UPC: 5099963393125
Format: CD (4 disc)
Release Date: Jun 07, 2010
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Liner Note Authors: Jon Savage ; Billy Sloan; Paul Gambaccini.
Introduction by: Paul Gambaccini.
Photographers: Nigel Goodall; Pam Taylor; Susie Wright; Barbara Marshall; Peter Lewry; William Hooper; Graham Kirk; Jane Evans; Audrey Wilson; Ann Chadwick; Jane Elliott; Iris Daniel; Enid Ferguson; Diana Emery; David Kasey; David Hancock; Dave Bailey ; Colette Williams; Carol Merrick; Carol Clackson; Phyllis Sweetman; Patsy Grey; Patricia Oliver; Pat Wall; Mrs. P. Amey; Mrs. M. Willsher; Mrs. M. Ford; Mrs. J. Philips; Mrs. J. Norcross; Mrs. P.M. Firth; Mrs. M. Furniss; Mrs. M. Ehringer; Mrs. Lyn Light; Mrs. L. Hawkes; Mrs. Janet Burton; Mrs. J.M. Heard; Mrs G. McCue; Mrs E.a. North; Mrs. C. Gregory; Mr. P.W. Carroll; Mr. D. Matthews; Mr. T. Kennerley; Mike Wilson; Marie Barnish; Margaret Tipple; Margaret Greenberry; Lorrain Kelly; Kath Coleran; Janice Tyler; Wendy Ashby; Vina Cooke; Valerie Dodds; Thelma Thompson; Simon Norman Stiles; Shirley Morgan; Sheilagh Middleton; Sheila Liversidge; Ken Jones; Mrs. Christine Brown; Ray Williams.
Unknown Contributor Roles: John Heron; Stan Edwards; John Friesen; Tony Hoffman; John Foster; Harry De Louw; Carol Foster; Dave Herbert.
Such an unimaginative title for such a imaginative boxful. Across four discs and 105 songs, Cliff Richard's earliest catalog comes in for precisely the kind of treatment every rock & roll star should have: an all-encompassing study of his most important period. Even more impressively, though the song titles all sound familiar, the performances rarely are. Thirty-seven tracks are bona fide unreleased (South African 78s notwithstanding), but several dozen more are culled from scarce EP-only mixes, rarely resurfacing B-sides, and unusual mixes. One cut, an undubbed take of "Willie and the Hand Jive," was hitherto available only on a mid-'80s budget-priced single disc, covering much the same period as this. It wasn't aimed at collectors, it wasn't heavily advertised, and it probably didn't sell many copies. Of such things do completists dream, but when you have a beakful of hen's teeth to sort through, do such things really matter? Discs one through three are the conventional ones. Running in strict chronology through Richard's first eight albums, 20-plus EPs, and 23 singles, highlights are sorted, then sorted again. Where a rare version exists, that's what is offered here, be it an alternate version of "It's All in the Game," an unreleased rehearsal of "Do You Wanna Dance," or the original stereo mix for the album take of "Twenty Flight Rock." Disc one is the hottest. The swagger of "Move It," the dynamics of "Dynamite," all the things that sent the New Musical Express running home to hide in 1958/1959 (screaming, "must we fling this filth at our pop kids?") are here. From this side of the ocean, the best-known tracks are the American covers, and there's a fair swathe of them to be sure. But the killers, the stompers, the real bees' knees, are the homegrown monsters that simply ripped up the form book and rewrote rocking basics. Just like the guy who sang them, in fact. Disc two, covering 1959-1961, keeps up the pace for as long as it can, but rock & roll itself was starting to flag, and Richard's energy level flags with it. By disc three, 1962-1963, Richard's post-Beatles role of mainstream pop balladeer was already in his grasp, and though he could still kick out the jams when he wanted (a soulful "Blueberry Hill," a raunchy "Reelin' and Rockin'"), it's the ballads that stick out the most -- "It's All in the Game" and "I'm Looking Out the Window." And then there's "The Next Time," stripped down to its unorchestrated basics, and still one of Richard's most impressive performances. Until you reach disc four, of course. Subtitled "Rare'n'Rockin' 1958-63," this is the album that completely rewrites history. It opens with the first recording Richard (then still laboring under his distinctly nondescript given name of Harry Webb) ever made: He rips through raucous, raw renderings of "Lawdy Miss Clawdy" and "Breathless," cuts to a 1958 live show, and hacks through broadcast tapes and unreleased acetates. And every one is a gem. His Elvis Presley covers are especially remarkable. America's rock & roll revolution, of course, was matched blow for blow by skiffle in the U.K. -- even Richard's Shadows cut their teeth in that movement, as members of Wally Whyton's Vipers. Where Richard triumphed over the rest of the pack was in the way he blended the two forms together; where "Rare'n'Rockin'" triumphs is by revealing just how seamless that blending could be. And "Jailhouse Rock" and "Heartbreak Hotel" are the apogee of his art. Suddenly it's no surprise that, for every new British band from the Beatles on down, it was Richard and the Shadows who pointed the way, not Elvis, Buddy Holly, Eddie Cochran, or Gene Pitney, and certainly none of the names who sprang up in Britain in Richard's wake. Richard did more than create a hybrid. He invented a truly British way of rocking. And from the Beatles to Blur, the Rolling Stones to the Stone Roses, that method remains fundamental to British rock. ~ Dave Thompson
Introduction by: Paul Gambaccini.
