https://exchange.prx.org/p/606671
It's the middle of February, and although we don't have any Love songs this week, we do have plenty of ear candy, including a big box of Vanilla Fudge and lots of other tasty treats.
Artist: Tommy James And The Shondells
Title: Hanky Panky
Source: 45 RPM single
Writer(s): Barry/Greenwich
Label: Roulette (original label: Snap)
Year: 1964
Once upon a time there was a girl group called the Summits who released a song called Hanky Panky as the B side of their only single in 1963. The song, which was also released as a B side by Brill building songwriters Jeff Barry and Ellie Greenwich's studio creation The Raindrops a few months later, started getting played by cover bands in the midwesterm US, including a South Bend, Indiana band called the Spinners. A Niles, Michigan high school kid named Tommy Jackson heard the Spinners play the song and taught it to his own band, the Shondells, getting some of the lyrics wrong in the process. In early 1964 the Shondells recorded their own version of Hanky Panky at the studios of WNIL radio, releasing it on their second single for the local Snap label later that year and pressing 2000 copies of the record. It's not entirely clear whether that recording of Hanky-Panky, credited to Jackson, was intended to be an A or B side, but it did get a decent amount of local airplay before fading off into obscurity. The original Shondells broke up in 1965 following graduation from high school, but a local teenager managed to get his hands on several copies of the record, trading them to Ernie's Record Mart in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania for store credit. A local DJ, Bob Mack, picked up a copy of the record and began playing it as part of his "dance party". The song became a local hit, but by then Snap Records was out of business, prompting local Pittsburgh entrepeneurs to press new copies of the single on their own label. Meanwhile, a search for Tommy Jackson eventually prompted the singer, who by then was calling himself Tommy James, to show up in Pittsburgh...with no band. This led to Tommy hiring a local band called the Racounteurs to become the new Shondells, who soon signed with the New York based Roulette label, which reissued the original Shondells' recording of Hanky Panky in 1966. The song went all the way to the top of the national charts, prompting a series of successful followup singles for Tommy James And The Shondells over the next three years or so. And that, my friends, was just one way to become a rock star in the mid-1960s. For another, check out the Byrds song coming up in about half an hour.
Artist: Beatles
Title: Nowhere Man
Source: CD: Yellow Submarine Songtrack (originally released in UK on LP: Rubber Soul)
Writer(s): Lennon/McCartney
Label: Apple/CapitoI (original UK label: Parlophone)
Year: 1965
Altough Nowhere Man had been included on the British version of the Beatles' 1965 Rubber Soul album, it was held back in the US and released as a single in 1966. Later that year the song was featured on the US-only LP Yesterday...And Today. It was remixed for the 2009 release of the Yellow Submarine Songtrack CD.
Artist: Simon and Garfunkel
Title: The Dangling Conversation
Source: CD: Collected Works (originally released as 45 RPM single and on LP: Parsley, Sage, Rosemary and Thyme)
Writer(s): Paul Simon
Label: Columbia
Year: 1966
The first Simon and Garfunkel album, Wednesday Morning 3AM, originally tanked on the charts, causing Paul Simon and Art Garfunkel to temporarily pursue solo careers. Simon went to England, where he wrote and recorded an album's worth of material, while Garfunkel went back to school. Meanwhile, producer Tom Wilson, fresh from producing Bob Dylan's Like A Rolling Stone, went into the studio with the original recording of the song Sound of Silence and added electric instruments to it. The result was a surprise hit that led Paul Simon to return to the US, reuniting with Art Garfunkel and re-recording several of the tunes he had recorded as a solo artist for a new album, Sounds of Silence. The success of that album prompted Columbia to re-release Wednesday Morning, 3AM, which in turn became a bestseller. Meanwhile, Simon and Garfunkel returned to the studio to record an album of all new material. Parsley, Sage, Rosemary and Thyme was yet another success that spawned several hit songs, including The Dangling Conversation, a song Simon described as similar to The Sound Of Silence, but more personal. The song was originally released as a single in fall of 1966, before the album itself came out.
