhoffmann8937 Год назад +1

    By November of this year imo; psychedelia was on the wane.
    Hello Goodbye, released just before Christmas; paving the way for its dearth.
    Liked YOUR music, within it yet again....keep it coming please.

  • @neilfriedman
    @neilfriedman Год назад +4

    I was not too happy with apples and oranges either, gave it a miss and carried on listening to Piper. I am the Walrus is still great, and so are the Pretty Things, a truely great band. RIP Phil and some XPTs

  • @xdef1ne
    @xdef1ne Год назад +8

    Another great video, thank you!
    The Pretty Things are one of the best bands from Britain. I thought they changed genre better than a lot of bands but their earlier records are some of the best proto-punk r&b you can get.
    I also really enjoyed Apples & Oranges, I love Syd’s screeching fuzz-wah guitar.

    • @darganx
      @darganx Год назад +1

      This group and the Deviants were two groups from this time that got more respect in the Punk/New Wave era a decade later.

  • @puliturchannel7225
    @puliturchannel7225 Год назад +5

    I just love that there's a second part coming! This video is a treasure pile of singles.

  • @deirdre108
    @deirdre108 Год назад +11

    I am very much enjoying your videos pertaining to the British psychedelic scene as this is one of my favorite genres of music.
    With the sonic experimentation that was going on in the music one can hear how these bands were separating rock from the blues that gave birth to it. It is interesting to hear how this later evolved into progressive rock.
    Also, I never knew Pink Floyd performed on American Bandstand! Now I'll have to find that on YT.
    Again, thank you and I look forward to part two!

  • @judyjudy51
    @judyjudy51 Год назад

    fantastic ~ thankyou. love the visuals

  • @christianvollheim5372
    @christianvollheim5372 Год назад

    Hey yesterdays papers, thanx so much for your marvellous videos!👍👋 The sixties were the best decade in pop music, and `67 was the best year in that decade! So much genius recordings, and so much that failed but shouldn`t have!

  • @evanelliott1213
    @evanelliott1213 Год назад +5

    Brilliant video, you must put in hard work to make it so good. I love Apples and Oranges and Beeside. Cities is an underrated Moody Blues B-side I think as well. Looking forward to a part 2. Thanks- Evan

  • @phatato
    @phatato Год назад

    Great songs! Thank you :)

  • @johnwood551
    @johnwood551 Год назад +3

    Nights in White Satin was and INSTANT Success with me. Moody Blues became my favorite group right then and got all their albums after that.

    • @justinthyme5382
      @justinthyme5382 Год назад +1

      Best comment I've read, I too have everything that the Moodies recorded, plus Blue Jays, Justin Hayward,and also have I think every DVD released. Hi from Perth Australia 😎👋🎵🎶🎵

    • @pippishortstocking7913
      @pippishortstocking7913 Год назад +1

      I read in a music magazine that it was an accidental hit. That DJs put it on to play because it was so long, so they could leave the room for a break lol.

    • @RavenThom
      @RavenThom Год назад +1

      I was a Moody fan from the first time i heard GO NOW!

    • @justinthyme5382
      @justinthyme5382 Год назад

      @@RavenThom I hope your still a fan, but who in the world would stop being a moodies fan. 😎👋💕🎶🎵🎶🎵🦘

  • @calvinguile1315
    @calvinguile1315 Год назад +3

    LOVE IT.... please do part 2

  • @martakrupinska674
    @martakrupinska674 Год назад

    Thanks for this great video. 😃

  • @wanderer299a
    @wanderer299a Год назад

    Excellent as always. A lot there I've never heard before. Congrats.

  • @Ndlanding
    @Ndlanding Год назад +2

    Ever since hearing "Pivate Sorrow" on John Peel, I've adored the SF Sorrow album. Follow-ups didn't rate too highly with us, but THAT album is in the Top 5 EVER!

  • @Fuzzbrain61
    @Fuzzbrain61 Год назад

    Once more you’ve unearthed some more forgotten gems and what a month for some truely groovy sounds!

  • @stevejames2896
    @stevejames2896 Год назад

    A great trip indeed! Excellent choices, well researched and once again full marks for the visuals too. Looking forward to part two!

  • @danstone8783
    @danstone8783 Год назад +6

    Love this channel. If there was a similar channel dealing with American singles at the same time it would be neat comparing the two.

