BBC Sessions: 1965-1968

BBC Sessions: 1965-1968 Artist: The Small Faces
Label: Varese Sarabande
Category: Music


Average customer rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars
Format: Live
Media: Audio CD
Number Of Discs: 1


UPC: 030206105124
EAN: 0030206105124
ASIN: B00004NH8E


Release Date: 2000-02-29

BBC Sessions: 1965-1968


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Tracks:

  1. Watcha Gonna Do About It
  2. Jump Back
  3. Baby Don't You Do it
  4. Shake
  5. Sha La La La Lee
  6. You Need Loving
  7. Hey Girl
  8. E Too D
  9. One Night Stand
  10. You'd Better Believe It
  11. Understanding
  12. All Or Nothing
  13. If I Were a Carpenter
  14. Lazy Sunday
  15. Every Little Bit Hurts
  16. Interview - Small Faces/Steve Marriott
  17. Interview - Small Faces/Steve Marriott
  18. Interview - Small Faces/Steve Marriott
  19. Interview - Small Faces/Steve Marriott
  20. Interview - Small Faces/Kenney Jones

Similar Items:

  1. From the Beginning
  2. The Small Faces
  3. Ultimate Collection
  4. 35th Anniversary
  5. Natural Born Boogie: BBC Sessions

Customer Reviews:

4 out of 5 stars You'd Better Believe It!.......2004-03-30

This collection draws heavily from the band's earlier R&B period. On these recordings, Steve Marriot and company actually manage to sound rougher, tougher, leaner and meaner than they did on those classic Decca singles. They are no substitute for the originals, but essential none-the-less. Talk about giving The Who a run for their money! Even if you prefer their later Immediate material, you owe it to yourself to check this out. All Faces is good Faces!

Yes, Led Zeppelin blatantly ripped off "You Need Loving". But, let's not forget that the Small Faces shamelessly nicked the lyrics from Willie Dixon. Willie actually sued Zeppelin over copyright infringements and won. Smart man, Zeppelin had more money!

5 out of 5 stars This Can't Be Their Only Live Performances!!! I Want More!!!.......2003-12-09

I've never heard The Small Faces live, Appparently there are no live recordings......But after reading the reviews I bought this cd. Best cd purchase in a long time. Very good recording quality, well balanced sound, all instruments and vocals/backup vocals are clear as all bbc recordings are.In my opinion: If I Were A Carpenter is the stand-out track. Best rocking and soulful version I've ever heard along with Tracks 1,2,6,8,15.I definately prefer their harder stuff, but it's a great Cd to crank up all the way through. (As an aside, Robert Plant should be ashamed, now I know where he got his early influences from. He comes up short.)

4 out of 5 stars zeroxed by led zeppelin.......2003-09-03

Odd that the Small Faces never made much a splash outside England's Mod movement of the mid-60s. Stateside, they were a one-hit curiousity (Itchycoo Park) but back in the Queen's empire, Steve Marriott, Ronnie Lane, Kenney Jones and Jimmy Winston (later replaced with Ian McLagan) hit the top of the pops within weeks of their formation in 1965. Marriott's amply-amplified electric blues and leather-lunged vocals (an impossibly earthy black howl which later made millions for rock's most shameless embezzler Robert Plant) immediately distinguished the band's rollicking R&B covers and boisterous originals from their contemporaries. While the group's success was short-lived (Marriott walked offstage mid-song in a fit of pique during a New Years Day gig in 1969 and recruited Peter Frampton for a new band called Humble Pie), these BBC recordings recorded between 1965 - 68 show why the Small Faces were adored in their homeland. With avuncular BBC host Brian Matthews gleefully hosting the affair, the energy and confident cheek of the band is unmistakable as they plow through soul, blues and folk covers (Shake, If I Were a Carpenter, You'd Better Believe It, Sha La La La Lee) and their own hits (Hey Girl, Watcha Gonna Do About It, Lazy Sunday) - 15 in total. Unfortunately, neither Lane and Marriott aren around to enjoy the satisfaction of knowing they influenced everyone from The Jam to Oasis with their vibrant pre-punk power. But the electric crunch of Marriott's sizzling guitar work and howling graveyard blues (particularly on You Need Love, a throbbing and pained blues pledge blatantly Xeroxed by Zeppelin in Whole Lotta Love) - coupled with a solid rhythm section courtesy of Lane and Jones - are a study in unbridled rock enthusiasm and originality and not to be ignored.

5 out of 5 stars Supercharged live energy sixties mod style........2002-04-09

All their classics live(before Ogden Nut...).Yes, they could play as well as on their studio records.I knew about Small Faces but did not really hear their albums until 2001,better late than never.They were the cream of the crop in the late sixties.Super tight musicians,stellar tracks,sheer power.
P.S.I think the reviewer before me had the right review,but the wrong album.This aint Who,but better.

4 out of 5 stars

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  2. Bitches Ain't Shit But Good People ~ Hella
  3. you i lov/// ~ sub.bionic
  4. Friends at the Piano: Elton John & Billy Joel ~ Stars at Studio '99
  5. Song From ~ Renaissance
  6. Instant Party: Irresistible 80's ~ Various Artists
  7. 18 Best of Percy Sledge ~ Percy Sledge
  8. Essential Collection ~ Marc Bolan
  9. Stars Forever ~ Momus
  10. Born Under ~ Martin Zellar

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Teach Me Tonight ~ Nicole Henry with the Eddie Higgins Trio

Music CD 51

Interaction ~ Teddy Wilson

Managarroba ~ Jo%C3%A3o Donato

Autobiography in Jazz ~ Various Artists

Right Time ~ Sahotas

Begegnungen Live ~ Peter Maffay

Dirty Karat ~ Rosso

Ekoekoazarak ~ Natsuki Kato