Photographers: Nigel Goodall; Pam Taylor; Susie Wright; Barbara Marshall; Peter Lewry; William Hooper; Graham Kirk; Jane Evans; Audrey Wilson; Ann Chadwick; Jane Elliott; Iris Daniel; Enid Ferguson; Diana Emery; David Kasey; David Hancock; Dave Bailey ; Colette Williams; Carol Merrick; Carol Clackson; Phyllis Sweetman; Patsy Grey; Patricia Oliver; Pat Wall; Mrs. P. Amey; Mrs. M. Willsher; Mrs. M. Ford; Mrs. J. Philips; Mrs. J. Norcross; Mrs. P.M. Firth; Mrs. M. Furniss; Mrs. M. Ehringer; Mrs. Lyn Light; Mrs. L. Hawkes; Mrs. Janet Burton; Mrs. J.M. Heard; Mrs G. McCue; Mrs E.a. North; Mrs. C. Gregory; Mr. P.W. Carroll; Mr. D. Matthews; Mr. T. Kennerley; Mike Wilson; Marie Barnish; Margaret Tipple; Margaret Greenberry; Lorrain Kelly; Kath Coleran; Janice Tyler; Wendy Ashby; Vina Cooke; Valerie Dodds; Thelma Thompson; Simon Norman Stiles; Shirley Morgan; Sheilagh Middleton; Sheila Liversidge; Ken Jones; Mrs. Christine Brown; Ray Williams.
Unknown Contributor Roles: John Heron; Stan Edwards; John Friesen; Tony Hoffman; John Foster; Harry De Louw; Carol Foster; Dave Herbert.
Such an unimaginative title for such a imaginative boxful. Across four discs and 105 songs, Cliff Richard's earliest catalog comes in for precisely the kind of treatment every rock & roll star should have: an all-encompassing study of his most important period. Even more impressively, though the song titles all sound familiar, the performances rarely are. Thirty-seven tracks are bona fide unreleased (South African 78s notwithstanding), but several dozen more are culled from scarce EP-only mixes, rarely resurfacing B-sides, and unusual mixes. One cut, an undubbed take of "Willie and the Hand Jive," was hitherto available only on a mid-'80s budget-priced single disc, covering much the same period as this. It wasn't aimed at collectors, it wasn't heavily advertised, and it probably didn't sell many copies. Of such things do completists dream, but when you have a beakful of hen's teeth to sort through, do such things really matter? Discs one through three are the conventional ones. Running in strict chronology through Richard's first eight albums, 20-plus EPs, and 23 singles, highlights are sorted, then sorted again. Where a rare version exists, that's what is offered here, be it an alternate version of "It's All in the Game," an unreleased rehearsal of "Do You Wanna Dance," or the original stereo mix for the album take of "Twenty Flight Rock." Disc one is the hottest. The swagger of "Move It," the dynamics of "Dynamite," all the things that sent the New Musical Express running home to hide in 1958/1959 (screaming, "must we fling this filth at our pop kids?") are here. From this side of the ocean, the best-known tracks are the American covers, and there's a fair swathe of them to be sure. But the killers, the stompers, the real bees' knees, are the homegrown monsters that simply ripped up the form book and rewrote rocking basics. Just like the guy who sang them, in fact. Disc two, covering 1959-1961, keeps up the pace for as long as it can, but rock & roll itself was starting to flag, and Richard's energy level flags with it. By disc three, 1962-1963, Richard's post-Beatles role of mainstream pop balladeer was already in his grasp, and though he could still kick out the jams when he wanted (a soulful "Blueberry Hill," a raunchy "Reelin' and Rockin'"), it's the ballads that stick out the most -- "It's All in the Game" and "I'm Looking