| First
Immediate Album- The Reviews
Record
Collector, July 1999
Having outdone themselves in the
reissue stakes with their batch of remastered Immediate titles,
Sequel put the icing on the cake with this limited-edition, 180
gram heavyweight vinyl edition of the Small Faces'
"first" album. Originally issued in June 1967, it's
referred to by Faces aficionados as their third album, counting
the two preceding Decca LPs but the group always felt it to be
their first proper effort.
Taking advantage of the newfound
creativity afforded them, the pint-sized wonders tempered the
experimentation of Swinging London psychedelia (Green Circles),
with good, honest, straight-ahead power-pop of the type that has
immortalised them as 90s Britpop heroes (Tell Me Have You
Ever Seen Me, Get Yourself Together, a Weller favourite, Talk
To You and My Way of Giving) to name but several).
In between, there are sly
in-jokes (Become Like You, All Our Yesterdays and Ian
McLagan's Up The Wooden Hills to Bedfordshire)
culminating in a stoned calypso (Eddie's Dreaming),
featuring Georgie Fame's trumpet player Eddie Thornton, and
conga player, the late Speedy Acquaye. (Consumer tip: turn up
the volume to catch Eddie's excitable rap at the fade- missing
from most previous reissues.) The stereo mix has been given the
nod and sounds as good, if not better, than the original vinyl.
Taking advantage of the increased
playing time, Sequel have squeezed on Here Come The Nice,
plus the A and B sides to Itchycoo Park and Tin
Soldier. Perhaps it would have been better to reissue the
album as is, but then, can you really have too much of a good
thing? If that's not all, a re-pressing of the ultra-rare
one-sided promo single for the album, featuring the
gravel-voiced disc jockey: "small of stature but giant of
music". Couldn't agree more Mr Vance.
Andy Neil
Making Time, September 1997
Making
Time Review
Uncut magazine (UK), June
1997
THE SMALL FACES
OGDEN'S NUT CONE FLAKE
THE AUTUMN STONE
Castle Communications
CHECK out how many column inches
The Small Faces warrant in rock encyclopaedias, compared to the
space given to the likes of The Kinks or The Who and you'll find
Steve Marriott's men fail miserably short of their
contemporaries.
Granted, they knocked it on the
head after less than four years but between 1965 and 1969 they
were just as innovative and influential. They embraced R&B,
soul and psychedelia while remaining resolutely British. The
pioneering "concept" album Ogden's Nut Gone Flake pre-dated
Pete Townshend's Tommy by a year and in Marriott they had
the finest white voice of the decade.
And, by splitting when they did,
it gave them little time to fuck up and tarnish their
well-earned reputation (how many really good Kinks or Who
records have you heard in the last 25 years? A lesson the band's
modern day champion Paul Weller took to heart when he disbanded
The Jam at precisely the right moment.
The Small Faces,
originally released in 1967, is a perfect distillation of the
energy of the group's live performances over the previous two
years. This remastered version adds five bonus tracks including
the more complex singles Itchycoo Park and Tin Soldier
like a statement of intent for the future, not dissimilar to how
The Beatles' Revolver paved the way for Sgt Pepper.
Ogden's Nut Gone Flake, from
1968, is the recognised ground-breaker with its infamous
circular sleeve design and nonsensical continuity links from
professional nutter Stanley Unwin, but the novelty elements
never detract from the invention of tracks like Long Agos And
Worlds Apart or Happy Days Toy Town.
Only the big hit Lazy Sunday,
with its cod-cockney Lionel Bartisms grates on the ears.
The Autumn Stone,
originally released as a double vinyl album in 1969 is a taking
care-of-business collection of the old and new which, while
providing a fairly accurate snap shot of the group's career by
mopping up various singles and non-album tracks, is let down by
some painfully inept live tracks.
The combination of all three is
nigh on a completist's dream but a considered compendium of the
best bits from each album would be ideal for the more casual and
curious listener, and proof enough that the namedropping
Gallaghers. Wellers and Ocean Colour Scenes of this world are
men of taste, rather than the Johnny-come-lately muso bores who
are pulling our chains.
Terry
Staunton
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