    • @LannieLord
      @LannieLord 6 месяцев назад

      What was going on in Britain and the Netherlands was much more far out that anything going on in the USA.

    • @danstone8783
      @danstone8783 6 месяцев назад

      Agreed@@LannieLord

  • @delbertstringbreaker7686
    @delbertstringbreaker7686 Год назад +2

    Another excellent production!
    It is worth noting that Flames by Elmer Gantry also had another airing on the 1968 compilation album, 'The Rock Machine Turns You On', which I believe was the very first of its kind.

  • @johngleeson6747
    @johngleeson6747 Год назад

    I really love this channel, this was another gem to watch, thank you from the Isle Of Wight.

  • @nathalieplum2137
    @nathalieplum2137 Год назад +2

    Excellent production Mister YP, thank you again 💯

  • @kevingilhooley2064
    @kevingilhooley2064 Год назад

    Fabulous nostalgia yet again....loved the Tickle review.

  • @fastideas1
    @fastideas1 Год назад +1

    Thank you. Another great episode. Was blessed to have first heard many of the tunes you feature via the wonderful 'Chocolate Soup for Diabetics' bootleg compilations as a psychedleicized teenage Jam fan back in the early 80's. Glad that a few musical lifetimes later they still sound great. Never heard the St Valentine's version of 'Brother can you...' which is magnificent wonder whether that's where the inspiration for Ronnie Lane's later version came from

  • @poempadgett4664
    @poempadgett4664 Год назад +2

    Great year in music!
    I discovered The Nice in just the past decade, when I bought a “Best of CD” on sale thinking this looks interesting old/psychedelic and fell in love with a few tunes (especially the songs _The Cry of Eugene,_ and, _Diamond Hard Blue Apples of the Moon)_ and thought “Gee, that keyboardist is just fantastic, Keith Emerson-sounding level,” lol.
    Being a mainly British blues rock & prog-rock-crazy young kid in the seventies, (influenced by older brother’s records) I had ELP’s album _Trilogy,_ which I loved, and later got _Brain Salad Surgery._
    Finally, I looked up the band members of The Nice and it WAS Keith Emerson! RIP to him, it breaks my heart how he left us.
    The Pretty Things, I’d heard of, but also only recently discovered on a compilation their so-cool song, imo, _Baron Saturday,_ which I learned later was apparently written about Jimmy Page, (whom o/c I was wild about as a kid) their friend and eventual record label boss, (Swan Song). That song, which I’m definitely going to look up, featured here did sound proto-punk, a little MC-5ish, a band that didn’t yet exist at the time, iirc.
    Finally, _Knights in White Satin,_ a US 70’s rock radio standard, has grown on me over the years, not that I didn’t like it at all, but it really was a seminal English progressive art rock masterpiece, I see, now, and just so beautiful. IM🪩
    I love this channel, and thanks, btw! 🫀

    • @YesterdaysPapers
      @YesterdaysPapers  Год назад +2

      Thank you very much! "Baron Saturday" is one of my favourite songs by The Pretty Things. Great song.

  • @rossgregor4817
    @rossgregor4817 Год назад +1

    Super good episode.

  • @spiritof6663
    @spiritof6663 Год назад +2

    Outstanding work, as usual!! Very professional presentation, with incredible lost footage and pics that suck one right into the period. November '67 has to be the peak of the UK psychedelic scene. I hope there's a part two--and if so, it would be great to hear "Have Some More Tea" by The Smoke, "Save Me" by Brian Auger & Julie Driscoll, "Man In A Shop" by The Marmalade, "Here We Go Round The Mulberry Bush/Coloured Rain" by Traffic, "Reason To Live" by Skip Bifferty, "World" by The Bee Gees, and "Looking Glass Alice" by The Bunch; I can't think of too many more singles that you didn't already cover here, so I really look forward to seeing what else you come up with!!! GREAT JOB!!

  • @Transterra55
    @Transterra55 Год назад +1

    Another outstanding video...thanks so much!
    Greetings from Tennessee.

  • @edwardmulholland7912
    @edwardmulholland7912 Год назад

    The Pretty Things - wow!
    Lots of stuff I’ve not heard about before.
    I’ve always loved “Beeside”.
    Thank you for this,
    Your channel is great.

