Celebrating
its 60th anniversary today is the eponymous debut LP by The Kinks,
which was released on October 2nd, 1964. While not fully indicative of
the latent talents of the band, in particular the songwriting prowess of
leader, Ray Davies, it is at least the home of the band's first chart
topping single, You Really Got Me, a song that would become the
blueprint for garage rock, hard rock, heavy metal and punk rock in years
to come.
The band were founded
by brothers Ray and Dave Davies in 1963, coming together in London
around the same time as others of the looming "British Invasion",
rubbing shoulder to shoulder with bands like The Beatles, The Rolling
Stones and The Who. The group had signed to Pye Records, who were
initially frustrated by the band's failure to connect with its first
couple of singles. Both their cover of Little Richards' Long Tall Sally
and its follow-up, the Davies' original, You Still Want Me, were pretty
much ignored by DJs and record buyers, despite significant promotion.
After
those two strikes, the label gave them one more opportunity to hit a
home run, and they did so with You Really Got Me. Another Ray Davies
original, the hit version almost never materialized. After recording a
preliminary version, Ray Davies insisted on modifying the arrangement to
something slower and more raw. The label refused to stump up the cash
for the studio time, however, but Davies persisted until session
producer, Shel Talmy, broke the stalemate by underwriting the additional
session himself. The song was inspired by The Kingsmen's version of
Louie Louie, and was taken to another level by the innovative mutilation
of a guitar amp. Dave Davies took a pocket knife and put a slice into
the speaker cone of his amp, causing it to have a distinct buzzing
distortion. It was a sound that instantly gave the record an
idiosyncratic edge, sounding unlike any other guitarist out there. The
single, released in August of 1964, became a top ten hit in both the US
and UK. It's gone on to be widely considered the root for many of the
heavier branches of rock 'n' roll that grew from its inspiration. That
fuzzy distortion became intrinsic to the hard rock and metal sounds that
would proliferate in the following decades.
The
rest of the album, however, wasn't so blessed with as much distinction.
As was the standard of the time, being a new group meant that the
record company expected them to record mostly covers, rather than
original material. This is a situation all of the British Invasion
bands went through with their first recording efforts, which is why many
of those debut albums don't properly capture the true essence of a lot
of those bands, and this is certainly the case with The Kinks. Their
debut LP offers only a bare glimpse into the greatness that the band
would deliver once they were allowed to shine in their own light.
2024-10-02
THE KINKS @ 60
2022-09-15
SOMETHING ELSE BY THE KINKS @ 55
Celebrating
55 years on the shelves today is Something Else by The Kinks, their
fifth UK studio LP, which was issued on September 15th, 1967. It’s an
album that continued to move the band away from the proto-hard rock
sound which had characterized early hits like You Really Got Me. The
late 1960s Kinks, instead, favored a more baroque pop sound with English
music hall leanings featuring Ray Davies’ introspective observational
lyrical content.
It was a move that was not particularly chart
friendly, though the singles from the LP, Waterloo Sunset and Death of a
Clown, performed respectably. The LP, on the other hand, didn’t fare
well with sales and critics were mixed. The US market were still
banning the group from touring or performing on TV, so there was no way
to properly promote it overseas. In the UK, the LP was competing with
compilations of early Kinks hits and the advance singles sort of let the
air out of the balloon, so to speak, and undercut interest in the
album.
But the vagaries of the times have since given way to an
appreciation of the complexities offered by the band at what has since
become recognized as the peak of their creative genius. Indeed, the LP
is bursting with brilliant songwriting and performances with songs like
David Watts, Situation Vacant and Lazy Old Sun being but a few of the
many standouts on the album. It’s a record that rewards repeat
listening and offers layers of insight into British life during the post
war era.
2021-11-24
THE KINKS - MUSWELL HILLBILLIES @ 50
November
24th marks the 50th anniversary of the release of The Kinks’ 10th
studio album, Muswell Hillbillies, which was issued on this day in 1971.
Coming
in with the first wave of the British Invasion of the early 1960s and
following on the success of their blistering proto-metal hits like You
Really Got Me, The Kinks had built a career refining their songwriting
sophistication through a series of albums which brought out Ray Davies’
talents as a storyteller to a degree that was quite unequaled in the
realm of pop music. Yet, while they’d had success in the UK charts
throughout the latter half of the decade, the US was pretty much a lost
territory after their 1965 tour resulted in the American Federation of
Musicians refusing to grant them performance permits until 1969, likely
due to their rowdy reputation on the road. The result was that the US
mostly forgot about them for the back half of the ’60s.
That
began to change in 1970 with the release of the album, Lola Versus
Powerman and the Moneygoround, Part One. The album’s title track, Lola,
an account of a confused romantic encounter with a transvestite, became
an unlikely top 10 hit on both sides of the Atlantic and brought the
band back into the spotlight in the US. That album also signaled the
ended of their contracts with Pye and Reprise Records as they signed a
five album deal with RCA. That got them enough of an advance to set up
their own recording studio, where they recorded Muswell Hillbillies.
Muswell
Hill is the area where the Davies brothers grew up and the themes of
the album delved into working class subjects reflective of their
background. Critically, the album was a success and garnered glowing
reviews right out of the gate and the success of its predecessor had
seemingly set them on course to continue that trend as they began their
tenure with their new label. Yet neither critical acclaim nor momentum
from the previous album managed to secure significant sales for Muswell
Hillbillies, even though it had all the earmarks to succeed. The songs
are top-notch, the styles reflect both British sensibilities, when it
leaned into music hall influences, while also bringing in American
influences of bluegrass and country. For many, it is considered the
band’s last truly “great” album! Yet it flagged in the stores and ended
up signalling the band entering into a downward trend until they
rebounded in 1977, reinvigorated by the “new wave” vibrancy of the
times.
While the band would go on to have more hits in the late
‘70s and beyond, Muswell Hillbillies, in retrospect, seems to be a
marker of the end of their “golden age” that began with Face to Face in
1966. It caps a run of music that remains peerless in terms of its
visceral connection to its subjects and Ray Davies’ ability to deftly
concoct his narratives around the framework of meticulously crafted,
unforgettable pop music. It’s music that defined the gold standard for
its genre of narrative driven, folksy realism.