THE PRETTY THINGS-"Get The Picture" U.K. LP Fontana TL.5280 1965
The Pretty Things launched their second U.K. LP "Get The Picture" in December 1965. By then the band were firmly settling in to recording more of their own material instead of churning out beloved U.S. blues/r&b covers. The band were also in a state of flux in regards to their troublesome drummer Viv Prince, who by its release date, was summarily ejected. The sessions saw him play on some tracks, with the rest of the drumming on the album done by session man extraordinaire Bobby Graham and Fairies drummer Twink (who would later become a full time member in 1967). The band's sound was also in a state of metamorphosis with them moving slightly out of the raw British r&b harp wailin'/maracas shakin' sound and including more jangly, melodic numbers whilst also absorbing a lot of the harder edged "mod" sound (fuzz, feedback, Nicky Hopkin's ivory tinkling etc).
SIDE ONE
1. "You Don't Believe Me" (Page, Graham, May, Merrell)
2. "Buzz The Jerk" (May, Taylor)
3. "Get The Picture" (May, Taylor)
4. "Can't Stand The Pain" (May, Taylor, Graham)
5. "Rainin' In My Heart" (West, Moore)
6. "We'll Play House" (Aldo, Gandy, May, Taylor)
Side One opens with the jangly neo folk rock of "You Don't Believe Me", co-authored with Jimmy Page it sees the band doing something they'd never really done before: a beat ballad! Which works! Band original (all but one track one Side One are band originals) "Buzz The Jerk" is next with it's intro borrowed from Alvin Cash and The Crawler's "Twine Time" with Dick Taylor's blistering fuzz licks laying perfectly with John Stax murky bass line, easily the most "danceable" thing the band after crafted! "Get The Picture" also benefits from Dick's fuzz guitar riffs on top of a mid tempo track and perfectly illustrates the new direction the Pretties were headed in. "Can't Stand The Pain" (also utilized as the flip of their current single "Midnight To Six Man") is magical. Delivered in hushed tones with bluesy licks and a desolate feel it's accented with faint piano tinkling and a discordant vibrato. Slim Harpo's "Rainin' In My Heart" is next, slowing things down a bit and harking back to their blues interpreter phase that they were just shifting away from. "We'll Play House" with it's feedback intro and constant cow bell is an interesting mix of styles but all too often sounds like filler to me despite the cool mod power chords.
SIDE TWO
1. "You'll Never Do It Baby" (B. Smith, T. Fox)
2. "I Had A Dream"
3. "I Want Your Love" (J. Dee, J. Tarr)
4. "London Town" (Taylor)
5. "Cry To Me" (Russell)
Side Two kicks off with a track penned by fellow r&b devotees The Cops N' Robbers, adds a dash of the bluesy Pretties that's part Chuck Berry and part Prettie's '66, especially with the soulful pauses. "I Had A Dream" is uncredited on the original album and is a bluesy barroom ballad with call and response backing vocals beneath smoky guitar licks and ivory tinkling that call to mind Them. "I Want You Love" plumbs the call and response backing vocals again with some nifty chord changes and stops and occasional bursts of uptempo raving with blistering licks. British folk standard "London Town" (originally penned by Mick Taylor, NOT the Stones guy) fords into uncharted territory for the band with it's acoustic guitar, bongos and echo drenched blues licks, easily my favorite interpretation of this number!! Betty Harris' blues belter "Cry To Me" (previously covered by The Stones on their "Out Of Our Heads" album) is next, though I prefer the Stones reading, this isn't without charm thanks to the backing vocals and the moody backing. "Gonna Find A Substitute" closes the album, though uncredited it's actually an Ike Turner composition culled from Ike & Tina's rare as hell (U.K.) Sue E.P. "The Soul Of..". The Pretties make it their own with trademark gusto: thundering bass and blistering bluesy guitar before the number gradually fades out like they'd had enough!
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Dutch pressing Fontana 858 039 FPY 1967 |
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