  • @walterfechter8080
    @walterfechter8080 Год назад

    Many thanks, Yesterday's Papers, for this exacting view on the British Psychedelic sounds from late 1967.

  • @lindadote
    @lindadote Год назад +8

    Your wonderful videos don’t just help jog my memory, I’m constantly learning of acts I missed at the time. The Pretty Things were a terrific band and as far as timeless songs go, I don’t think (the genius of) I Am The Walrus will ever age. The painstaking research and dedication you obviously put into bringing us these fabulous uploads is genuinely appreciated YP, many thanks.

  • @Norshammar72
    @Norshammar72 Год назад +3

    A great run through of great songs. Cherry red has just released two comps On Elmer Gentry’s Velvet Opera and Tinter Abbey. Really inspired to check them out now. Really enjoy this channel. Looking forward to every episode!

  • @tattyshoesshigure5731
    @tattyshoesshigure5731 Год назад +5

    Fascinating edition of YP’s as usual! Georgie Fame’s hit single The Ballad of Bonnie & Clyde is a terrific song & production that has stood the test of time… Georgie is one of those great artists who I feel never gets the full recognition he deserves.

    • @iconicshrubbery
      @iconicshrubbery Год назад +2

      "I Say Yeh Yeh"(!)
      Like Alan Price, someone who could really sing and play, so melodic that I remember those songs from childhood

    • @YesterdaysPapers
      @YesterdaysPapers  Год назад +4

      Agreed. Georgie Fame is very underrated nowadays.

    • @Krzyszczynski
      @Krzyszczynski Год назад +2

      Hear, hear. Georgie Fame was at the top of the tree from a ridiculously early age, and deservedly so.

    • @marshlanderdumarais264
      @marshlanderdumarais264 Год назад +1

      And still on top form when I saw him just prior to lockdown.

  • @SophieLovesSunsets
    @SophieLovesSunsets Год назад +11

    "The group hardly considered my reviews worth the paper they were written on" The shade 🤣😂 That does sound suspiciously like something Roger Waters would say 👀 Maybe I'm in the minority, but I've always loved "Apples and Oranges" I think it's really beautiful and whimsical. Your videos are a lovely way to start the week, YP. Stunning intro Music 💯❤

    • @YesterdaysPapers
      @YesterdaysPapers  Год назад +3

      Thank you, Sophie! I've always really liked "Apples and Oranges" as well. Great song. I guess it was a bad choice for an A-side, though.

    • @SophieLovesSunsets
      @SophieLovesSunsets Год назад +2

      @@YesterdaysPapers Yep, I agree. It was a strange choice for an A-side 🍏🍊💖

    • @Krzyszczynski
      @Krzyszczynski Год назад

      Of the two songs on that record, I have to say I prefer Paintbox, which would have had a lot more commercial appeal. Perhaps Syd and Roger couldn't countenance the idea of a Rick Wright number being on the A-side.
      I remember that final comment of Penny Valentine's very well - but from that day to this, I've never been able to decide whether she liked the final little flourish itself, or the fact that a record she plainly didn't much care for had finally come to an end.

    • @SuperNevile
      @SuperNevile Год назад

      @@Krzyszczynski Agree, great song; but Rick's "It Would Be So Nice" backed by Roger's "Julia Dream" had masses of commercial appeal, but bombed too. I think this is when they realised they were an "albums band".........

    • @mikesaunders4775
      @mikesaunders4775 6 месяцев назад +1

      I don't know why Penny Valentine was so confused about the song's meaning. Syd himself is on record of saying that its about a time he followed a dolly bird from Barnes to Richmond where he was living at the time. It is amazing how unadventurous the journos of the day were when all this fantastic music was flying around.

  • @jfrorn
    @jfrorn Год назад +2

    Love this series!

  • @mrheem44
    @mrheem44 Год назад +1

    man I've always loved that [pretty things single

  • @carlnielsen3477
    @carlnielsen3477 Год назад

    Enjoyed it very much! 🙂

  • @JohnCBurzynski
    @JohnCBurzynski Год назад

    I was alive in 67, never heard of most of these groups or their songs. It must have been a British thing. Outside of the Moody’s, Beatles, Zombies and Pink Floyd it’s all new to me. Thanks...I think.

  • @Syd4510
    @Syd4510 Год назад +1

    Yes, a lot of very impressive psychedelia was issued in this month! Beatles I am the Walrus definitely the best of the crop, but I also love Tintern Abbey and so many more of the songs you included here.

