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Roger the Engineer by The Yardbirds
Roger the Engineer by The Yardbirds
1966 | Rock
6
6.0 (1 Ratings)
Album Rating
Rolling Stone's 350th greatest album of all time
Pretty forgettable Merseybeat album.
  
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Ross (3282 KP) rated Something Else by The Kinks in Music

May 26, 2020 (Updated Apr 9, 2021)  
Something Else by The Kinks
Something Else by The Kinks
1967 | Rock
7
8.5 (2 Ratings)
Album Rating
Rolling Stone's 289th greatest album of all time (478th in the 2020 list)
Decent Merseybeat album by the Kinks, though there is a lot of samey material to get through before the joy of Waterloo Sunset.
  
Who Sings My Generation by The Who
Who Sings My Generation by The Who
1965 | Rock
7
7.0 (1 Ratings)
Album Rating
Rolling Stone's 237th greatest album of all time
Strange album, generally mediocre 60s songs with the epic My Generation standing out like a sore thumb. One raw, raucous rock song among all the saccharine Merseybeat was a little unusual.
  
Rubber Soul by The Beatles
Rubber Soul by The Beatles
1965 | Folk, Pop, Rock
9
9.1 (15 Ratings)
Album Rating
Rolling Stone's 5th greatest album of all time
Brilliant Beatles album, some of their best, but maybe not best-known, songs. Somnewhere between their earlier, Merseybeat jingle-jangle pop, and their later blues-y and hippie works. An exciting pointer towards the follow-on album Revolver.
  
The Piper at the Gates of Dawn by Pink Floyd
The Piper at the Gates of Dawn by Pink Floyd
1967 | Psychedelic, Rock
6
8.3 (9 Ratings)
Album Rating
Rolling Stone's 347th greatest album of all time
I realise what this album was meant to be, Pink Floyd starting to create the prog genre. And it truly is progressive. However, that mentality overlaid on the music of the time, Merseybeat style Rhythm & Blues, just doesn't work for me. Most of it I found quite hard to listen to. I think Pink Floyd were just ahead of their time and the music of the era didn't fit well with experimental stylings.
  
Band of Gold/Contact/Best Of/Reaching Out by Freda Payne
Band of Gold/Contact/Best Of/Reaching Out by Freda Payne
2009 | Rock
(0 Ratings)
Album Favorite

"I’m a gigantic music fan. I love fifties rock‘n’roll, Chess, Sun, Motown. All the Merseybeat bands, Sixties girl groups, folk. This is just so cool: it’s a combination of the way it’s produced, the cool pop/R&B sound, and Freda’s voice. Its kinda kitschy in a way – y’know, it’s got a really up-tempo tune – and, the first few times I heard it, I was, like, totally into the coolness of the song. It was only on the third or fourth listen I realised the lyrics were so fucking heartbreaking"

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I Hear A New World by Joe Meek and The Blue Men
I Hear A New World by Joe Meek and The Blue Men
1960 | Electronic, Pop, Rock
(0 Ratings)
Album Favorite

"I was obsessed with this record from the first time I heard it. Everything about Joe Meek's story is fascinating. The way he worked, the way he lived. As a producer, he turned down the Beatles, saying "The Merseybeat sound is going nowhere." This record was made in 1960 and it's berserk. It captures a time when space exploration was an international agenda. 'Telstar' had captured the mood when the first satellites went up; this record went a lot further, imagining an entire planet beyond our solar system. It's an artist you know doing a record that's so far from what you thought they were capable of: "Really, this is the same person?" I just got obsessed with it. I only had a taped version of it which, to me, isn't like actually having the record. I was in Japan a few years later, before it was reissued, and I found a bootleg copy there at great expense. It's almost like an early hauntological recording; it's very crude but incredibly evocative. It's interesting to wonder what would have happened to Joe Meek had his story turned out differently…"

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