V.A. – TRY A LITTLE SUNSHINE CD3

35,00 

DISC ONE 

1.  TRY A LITTLE SUNSHINE – The Factory

2.  REPUTATION – Shy Limbs

3.  LITTLE BOY – Beatstalkers

4.  LETTERS FROM EDITH –

The Spencer Davis Group

5.  ROUNDABOUT – The Montanas

6.  SISTER – Cliff Wade

7.  BROTHER THRUSH – Barclay James Harvest

8.  (VISION IN A) PLASTER SKY – Wild Silk

9. THE DAY THE TRAIN NEVER CAME – Consortium

10. LIFETIME – The Bliss

11. THIS IS TO A GIRL – Strawberry Jam

12. RIVER BOAT QUEEN – Audience

13. CAPTAIN REALE – Gentle Influence

14. A SALTY DOG – Procol Harum

15. GREEN MELLO HILL – Angel Pavement

16. THE WALRUS AND THE CARPENTER – Peter Howell & John Ferdinando

17. THIS TIME TOMORROW – The Move

18. SHINE A LITTLE LIGHT INTO MY ROOM – Jason Paul

19. STAY INDOORS – The New Formula

20. RUNNING WILD – Fresh Air

21. DOGS AND CATS – The Sorrows

22. WE BUILT THE SUN – Pussy

23. BABY AND ME – The Hammers

24. BEING HUMAN BEING (ALTERNATIVE VERSION) – Paper Bubble

DISC TWO

1.   CHILD ON A CROSSING – Writing On The Wall

2.   DR CRIPPEN’S WAITING ROOM – The Orange Machine

3.   LIAR – Fleur De Lys

4.   SEEN THROUGH A LIGHT – The Mooche

5.   IT’S ONLY LOVE – Sam Gopal

6.   DEEP WATER – Grapefruit

7.   STOP – Pan Pipers

8.   MARRAKESH – Fortes Mentum

9.   FLAXEN HAIR – Marc Brierley

10. CHANGES IN OUR TIME – Colin Giffin

11. CREEPING JEAN – Dave Davies

12. WHO WANTS HAPPINESS – Tapestry

13. SHE SAID, SHE SAID – Grand Union

14. ONLY GEORGE – Scrugg

15. SUMMER COME ALONG – Ralph McTell

16. IT HAPPENED TWO SUNDAYS AGO – Nirvana

17. DOUBTFUL NELLIE – Tuesday’s Children

18. MINDLESS CHILD OF MOTHERHOOD – Ewan Stephens

19. BIOGRAPHY – Woody Kern

20. ALCOCK AND BROWN – Balloon Busters

21. MAGIC CAR – Edwards Hand

22. HOW DOES IT FEEL – The Good Ship Lollipop

23. NO REASON – Shere Khan

24. MORNING WAY – Trader Horne

DISC THREE

1.   BLACK MASS – Jason Crest

2.   LAST CLOUD HOME – The Orange Bicycle

3.   (WHO PLANTED THORNS IN) MISS ALICE’S GARDEN – The Explosive

4.   JUST WHAT I WAS LOOKING FOR TODAY – The Spectrum

5.   THE PRICE OF LOVE – Status Quo

6.   THIS LITTLE BOY – 1984

7.   DEATH OF A DREAM MACHINE – The Deviants

8.   DAY OF THE CHANGE – Andromeda

9.   MR RAINBOW – Homer’s Knods

10. YOU MIGHT EVEN SAY – Pretty Things

11. CRY BABY CRY – Freedom

12. SATURDAY ROUNDABOUT SUNDAY – The Humblebums

13. WE WANT YOU TO STAY (DEMO VERSION) – Bill Fay

14. WHAT A GROOVY DAY – Harmony Grass

15. MR BEVERLY’S HEAVY DAYS – The Freshmen

16. LITTLE BIRD – Eyes Of Blue

17. TAMARIS KHAN – The Onyx

18. THE SCHOOL BOY – Five’s Company

19. LOOKING TOWARDS THE SKY – Davey Payne & The Medium Wave Band

20. FAIRGROUND – Pure Gold

21. PETROL PUMP ASSISTANT – Fat Mattress

22. GOOD OLD ’59 (WE ARE SLOWLY GETTIN’ OLDER) – Second Hand

23. COUNTING TIME MY WAY – Taxi

24. BURNING THE WEED – Bobak, Jons, Malone

25. ARMAGEDDON – Cape Kennedy Construction Company

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Description

Housed in a clamshell box with a 44 page booklet that includes biographical information on every band as well as rare photos.

• ‘Try A Little Sunshine’ covers every aspect of the 1969 British pop sound to provide not just four hours of vital late 60s music, but a fascinating look at how the mode of the music changed as a tumultuous decade drew to a close.

1967 was undoubtedly the high-water mark of the era, but the psychedelic genre’s influence lingered for some while afterwards, and by the end of the decade the British music scene had largely polarised into two distinct camps: the influence of the counterculture saw the burgeoning college/ university circuit grow as “serious” pop evolved into rock, while the more exploitative, commercial element of the industry reacted to the success of manufactured bands like The Monkees to instigate a sub-genre dismissively dubbed bubblegum.

That dichotomy saw the British pop and rock scene exhibit a strong element of musical schizophrenia, as can be heard on Try A Little Sunshine: The British Psychedelic Sounds of 1969, the latest instalment in Grapefruit’s acclaimed late Sixties series.

A significant number of great, heavily lysergic records were still appearing (if psychedelia was dead, clearly nobody had told the likes of The Factory, Fleur de Lys or Jason Crest), but the musical template did mutate. The Attack’s chunky mod-pop vignettes gave way to Andromeda’s power trio riffing, Status Quo moved from day-glo popsike to a looser, bluesier approach, The Pretty Things reluctantly left behind their neglected masterpiece ’S. F. Sorrow’ to explore more introverted territory, Grapefruit traded their gossamer-light harmony pop template for a relatively stripped- down sound, and Colin Giffin eschewed The End’s psychedelic dreamscapes to dabble in post- ‘Eleanor Rigby’ baroque pop.

In addition to such cornerstone creations, our overview ranges from ultra-commercial (but still unsuccessful) bubblegum-flecked singles by the likes of Pure Gold, Balloon Busters and Strawberry Jam to the arrival of prog-rock underground groups such as Woody Kern, Pussy and the righteously- obscure Irish band Taxi. We also feature some of the more pop-oriented folkies/singer-songwriters, including Ralph McTell’s attempt at a summer pop hit single and Marc Brierley’s sitar-laden non-LP nugget ‘Flaxen Hair’, while a number of harmony pop acts (Harmony Grass, Tapestry, Angel Pavement, The Orange Bicycle and others) were eager to move with the changing times. For other, more commercially successful bands like The Spencer Davis Group, Procol Harum and The Move, it was a case of attempting to maintain their high-profile status while also showing signs of progression.