  • @shadowstealer2790
    @shadowstealer2790 Год назад +3

    "Mr. Evasion", B Side of "Defecting Grey" is very cool too,.Biting lyrics , great pace, offbeat chorus, a wilder psychedelia than most. "Defecting"must be one of the craziest choices for an A side of that era!

    • @YesterdaysPapers
      @YesterdaysPapers  Год назад +1

      Agreed, definitely a crazy choice for an A-side.

    • @shadowstealer2790
      @shadowstealer2790 Год назад

      @@YesterdaysPapers But that's what was great about the Pretties, they were edgy by instinct. When I first looked into them I was surprised how unsuccessful they were compared to their peers.

    • @YesterdaysPapers
      @YesterdaysPapers  Год назад

      @@shadowstealer2790 Very true, they were always very edgy and anarchic. They were never afraid to take everything one step further.

    • @shadowstealer2790
      @shadowstealer2790 Год назад

      @@YesterdaysPapers Yes, so true! Still find it hard to believe that a rock n roll monster like "Midnight to 6" only got to no.46!!Being the ace researchers you guys are , you've probably seen this gem but just in case you haven't ruclips.net/video/1dvxVE8LltA/видео.html

    • @edyb2097
      @edyb2097 Год назад +2

      I think they wanted "Defecting Grey" to be a single mostly to break ties with the album "Emotions", which the band made unwillingly and only for contractual fulfillment. Anyway, I too agree with you all. Maybe "Mr. Evasion" would have charted better...

  • @jessehaskell1397
    @jessehaskell1397 5 месяцев назад +2

    I learned something new today. I didn’t know Pink Floyd was originally called THE Pink Floyd.

  • @jonathanbirch2022
    @jonathanbirch2022 Год назад +1

    This channel is amazing

  • @pcno2832
    @pcno2832 Год назад +1

    11:19 I saw "Caged" for the first time earlier this year on the "Movies!" channel's "Sunday Night Noir" feature. It was a gripping movie which must have been quite shocking in 1950. "Care of Cell 44" sounds quite promising; I'll have to find the whole thing next and listen to the rest of it. Thanks for letting us see these records that would otherwise have escaped our attention.

    • @Krzyszczynski
      @Krzyszczynski Год назад +2

      Must be 55 years or more since I saw Caged on TV, but I'll never forget that forcible head-shave, or the terribly downbeat ending, which as you say must have been a real face-slap for 1950 audiences.

  • @terryenglish7132
    @terryenglish7132 Год назад

    Thanks. Another great video w singles I missed first time round. I can hear how they missed, tho, just didn't have the catchy melodies needed. My fav was Flames; unfortunately the Zepplin version isn't here on youtube in bootleg form.

  • @centralparkjoe1290
    @centralparkjoe1290 Год назад +2

    Fantastic episode! Made my weekend! 🤙🔥

  • @stevenwetherbee7573
    @stevenwetherbee7573 Год назад +2

    This is the month/year I was born. I only discovered Tintern Abbey in the last year and have listened to those to songs obsessively. That Zombies song is seriously underrated too,

  • @willieluncheonette5843
    @willieluncheonette5843 Год назад +4

    So many good singles that failed to chart back then. I mean the Zombies' Care of Cell 44 and Maybe After He's Gone is a GREAT two sided platter. How could that not chart? Bad distribution? And I love the clip you chose to go with the song. Caged (1950) is a terrific noir directed by John Cromwell. The lead actress, Eleanor Parker, was nominated for an academy award and won best actress at the Venice International Festival that year. The terrifying prison guard, Hope Emerson, a frequent noir heavy,, was nominated for best supporting actress at the Academy Awards. The film presents fairly both sides of the incarceration question---whether prisons actually rehabilitate anyone. At the end, Parker, having learned all the tricks of criminals during her prison stay, is now more equipped upon her release to become a real criminal. It is just about a perfect film noir.
    YP your psychedelic journeys to the 60's are better than an acid flashback trip. Thanks so much.

    • @YesterdaysPapers
      @YesterdaysPapers  Год назад +2

      Thanks, Willie! I love "Caged". I'm a big fan of the film noir genre.

