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Roy Wood - Singles

Track listing:
  1. Night Of Fear - The Move 2:14
  2. I Can Hear The Grass Grow - The Move 3:01
  3. Flowers In The Rain - The Move 2:31
  4. Fire Brigade - The Move 2:23
  5. Blackberry Way - The Move 3:42
  6. Curly - The Move 2:45
  7. Brontosaurus - The Move 4:29
  8. Tonight - The Move 3:18
  9. Chinatown - The Move 3:07
  10. California Man - The Move 3:36
  11. Ball Park Incident - Wizzard 3:40
  12. See My Baby Jive - Wizzard 4:59
  13. Dear Elaine 4:09
  14. Angel Fingers (A Teen Ballad) - Wizzard 4:32
  15. Forever 4:19
  16. I Wish It Could Be Christmas Every Day - Wizzard 4:39
  17. Rock 'N' Roll Winter - Wizzard 5:04
  18. Goin' Down The Road (A Scottish Reggae Song) 3:03
  19. This Is The Story Of My Love - Wizzard 5:07
  20. Are You Ready To Rock - Wizzard 2:30
  21. Oh What A Shame 3:52

Notes


If there's anything wrong with Repertoire's Singles A's & B's, it's that Wizzard peaked early, albeit brilliantly, and their B-sides never capitalized on their dazzling, Spector/Beach Boys-tinted rock & roll. It's no coincidence that those B-sides were written by everybody else in the band but Wood, and that most of those were instrumentals. Some are amusing (the mild ELO send-up "Bend Over Beethoven"), some are interesting ("Rob Roy's Nightmare"), but they're all disposable, especially when compared to the A-sides, which are uniformly enchanting. True, they're a little similar -- the core is straight-ahead, old-fashioned rock & roll, sort of like Dave Edmunds, graced with wildly ornate arrangements and vocal harmonies -- but "Ball Park Incident," "See My Baby Jive," "Angel Fingers," "Rock & Roll Winter," "This Is the Story of My Love (Baby)," and "I Wish It Could Be Christmas Everyday" are all giddy entertainments. The three remaining singles were recorded when Wizzard was trucking as the oldies outfit Eddy & the Falcons, a silly but enjoyable trek into nostalgia highlighted by the Grease-soundalike "You Got Me Running." Considering the quality of the nine A-sides, it's easy to wish that they had been combined with Wood's solo A-sides on a dynamite single disc, but that's not what happened - and, perhaps that's appropriate, since with the preponderance of B-sides on both discs are accurate representations of how idiosyncratic Wood is. Even if it is a bit uneven, there's little argument that Singles is much, much better and considerably more logical than most Wood/Wizzard compilations.