Out the Window." And then there's "The Next Time," stripped down to its unorchestrated basics, and still one of Richard's most impressive performances. Until you reach disc four, of course. Subtitled "Rare'n'Rockin' 1958-63," this is the album that completely rewrites history. It opens with the first recording Richard (then still laboring under his distinctly nondescript given name of Harry Webb) ever made: He rips through raucous, raw renderings of "Lawdy Miss Clawdy" and "Breathless," cuts to a 1958 live show, and hacks through broadcast tapes and unreleased acetates. And every one is a gem. His Elvis Presley covers are especially remarkable. America's rock & roll revolution, of course, was matched blow for blow by skiffle in the U.K. -- even Richard's Shadows cut their teeth in that movement, as members of Wally Whyton's Vipers. Where Richard triumphed over the rest of the pack was in the way he blended the two forms together; where "Rare'n'Rockin'" triumphs is by revealing just how seamless that blending could be. And "Jailhouse Rock" and "Heartbreak Hotel" are the apogee of his art. Suddenly it's no surprise that, for every new British band from the Beatles on down, it was Richard and the Shadows who pointed the way, not Elvis, Buddy Holly, Eddie Cochran, or Gene Pitney, and certainly none of the names who sprang up in Britain in Richard's wake. Richard did more than create a hybrid. He invented a truly British way of rocking. And from the Beatles to Blur, the Rolling Stones to the Stone Roses, that method remains fundamental to British rock. ~ Dave Thompson
Tracks:
Disc 1:
1 - Schoolboy Crush [Original B-Side]
2 - High Class Baby [Original A-Side]
3 - My Feet Hit the Ground [Original B-Side]
4 - Don't Bug Me Baby [Studio Master]
5 - King Creole
6 - Tv Hop
7 - Rockin' Robin
8 - I'll Try
9 - High School-Confidential
10 - Early In the Morning
11 - Somebody Touched Me
12 - Livin' Lovin' Doll [Original a-Side]
13 - Mean Streak [Original B-Side]
14 - Never Mind [Original B-Side]
15 - Steady With You [Original B-Side]
16 - My Babe [Live Stereo EP Version]
17 - Move It [Live Stereo EP Version]
18 - That'll Be the Day [Live Stereo Version]
19 - Danny [Live Stereo Version]
20 - Whole Lotta' Shakin' Goin' On [Live Stereo Version]
21 - One Night [Live Mono Outtake]
22 - Apron Strings [Original B-Side]
23 - Dynamite [Original B-Side]
24 - I Gotta Know [Alternate Stereo EP Version]
25 - Snake and the Bookworm [Alternate Stereo EP Version]
26 - Here Comes Summer [Stereo EP Version]
27 - Twenty Flight Rock [Stereo EP Version]
28 - Blue Suede Shoes [Stereo EP Version]
Disc 2:
1 - Mean Woman Blues [Stereo EP Version]
2 - Pointed Toe Shoes [Stereo EP Version]
3 - I'm Walkin' [Stereo Ep Version]
4 - Don't Be Mad At Me [Original B-Side]
5 - Willie and the Hand Jive [Undubbed Version]
6 - Nine Times Out of Ten [Incomplete Take Plus Master]
7 - Thinking of Our Love [Original B-Side]
8 - Evergreen Tree [Stereo LP Version]
9 - She's Gone [Stereo LP Version]
10 - Tell Me [Alternate Stereo Take]
11 - Where is My Heart? [Original B-Side]
12 - Lamp of Love [Stereo LP Version]
13 - I'm Gonna Get You [Stereo LP Version]
14 - I Cannot Find a True Love [Original B-Side]
15 - Working After School [Stereo LP Version]
16 - You and I [Stereo LP Version]
17 - I'm Willing To Learn [Alternate Stereo Take]
18 - We Have It Made [Alternate Stereo Take]
19 - Choppin' 'N' Changin' [Alternate Stereo Take]
20 - It's You [Stereo LP Version]