    • @willieluncheonette5843
      @willieluncheonette5843 Год назад +1

      @@YesterdaysPapers Film noir is a big influence on my film. My favs in no particular order are Vertigo (a color noir!) Touch of Evil, Kiss Me Deadly, Out of the Past, White Heat and The Lineup.

    • @YesterdaysPapers
      @YesterdaysPapers  Год назад +1

      @@willieluncheonette5843 Love those films. A big favourite of mine, apart from the ones you mentioned, is "The Big Combo".

    • @willieluncheonette5843
      @willieluncheonette5843 Год назад +1

      @@YesterdaysPapers You might be interested in my review of the Big Combo but please delete it after you've read it since this is outside the subject of your post.
      Glad I saw, for the second time, THE BIG COMBO (1955) on CUNY TV last night. .Directed in fine style by Joseph H. Lewis, also responsible for My Name is Julia Ross (1945) and Gun Crazy.(1949). A real testament to a director who in 1938 and early 1940's was turning out six and seven bottom of the barrel quickies a year.
      Basically the story line is a police lieutenant (Cornel Wilde) goes after a criminal (Richard Conte) whose wife (Jean Wallace) does not love him. Wilde hopes she will assist him in his quest. Conte, full of chirping, venomous confidence, gives the best performance I've ever seen from him. He's psychologically aware, cunning and ruthless. Brian Donlevy, Lee Van Cleef and Earl Hollman are all fine as Conte's minions as is the striking looking Helene Stanton as Wilde's stripper girlfriend. The only weak link, IMO, is Wallace who is a bit one dimensional in her acting.
      From the dark opening alley chase sequence to the last shot in white fog, this is some kind of film. Cinematographer John Alton is universally praised for his style and The Big Combo might be his finest achievement. A claustrophobic tale filled with shadows, harsh facial lighting and spotlights. The whole film is an amazing exercise in painting with light (the title of his book). David Raksin's jazz influenced score is also perfect for the roller coaster twists and turns on the screen.
      The Big Combo has everything--guns, killings, violence and torture. Oh, and toss in sexual perversity and homosexuality..There is a brilliant and brutal torture scene that is almost unbearable to watch, a startling and most likely unique for its time machine gun killing, and an inventive last scene that, due to budget limitations, was fashioned out of skeleton sets and the most meager of props. This marvelous little noir was shot in 26 days---give Joseph Lewis full credit here. Like Edgar G. Ulmer, another poverty row director, Lewis had the wonderful ability to create gems out of rubble.
      Foster Hirsch is rapidly becoming one of my favorite commentators on noir. Last night he said " The Big Combo is a summation of noir themes" He is right; this late in the noir cycle film has everything. He also stated " There's not a normal, well adjusted character in the film." Spot on again.. Hero police lieutenants are supposed to be 100% good guys but here Wilde is anything but. In this respect The Big Combo reminds me of Kiss Me Deadly. Explosive melodramatic plot inhabited by flawed, unsympathetic characters. At one point in the program Hirsch, the author of 16 books related to film and theater, asked the host of the show, Jerry Carlson, a question because Hirsch wasn't sure himself. This is the kind of intelligent, humble man for whom I have the utmost respect and admiration.
      If you yearn for a noir that touches all bases, look no further than The Big Combo .Very highly recommended

    • @YesterdaysPapers
      @YesterdaysPapers  Год назад +1

      @@willieluncheonette5843 Great review, Willie. I enjoyed it. I actually wasn't aware that "Gun Crazy" was by the same director. I love that film, too.

  • @t.c.bramblett617
    @t.c.bramblett617 Год назад +1

    The Pretty Things were so good, still so underrated

  • @jean-marcknight8816
    @jean-marcknight8816 Год назад +1

    Another great piece of work YP !
    The Walrus cover by Jim Carrey in George Martin's "In my life" is quite enjoyable (and so is Come Together by Robin Williams and Bobby McFerrin).

    • @johnmarshall2722
      @johnmarshall2722 Год назад

      Yes, maybe ´quite enjoyable´. But I don´t like the ovet-the-top look-at-me I´m so zany type of performance he gave. Just let the lyrics do the surreal / the funnies. Anything else is like trying to gild the lily.

  • @chicklets4ever51
    @chicklets4ever51 Год назад

    Excellent stuff, man. Can't wait for part two. (And now I'm going to go and listen to the Pretty Things' full album, SF Sorrow.

