The Primitives - "The Ostrich" (2:31)
The Beachnuts - "Cycle Annie" (2:20)
The Hi Lifes - "I'm Gonna Fight" (2:10)
The Hi Lifes - "Soul City" (2:19)
Ronnie Dickerson - "Oh No Don't Do It" (2:22)
Ronnie Dickerson - "Love Can Make You Cry" (2:20)
The Hollywoods - "Teardrop In The Sand" (2:47)
The Roughnecks - "You're Driving Me Insane" (2:21)
The Primitives - "Sneaky Pete" (2:10)
Terry Philips - "Wild One" (2:12)
Spongy & The Dolls - "Really - Really - Really - Really - Really - Really Love" (2:08)
The Foxes - "Soul City" (2:24)
The J Brothers - "Ya Running, But I'll Getcha" (2:09)
Beverley Ann - "We Got Trouble" (2:52)
The All Night Workers - "Why Don't You Smile" (2:28)
Jeannie Larimore - "Johnny Won't Surf No More" (2:12)
Robertha Williams - "Tell Mamma Not To Cry" (2:17)
Robertha Williams - "Maybe Tomorrow" (2:18)
Terry Philips - "Flowers For The Lady" (2:29)
Terry Philips - "This Rose" (2:11)
The Surfsiders - "Surfin'"
The Surfsiders - "Little Deuce Coupe"
The Beachnuts - "Sad, Lonely Orphan Boy"
The Beachnuts - "I've Got A Tiger In My Tank"
Ronnie Dickerson - "What About Me"
Review: Light In The Attic teams up with Laurie Anderson and the Lou Reed Archive for a thrilling retrospective, Why Don't You Smile Now: Lou Reed At Pickwick Records 1964-65. An expansive selection of songs all written by Lou Reed, during his mid-60s stint as the staff songwriter for the long-defunct label Pickwick Records, this is a rare glimpse of a master rock musician stepping out of the limelight over the course of 25 songs, yet still letting the form and contour of his voice and sensibility be heard. All this was achieved before Reed had at all launched his career with the Velvets; it may indeed be said that this pubescent 60s period was the firelighter to Reed's flame, as the label specialised in soundalike records that emulated the major pop hits of the day - it's no wonder Reed would absorb such emulations and take them in as his own, albeit with a Century-defining twist. Channelling everything from teenybopper pop to soul-inflected garage rock, whether byJeannie Larimore, The Hi-Lifes or The Hollywoods, we get a thorough look-in here as to what made Reed and his contemporaries tick, and what Reed made tick in turn, before the fame.
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