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Urban75 Album of the Year 1964

Five James Brown albums!!
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Live at the Apollo was released in May '63. I remember it from the 63 thread.

Live at the Royal is a good live album (even if 2 of the tracks are studio recordings with audience sounds dubbed on top).

Good Good Twistin' is a compilation.

Grits and Soul gets a bit jazzy for me and has too much organ.

Showtime is a weird album - part Brown singing the kind of songs Frank Sinatra would be happy with, part looking towards the sound that would make him absolutely massive in 65. It's got the original version of I Got You on it (everyone knows smash hit the 65 version):

 
Showtime is a weird album - part Brown singing the kind of songs Frank Sinatra would be happy with, part looking towards the sound that would make him absolutely massive in 65. It's got the original version of I Got You on it (everyone knows smash hit the 65 version):
No, wait... I Got You isn't on Showtime, it's on Out of Sight which seems to have been released in September 64 (although Discogs has it as 65).

James Brown's albums discography is such a mess in the 60s, in every way :D
 
This is wild...
""Bo Diddley's Beach Party recorded live in concert in July 1963 at the Beach Club in Myrtle Beach, South Carolina, it is one of rock music's earliest live remote recordings. ""
Dripping with influence.... Like with the Yardbirds theres definite foreshadowing of Velvet Underground on this at times

wiki says
Released January 1964
Recorded July 5–6, 1963


Beach Party Review by Bruce Eder
"A blistering live album, especially in mono, cut by Bo Diddley and company in Myrtle Beach, South Carolina on July 5 and 6, 1963.

This album contains 30-plus minutes of the best live rock & roll ever issuedd on record. Diddley and company are "on" from the get-go with a killer instrumental erroneously credited as Chuck Berry's "Memphis" (which it isn't), that's a showcase for Diddley's attack on his instrument and a crunching assault by the rest of the band (all in that shave-and-a-haircut-two-bits beat), cymbals on top of an overloaded bass, and what sounds like every rhythm guitar in the world grinding away. And even that instrumental seems to "talk" to the audience, telling a story.

Once Diddley's voice comes in on "Gunslinger," the picture is complete, and perfection is achieved on the frantic, gyrating "Hey, Bo Diddley." The crowd is driven into an audible frenzy as the thundering band crunches in time to Diddley's sometimes shrieking punctuation around his rhymes.

Some repertory here may elude modern listeners; this was a dance, and any tune that could be turned into one was fair game, even "On Top of Old Smokey" as a slow number, which leads into the frenetic "Bo Diddley's Dog."

Diddley does even better adapting the Larry Verne novelty tune "Mr. Custer," making it his own, and has some fun on "Bo Waltz" before switching gears to the softer, ballad-like "What's Buggin' You," all of which leads to the roaring finale on "Road Runner." Diddley and the band show off most of their bag of tricks amid the man's joyous, buoyant laughter.

Apparently, the shows weren't entirely a laughing matter: the police threatened to arrest the band when Jerome Green leaped into the audience with his maracas waving and the female members surrounded him; this all happening in the still-segregated south of 1963.

Mishaps, provocations, and non-musical spontaneity aside, this is some of the loudest, raunchiest guitar-based rock & roll ever preserved for public consumption, and it captures some priceless moments. "I'm All Right" was lifted wholesale by the Rolling Stones for their live sets, from 1964 until as late as the end of 1966.

The whole approach to music-making here lay at the core of practically every note of music that the Stones recorded or performed for the first three years of their history; indeed, no Stones collection is truly complete without this record attached to it."
 
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Colombian singer, actress, sometime politician and national treasure Leonor Gonzalez had her first album Cantos De Mi Tierra Y De Mi Raza out.



Most cumbia music from this period sounds like it was recorded in a cupboard with a single failing mic, which it probably was, but this album is really well produced, which makes it stand out.
 