21 - I Love You [Alternate Take Featuring False Start]
22 - 'D' In Love [Original B-Side]
23 - Catch Me [Undubbed Version]
24 - Now's the Time To Fall In Love [Undubbed Version]
25 - True Love Will Come To You [Alternate Mono Take]
26 - First Lesson In Love [Stereo LP Version]
27 - I Want You To Know [Alternate Stereo Take]
28 - Blue Moon [Stereo LP Version]
Disc 3:
1 - Tough Enough [Stereo LP Version]
2 - Mumblin' Mosie [Original B-Side]
3 - Fifty Tears For Every Kiss [Stereo LP Version]
4 - Unchained Melody [Stereo LP Version]
5 - What'd I Say [Stereo LP Version]
6 - Forty Days [Stereo LP Version]
7 - Without You [Stereo LP Version]
8 - Shame On You [Stereo LP Version]
9 - Spanish Harlem [Stereo LP Version]
10 - Do You Remember [Alternate Version]
11 - I'm Looking Out the Window [Original a-Side]
12 - You Don't Know [Stereo LP Version]
13 - Take Special Care [Fast Version]
14 - Do You Wanna Dance [Rehearsal Take]
15 - Do You Wanna Dance
16 - Do You Wanna Dance [Undubbed Master]
17 - Do You Wanna Dance [Original B-Side]
18 - Since I Lost You [Original B-Side]
19 - Dim, Dim the Lights [1962 Live Stage Performance From Kingston]
20 - Save My Soul [1962 Live Stage Performance From Kingston]
21 - I'm Walkin' the Blues [Mono Lp Version]
22 - Summer Holiday [Undubbed Version]
23 - Next Time [Undubbed Version]
24 - Blueberry Hill [Stereo Lp Version]
25 - Forever Kind of Love [Stereo Ep Version]
26 - Razzle Dazzle
27 - Reelin' and Rockin'
28 - It's All In the Game
Disc 4:
1 - Lawdy Miss Clawdy [Private Recording]
2 - Breathless [Private Recording]
3 - Twenty Flight Rock [1958 Live Stage Performance]
4 - Jailhouse Rock [1958 Live Stage Performance]
5 - Money Honey [1958 Live Stage Performance]
6 - Heartbreak Hotel [1958 Live Stage Performance]
7 - Turn Me Loose [1959 "Oh Boy" Tv Performance]
8 - Who's Gonna Take You Home [Acetate]
9 - Let's Stick Together [Acetate]
10 - What'd I Say [Alternate South African 78rpm Single Version]
11 - Forty Days [Radio Luxembourg Performance]
12 - Got a Funny Feeling [Radio Luxembourg Performance]
13 - Rosalie (Come Back To Me) [Radio Luxembourg Performance]
14 - Me and My Shadows [Radio Luxembourg Show Closing]
15 - Lessons In Love [Solo Version]
16 - We Say Yeah [Undubbed Film Version]
17 - Hang Up Your Rock and Roll Shoes [1963 Radio Broadcast]
18 - Dancing Shoes [1963 Radio Broadcast]
19 - It'll Be Me [1963 Radio Broadcast]
20 - Summer Holiday Advertising Ep [US Radio Promotional Disc]
21 - Cliff's Personal Message To You ["Serenade" Flexi-Disc Recording]
1 - Schoolboy Crush [Original B-Side]
2 - High Class Baby [Original A-Side]
3 - My Feet Hit the Ground [Original B-Side]
4 - Don't Bug Me Baby [Studio Master]
5 - King Creole
6 - Tv Hop
7 - Rockin' Robin
8 - I'll Try
9 - High School-Confidential
10 - Early In the Morning
11 - Somebody Touched Me
12 - Livin' Lovin' Doll [Original a-Side]
13 - Mean Streak [Original B-Side]
14 - Never Mind [Original B-Side]
15 - Steady With You [Original B-Side]
16 - My Babe [Live Stereo EP Version]
17 - Move It [Live Stereo EP Version]
18 - That'll Be the Day [Live Stereo Version]
19 - Danny [Live Stereo Version]
20 - Whole Lotta' Shakin' Goin' On [Live Stereo Version]
21 - One Night [Live Mono Outtake]
22 - Apron Strings [Original B-Side]
23 - Dynamite [Original B-Side]
24 - I Gotta Know [Alternate Stereo EP Version]
25 - Snake and the Bookworm [Alternate Stereo EP Version]
26 - Here Comes Summer [Stereo EP Version]
