View unanswered posts | View active topics
Page 1 of 1
[ 2 posts ]
Author
Message
Linda
IMWAN Admin
Post subject: [2023-09-29] Various Artists "Bob Stanley Presents London A To Z 1962-1973" (Ace UK)
Posted: Thu Aug 31, 2023 8:48 pm
Helpful Librarian
Joined: Day WAN
Posts: 197104
Location: IMWAN Towers
Bannings: If you're not nice
Amazon USA https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0CGXTX8ZQ/?tag=imwan-20 Amazon UK https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B0CGXTX8ZQ/?tag=imwan-21 Description If you threw a house party in London in the late twentieth century, before the smart phone rendered it redundant, you could guarantee that the following morning there would be a dog-eared copy of the A to Z behind the sofa, or under the coffee table, probably in a Tesco bag. Everybody had at least one. It was an essential aid in understanding London. It joined the dots and threw up obscure names printed over hitherto unexplored grids of streets: Alperton, Shooters Hill, Honor Oak, Tooting Graveney, Childs Hill, Ladywell. It invited you to create your own personal map of London, discover your own secret routes, your own special places. You could peruse the A to Z with the knowledge of who lived where – Sandy Denny in Wimbledon, before she moved to Muswell Hill which was already legendary as the home of the Kinks. Arterial roads as grisly as Archway Road (Rod Stewart) or Holloway Road (Joe Meek) or could be made magic through their pop connections. Put together by Saint Etienne’s Bob Stanley, this is the soundtrack of London’s centre (Bert Jansch and John Renbourn’s ‘Soho’, Nick Drake’s ‘Mayfair’) and its hinterlands (Al Stewart’s ‘Swiss Cottage Manoeuvres’, Humble Pie’s ‘Beckton Dumps’, Julie Driscoll’s ‘Vauxhall To Lambeth Bridge’) with a few transport links (Barbara Ruskin’s ‘Euston Station’, Norma Tanega’s ‘Clapham Junction’) thrown in to help you navigate your A to Z. This isn’t London swinging cinematically, but it has the exact feel of the city’s streets and suburbs in the late 60s and early 70s. What might be lurking in these locations, waiting to be uncovered on a cold winter Saturday? Corner caffs with Pepsi signs. Second-hand record shops and rickety street markets. Many are gone, but not all. This compilation is a musical travel guide – squint, and sometimes London can still seem magical. This is it’s soundtrack.Tracklist 1. Cutty Sark - The John Barry Seven & Orchestra 2. Portobello Road - Cat Stevens 3. Sunny Goodge Street - Marianne Faithfull 4. Jeffrey Goes To Leicester Square - Jethro Tull 5. Marcel's - Herman's Hermits 6. Goodbye Post Office Tower Goodbye - Cressida 7. Primrose Hill - John & Beverley Martyn 8. Mayfair - Nick Drake 9. London Bridge - Cilla Black 10. Hampstead Way - Linda Lewis 11. Soho - Bert Jansch & John Renbourn 12. Friday Hill - Bulldog Breed 13. London Social Degree - Dana Gillespie 14. Euston Station - Barbara Ruskin 15. Kew Gardens - Ralph McTell 16. City Road - Dave Evans 17. Parliament Hill - Magna Carta 18. Edgware Station - Edward Bear 19. Beckton Dumps - Humble Pie 20. Notting Hill Gate - Quintessence 21. Clapham Junction - Norma Tanega 22. Swiss Cottage Manoeuvres - Al Stewart 23. Richmond - Shelagh McDonald 24. Vauxhall To Lambeth Bridge - Julie Driscoll, Brian Auger & The Trinity
_________________
Top
Linda
IMWAN Admin
Post subject: [2023-09-29] Various Artists "Bob Stanley Presents London A To Z 1962-1973" (Ace UK)
Posted: Wed Sep 13, 2023 10:47 am
Helpful Librarian
Joined: Day WAN
Posts: 197104
Location: IMWAN Towers
Bannings: If you're not nice
Both of the pre-order links in the first post are now active.
_________________
Top
Page 1 of 1
[ 2 posts ]
View unanswered posts | View active topics
Who is WANline
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 5 guests
You cannot post new topics in this forum You cannot reply to topics in this forum You cannot edit your posts in this forum You cannot delete your posts in this forum You cannot post attachments in this forum