    • @airmark02
      @airmark02 Год назад +1

      I think "Parachute" from 1970 is much better than SF Sorrow because it doesn't sound as dated ~ check it out 😉

    • @chicklets4ever51
      @chicklets4ever51 Год назад

      @@airmark02 OK thanks

  • @voxac30withstrat
    @voxac30withstrat Год назад +1

    I shake my head when I see all todays TV talent shows knowing how little chance they have. This video is a textbook example of how many bands just disappeared off the scene no matter how much journos raved about them. At least they had some sort of chance unlike today where 99% of the artists who do win a talent show are forced to contract to SONY for 2 years and do what they are told. And lets not even start talking about miming on stage OR Autotune. Bands and artists used to travel, beat the boards and learn their craft. Today? Nope.

  • @pacificostudios
    @pacificostudios Год назад +1

    Anyone out to pick on "I am the Walrus" should remember that John was inspired by Lewis Carroll, especially "The Walrus and the Carpenter" and "Jabberwocky", and how Charles Dodson experimented with English to make sentences that sounded like English but meant nothing, e.g., "’Twas brillig, and the slithy toves did gyre and gimble in the wabe."
    So why IS the sea boiling hot?

  • @kevhead1525
    @kevhead1525 Год назад

    Yikes. Four comments this time. Well this one is to thank you for all the work you do on this and the insight you give us.👍

  • @charlesachurch7265
    @charlesachurch7265 Год назад +1

    Another great presentation xxx. I love this channel.

  • @jerrywatt6813
    @jerrywatt6813 Год назад

    Never heard oh the abbey YP now I must check this out ! Vacuum cleaner? OK? I love seeing the old Marshall amps in the background I have a few myself always fun ! Great show cheers from L A !

  • @Krzyszczynski
    @Krzyszczynski Год назад +1

    Defecting Grey was one of the (by then) obscure records to feature in Anne Nightingale's "Daisy Chain" spot on her Sunday afternoon Radio 1 show in the mid-70s. Whoever identified the song (I never could) got to nominate next week's one. Another that came up at one point was Over The Wall We Go from late 1966.

  • @claremaidofthewave251
    @claremaidofthewave251 Год назад

    I lived in a studio flat in Amen Corner House, Amen Corner, Tooting Broadway……….I also worked in music! Weird coincidence. And Rod Argent lived opposite my parents in Silsoe, Bedfordshire.

  • @rpc717
    @rpc717 Год назад

    Damn, that review of Pink Floyd was so savage and perfect!

  • @karlsinclair9918
    @karlsinclair9918 Год назад

    I think the Artwoods were fantastic...a great band. I did not know about this single! Again, more new stuff to add to my collection! I really appreciate your efforts in sharing the archival reviews and bringing them back for us to hear! :)

  • @gemspa73
    @gemspa73 Год назад

    What a great selection of singles.

  • @johnanthonycafe2993
    @johnanthonycafe2993 Год назад

    I remember the early 67 hits but most of these Nov songs escape me. They are vague & transitional
    at best. Glad I missed them.

  • @justinspivey8728
    @justinspivey8728 Год назад

    The Pretty Things Defecting Grey and Elmer Gantry’s Velvet Opera Flames! 🙌🏼 The Tickle turned into Junior’s Eyes!

  • @394pjo
    @394pjo Год назад

    Our yearly school disco back in the early 70's was the only time we were allowed to mix with girls from the school next door. The DJ used to play Nights in White Satin for the slow bit when we all had to pluck up the courage and ask the bird we fancied for a dance. The DJ used to call it 'the Erection Section' when he played it.

  • @pippishortstocking7913
    @pippishortstocking7913 Год назад +1

    Weird to think that the girl shown dancing after the Moody Blues part is nearing 80 years old now.

  • @WattisWatts
    @WattisWatts Год назад

    Having clips of the Noir classic "Caged" during the Zombies single was a great idea!

  • @danee9647
    @danee9647 Год назад +6

    Except for the Beatles, one after the other mentioned here, we hear "The single failed to chart". There was such an embarrassment of riches from this period that even the ones that failed to chart are now highly regarded brilliant classics. They all deserved to be top 10 hits.