27 - Twenty Flight Rock [Stereo EP Version]
28 - Blue Suede Shoes [Stereo EP Version]
Disc 2:
1 - Mean Woman Blues [Stereo EP Version]
2 - Pointed Toe Shoes [Stereo EP Version]
3 - I'm Walkin' [Stereo Ep Version]
4 - Don't Be Mad At Me [Original B-Side]
5 - Willie and the Hand Jive [Undubbed Version]
6 - Nine Times Out of Ten [Incomplete Take Plus Master]
7 - Thinking of Our Love [Original B-Side]
8 - Evergreen Tree [Stereo LP Version]
9 - She's Gone [Stereo LP Version]
10 - Tell Me [Alternate Stereo Take]
11 - Where is My Heart? [Original B-Side]
12 - Lamp of Love [Stereo LP Version]
13 - I'm Gonna Get You [Stereo LP Version]
14 - I Cannot Find a True Love [Original B-Side]
15 - Working After School [Stereo LP Version]
16 - You and I [Stereo LP Version]
17 - I'm Willing To Learn [Alternate Stereo Take]
18 - We Have It Made [Alternate Stereo Take]
19 - Choppin' 'N' Changin' [Alternate Stereo Take]
20 - It's You [Stereo LP Version]
21 - I Love You [Alternate Take Featuring False Start]
22 - 'D' In Love [Original B-Side]
23 - Catch Me [Undubbed Version]
24 - Now's the Time To Fall In Love [Undubbed Version]
25 - True Love Will Come To You [Alternate Mono Take]
26 - First Lesson In Love [Stereo LP Version]
27 - I Want You To Know [Alternate Stereo Take]
28 - Blue Moon [Stereo LP Version]
Disc 3:
1 - Tough Enough [Stereo LP Version]
2 - Mumblin' Mosie [Original B-Side]
3 - Fifty Tears For Every Kiss [Stereo LP Version]
4 - Unchained Melody [Stereo LP Version]
5 - What'd I Say [Stereo LP Version]
6 - Forty Days [Stereo LP Version]
7 - Without You [Stereo LP Version]
8 - Shame On You [Stereo LP Version]
9 - Spanish Harlem [Stereo LP Version]
10 - Do You Remember [Alternate Version]
11 - I'm Looking Out the Window [Original a-Side]
12 - You Don't Know [Stereo LP Version]
13 - Take Special Care [Fast Version]
14 - Do You Wanna Dance [Rehearsal Take]
15 - Do You Wanna Dance
16 - Do You Wanna Dance [Undubbed Master]
17 - Do You Wanna Dance [Original B-Side]
18 - Since I Lost You [Original B-Side]
19 - Dim, Dim the Lights [1962 Live Stage Performance From Kingston]
20 - Save My Soul [1962 Live Stage Performance From Kingston]
21 - I'm Walkin' the Blues [Mono Lp Version]
22 - Summer Holiday [Undubbed Version]
23 - Next Time [Undubbed Version]
24 - Blueberry Hill [Stereo Lp Version]
25 - Forever Kind of Love [Stereo Ep Version]
26 - Razzle Dazzle
27 - Reelin' and Rockin'
28 - It's All In the Game
Disc 4:
1 - Lawdy Miss Clawdy [Private Recording]
2 - Breathless [Private Recording]
3 - Twenty Flight Rock [1958 Live Stage Performance]
4 - Jailhouse Rock [1958 Live Stage Performance]
5 - Money Honey [1958 Live Stage Performance]
6 - Heartbreak Hotel [1958 Live Stage Performance]
7 - Turn Me Loose [1959 "Oh Boy" Tv Performance]
8 - Who's Gonna Take You Home [Acetate]
9 - Let's Stick Together [Acetate]
10 - What'd I Say [Alternate South African 78rpm Single Version]
11 - Forty Days [Radio Luxembourg Performance]
12 - Got a Funny Feeling [Radio Luxembourg Performance]
13 - Rosalie (Come Back To Me) [Radio Luxembourg Performance]
14 - Me and My Shadows [Radio Luxembourg Show Closing]
15 - Lessons In Love [Solo Version]
16 - We Say Yeah [Undubbed Film Version]
17 - Hang Up Your Rock and Roll Shoes [1963 Radio Broadcast]
18 - Dancing Shoes [1963 Radio Broadcast]
19 - It'll Be Me [1963 Radio Broadcast]
20 - Summer Holiday Advertising Ep [US Radio Promotional Disc]
21 - Cliff's Personal Message To You ["Serenade" Flexi-Disc Recording]