Thursday 8 February 2018

Popsike, Beat, Pop,White Soul: Brinsley Schwarz - Hen's Teeth (1993 Edsel Records)


Hen's Teeth is a bit of a godsend for longtime Brinsley Schwarz collectors, gathering all of the group's non-LP singles -- including the first singles released when the band was a Swinging London pop combo called Kippington Lodge -- plus singles the group released under aliases. As the Hitters, they released the reggae single "Hypocrite," complete with the dub "Version" on the flip. As the Knees and Limelight, they released 45s of Beatles covers.


All this is interesting, fun trivia, but the true meat of the collection lies in the Kippington Lodge material and the official non-LP Brinsley tunes. Kippington Lodge may not be earth-shattering and the band is quite derivative, borrowing heavily from psychedelic British pop, in particular the Beatles and early Yes.

This isn't bad, but it is silly, whether it's the cascading psychedelia of "Lady on a Bicycle," the exhortation to have a "peace-off" on "Tomorrow Today," or the Vanilla Fudge-styled, bombastic soul cover of "In My Life." All artifacts, of course, but they're pretty engaging artifacts all the same, and the last Kippington song, "I Can See Her Face," is notable as Nick Lowe's first recorded song. The Brinsley material stands the test of time, finding the group at its very poppiest, whether turning out spirited covers of Naomi Neville's "I've Cried My Last Tear" and Tommy Roe's stomping "Everybody," or on originals, divided equally between Lowe, Ian Gomm, and co-compositions between the two.

These four songs -- "(It's Gonna Be a) Bring Down," "I Like You, I Don't Love You," "There's a Cloud in My Heart," and "I Got the Real Thing" -- are shiny, glittering pop, finding the group exercising its mainstream melodic muscle. The songs didn't land the band any hits, but they stand as terrific little gems that offer a nice conclusion to this terrific, necessary compilation.(allmusic.com)


This compilation is a fine thing. Beside the ten tracks (non LP singles) from the time with Kippington Lodge there are songs from ''The Knees'' and ''Limelight''. Schwarz recorded Beatles songs under these names. Various other pseudonyms were used. It is remarkable that the name Brinsley Schwarz appears only three times in the song writing credits. Other prominent names include Ian Gomm, Nick Lowe, Cook, Greenaway, Mark Wirtz. All high class pop songwriters and musicians. However, this compilation is fun and I can only recommend it to anyone who doesn't have it or doesn't know it.(Frank)
Flac 
mp3@320


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