I'm not aware of trumpeter Kenny Dorham, turns out "his name has become synonymous with underrated"..../even the standard he wrote Blue Bossa was recorded by Joe Henderson first and so associated with him. I'd add "criminally" to the underrated - only got this album to go on so far but its brilliant.

I couldn't tell you what modal means precisely (i half get it) but so many of the records from this era that I love are modal - discogs says this is modal and it does sound in that style to me (im not a musician so i cant confirm if its modal!). Great themes, grooves hard, foot tapping start to finish, only 3 tracks on the original 64 release, but a 4th added later for CD which doesnt fit the set IMO - skip it on the video if you play that. two tracks have latin jazz elements, but its new york front and centre here.

Really enjoy Kenny's playing - perfect contrast with Joe Henderson and Herbie Hancock makes it special all the way (drum and bass pretty groundworking)

(recorded 1963, says 63 everywhere but released early 64 supposedly)

ETA: moving on to his next recorded in 64 released in 65 solo album Trompeta Toccata and thats facescrewing too)
 
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Found a playlist of Olympia 64, but on listening I realise that I have no idea what he's going on about because he's foolishly forgotten to write any of the songs in English. No wonder he had to get Scott Walker in to fix them a few years later. You wouldn't catch the Beach Boys making that kind of rookie error.
 
Found a playlist of Olympia 64, but on listening I realise that I have no idea what he's going on about because he's foolishly forgotten to write any of the songs in English. No wonder he had to get Scott Walker in to fix them a few years later. You wouldn't catch the Beach Boys making that kind of rookie error.
I clicked on your discogs link with trepidation but was at least releaved to see no breton shirt.
 
Talking of which this appears to be the debut Stones album


Sounds pale imitation after the Bo Diddley tbh! That Bo record is the one

Discogs reckons theres 3 Stones ablums in 1964
Two more


I think two of those albums are compilations of singles, only the first self-titled album is legit.

I really like the Stones of this period. Not great but there's a touch of chemistry and excitement about them. But still I would go for that Five Live Yardbirds or this first:

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I was going to say "I could've sworn that was by Daniel Johnston", but I think I may be getting mixed up there. I also just found out that Sontag's Notes on Camp was from 1964, didn't realise it was quite that old, but I don't think Sontag ever got around to releasing it on vinyl format so her chances of winning album of the year are pretty slim.
Found a playlist of the Supremes' Where Did Our Love Go - between Baby Love and Be My Baby/half the songs on the Ronettes album, it was a very strong year for songs with baby in the name.
 
I think two of those albums are compilations of singles, only the first self-titled album is legit.
12x5 is the UK only released Five by Five EP expanded to an album with some other tracks they had laying around for the US market.

Around and Around is the Five by Five EP expanded to an album with different tracks they had laying around for the French and German markets.

Ask fans in the US, France or Germany and they're definitely legit albums.

At this point albums weren't released all over the world with the same tracklists at the same time. Different countries got different versions of albums at different times geared towards local tastes and depending on the whims the local record label. See also Dusty Springfield and The Beatles.
 
Its a single and they didn't do an album till 4 years later but their first single in 1964 is a gem imo. ( Weirdly enough Andy Summers from the Police was in this group)

 
12x5 is the UK only released Five by Five EP expanded to an album with some other tracks they had laying around for the US market.

Around and Around is the Five by Five EP expanded to an album with different tracks they had laying around for the French and German markets.

Ask fans in the US, France or Germany and they're definitely legit albums.

At this point albums weren't released all over the world with the same tracklists at the same time. Different countries got different versions of albums at different times geared towards local tastes and depending on the whims the local record label. See also Dusty Springfield and The Beatles.

My thinking is that they were collections of singles/b-sides which ever way you look at it. I might be wrong on this though, with some original material on them.

Oh alright I'll allow them.
 
Very ahead-of-its-time song title that, I can't imagine there were that many places that proibido fumar in 1964?
 
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