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The Kinks - The Songs We Sang for Auntie: BBC Sessions 1964-1977 (1977)

Track listing:
CD1
  1. [Interview]
  2. You Really Got Me
  3. [Interview]
  4. Cadillac
  5. All Day And All Of The Night
  6. Tired Of Waiting For You
  7. Ev'rybody's Gonna Be Happy
  8. See My Friend
  9. This Strange Effect
  10. Milk Cow Blues
  11. Wonder Where My Baby Is Tonigh
  12. Till The End Of The Day
  13. Where Have All The Good Times
  14. Death Of A Clown
  15. Love Me 'Til The Sun Shines
  16. Harry Rag
  17. Good Luck Charm
  18. Waterloo Sunset
  19. Monica
  20. Days
  21. The Village Green Preservation
CD2
  1. Mindless Child Of Motherhood
  2. Holiday
  3. Demolition
  4. Victoria
  5. Here Comes Yet Another Day
  6. Money Talks
  7. Mirror Of Love
  8. Celluloid Heroes
  9. Skin And Bone/Dry Bones
  10. Get Back In Line
  11. Did You See His Name
  12. When I Turn Off The Living Roo
  13. Skin And Bone
  14. Money Talks

Notes


Is it possible that the early Kinks could be even rawer and more exciting in BBC halls than on their known Pye Records recordings? Sometimes yes, otherwise very nearly. A few of these — notably a breathless rave-up of Bo Diddley's "Cadillac" — are indeed even more spark-ridden than the LP versions. Most of the merely curious will delight in new looks at the punishing stomp of the original blockbuster 1964 hits "You Really Got Me" and "All Day and All the Night." Likewise, this is like hearing "Tired of Waiting," "Till the End of the Day," "Days," and a faster-paced "Love Me 'Til the Sun Shines" for the first time, the feeling is still so powerful in such fresh looks at seminal creations. And for the ardent fan, it's the procession of little differences and inspired takes that quietly push the tingle buttons — especially as one gets deeper into disc one. You note an unexpected piano on "Waterloo Sunset" by Nicky Hopkins, on a louder version that's as unusual as it is different from the 1967 pinnacle hit. And how about that deeper guitar chime on the pioneering Eastern flavor of "See My Friends"? Those who bought the bootlegs always raved about the great, lost, unreleased pop gem "Strange Effect"; this is the only Kinks version, yet its been covered over and over. Disc two is greatly diminished if still often worthy. Don't miss the ripping "Mindless Child of Motherhood," typically pretty versions of "Celluloid Heroes" and "Holiday," and the great lost Kinks album, comic-touching "When I Turn off the Living Room Lights." But it's disc one that you need. The wonder is that half of the band's '60s sessions are sadly not extant, yet the first 19 tracks are indispensable.