    • @YesterdaysPapers
      @YesterdaysPapers  Год назад +7

      The singles chart changed a lot in 1967, probably because it was the beginning of the LP era and also because BBC Radio One took over and pirate stations were forced to shut down. In 1966, most of the songs on the singles chart were great songs that eventually became classics. But in 1967, crooners like Engelbert Humperdink, Vince Hill or Solomon King took the charts by storm as well as a lot of disposable crap and mediocre bubblegum pop.

    • @danieleyre8913
      @danieleyre8913 Год назад +5

      Well _anything_ the Beatles put out was going to be a hit.

    • @jonathanbirch2022
      @jonathanbirch2022 Год назад

      ‘67 was THE most incredible time for pop music ever.

    • @Krzyszczynski
      @Krzyszczynski Год назад +1

      @@YesterdaysPapers Disc's review of the year called 1967 The Year Of The Big Boring Ballad, and by crikey they weren't far wrong. The nadir for me came earlyish in the year, when first Petula Clark (who otherwise made some pretty decent drama-ballads) and then Harry Secombe took that unremittingly awful Charlie Chaplin piece This Is My Song into the top ten.

    • @YesterdaysPapers
      @YesterdaysPapers  Год назад +3

      @@Krzyszczynski Yes, I came across that article some time ago. It was an interesting. read. It just goes to show how much perceptions change over the years. Nowadays, everyone remembers 1967 as the year of psychedelia but back then everyone was complaining about all these crooners taking over the charts and getting all the attention.

  • @buzzawuzza3743
    @buzzawuzza3743 Год назад

    A video that mentions the Tickle doing Smokey Pokey World should be seen by every acid punk out there! I've loved that 45 since the Chocolate Soup days of the middle 1980s! Rock on!

  • @maurice8607
    @maurice8607 Год назад +1

    Tintern Abbey. An absolute fantastic a and b side. Wonderful.

  • @dogbarbill
    @dogbarbill Год назад

    Wow. In November 1967 I had just turned 13 years old, and had two AM radio stations I would listen to in my city (there was no FM here yet). I am here in the south central US, and well remember music coming from across the pond, even had a few of the singles, but up until this video I had NEVER heard of any of these featured in this video except for "Knights in White Satin" or The Moody Blues. The Zombies had a couple of tunes over here, but not the ones in this video.

  • @christinecollins6648
    @christinecollins6648 Год назад +1

    One of those moments in time when there are more quality concepts which fail to thrive,then all the quality concepts that make it in a lesser time period. Good for a band to be lucky as The Who would say

  • @edyb2097
    @edyb2097 Год назад

    Yet another great video! Thank you!

  • @R_Jackson
    @R_Jackson Год назад +1

    I didn't see "big in Scandinavia" coming as a precursor to "big in Japan"!

  • @Krzyszczynski
    @Krzyszczynski Год назад +2

    I saw the Pretties and Pink Floyd on the same bill in Brighton, must have been very late 1968 - definitely after SF Sorrow had come out, anyway. (There was a third band as well, but despite regular brain-cudgelling I just can't remember who.)

  • @geldofpunk32
    @geldofpunk32 Год назад +1

    Gah everyone ignored Paint Box...such a brilliant song

  • @stephendavis5530
    @stephendavis5530 Год назад +2

    I have both the EP version and the album version of Magical Mystery Tour which featured both Hello Goodbye and I Am The Walrus, but for some strange reason, I was unaware that Hello Goodbye and I Am The Walrus was released as a single. The B side was infinitely better than the A side. I like Hello Goodbye but I always reckoned it was something that The Beatles could have written in their sleep. I Am The Walrus is a psychedelic classic, deliberately written with very obscure lyrics as a riposte to pretentious critics that would look for deep meanings in just about every one of their mid to late sixties releases. IATH is a tour de force of weirdness, brilliant recording tricks and an insistent beat that keeps you hooked. Its strangeness that somehow does sound deep and meaningful despite Lennon's attempt to take the piss. A fantastic record.

    • @SuperNevile
      @SuperNevile Год назад

      To be fair, "Walrus" did appear on the EP, on the LP, on the Film, and on the No.1 hit single, so maybe the thinking was that it had been given enough "airing" and something "non album" should be an A side as the fans had bought the song on the EP. Still got to number 1.

  • @kevhead1525
    @kevhead1525 Год назад +3

    Wow. How nights in white satin failed to garner any love early on is astounding. A big part had to be poor promotion.