Artist: Lemon Pipers
Title: Green Tambourine
Source: CD: Psychedelic Pop (originally released as 45 RPM single)
Writer: Leka/Pinz
Label: BMG/RCA/Buddah
Year: 1967
Oxford, Ohio's Lemon Pipers have the distinction of being the first band to score a number one hit for the Buddah label with Green Tambourine, released in November of 1967. Unfortunately for the band, the song's success led to them being typecast as a bubble-gum group, despite their roots as a bar band in a college town.
Artist: West Coast Pop Art Experimental Band
Title: Help, I'm A Rock (single mix)
Source: Mono CD: Part One (originally released as 45 RPM single)
Writer(s): Frank Zappa
Label: Sundazed (original label: Reprise)
Year: 1967
Ya gotta hand it to the West Coast Pop Art Experimental Band. It takes cojones to record a cover of a Frank Zappa tune, especially within a year of the original Mothers of Invention version coming out. To top it off, the W.C.P.A.E.B. even prepared a single edit of Help, I'm A Rock, although to my knowledge it was never released as such.
Artist: Monkees
Title: The Girl I Knew Somewhere (single version)
Source: CD: The Monkees' Greatest Hits (originally released as 45 RPM single B side)
Writer(s): Michael Nesmith
Label: Rhino (original label: Colgems)
Year: 1967
Although both Michael Nesmith and Peter Tork had participated in a few of the studio sessions for what became the first two Monkees albums (with Nesmith producing), the Monkees did not record as an actual band until January 16, 1967, when they taped the first version of Nesmith's The Girl I Knew Somewhere. Nesmith himself handled the lead vocals and guitar work, while Tork, the most accomplished musician in the group, played harpsichord. Mickey Dolenz played drums and Davy Jones added the tambourine part. The song was released less than two weeks after the same lineup re-recorded the song with Dolenz on lead vocals as the B side to A Little Bit Me, A Little Bit You. Both sides made the top 40 in the spring of 1967.
Artist: Donovan
Title: Superlungs (My Supergirl)
Source: CD: Sunshine On The Mountain (originally released on LP: Barabajabal)
Writer(s): Donovan Leitch
Label: Sony Music Special Products (original label: Epic)
Year: 1969
Donovan originally recorded a song called Supergirl for his 1966 album Sunshine Superman album, but ultimately chose not to use the track. Over two years later he recorded an entirely new version of the song, retitling it Superlungs (My Supergirl) for the 1969 Barabajagal album. Or was it really not entirely new? When you listen to it on headphones much of the track sounds like an "electronically rechanneled for stereo" recording (the Sunshine Superman sessions were originally mixed only in mono), with only the background vocals toward the end of the piece actually being mixed in true stereo.
Artist: Crystal Rain
Title: You And Me
Source: Mono CD: An Overdose Of Heavy Psych (originally released as 45 RPM single)
Writer(s): Bill Moan
Label: Arf! Arf! (original label: Dynamic Sound)
Year: 1969
Crystal Rain was a band from Dayton, Ohio that released a pair of singles in 1969, the second of which was You And Me. If you know anything more about them, feel free to drop me a note at hermitradio.com (hit the envelope icon near the top of the page).
Artist: Child
Title: Little Light
Source: LP: Child
Writer(s): Mike Lewis
Label: Jubilee
Year: 1969
One of the more obscure bands from the psychedelic era, Child, based somewhere on the East Coast, released their self-titled LP in 1969. They are often compared to Vanilla Fudge, as they too specialized in heavy, slowed-down versions of popular songs. They also included some lesser known tunes on the album, such as Little Light. The song is credited to Mike Lewis, who may or may not be the same Mike Lewis who arranged and conducted the equally obscure Fountainhead in 1970.
Artist: Byrds
Title: So You Want To Be A Rock And Roll Star
Source: LP: The Byrds' Greatest Hits (originally released as 45 RPM single and included on LP: Younger Than Yesterday)
Writer(s): Hillman/McGuinn
Label: Columbia
Year: 1967
By early 1967 there was a building resentment among musicians and rock press alike concerning the instant (and in many eyes unearned) success of the Monkees. One notable expression of this resentment was the Byrds' So You Want To Be A Rock And Roll Star, which takes a somewhat snarky look at what it takes to succeed in the music business. Unfortunately, much of what they talk about in the song continues to apply today (although the guitar has been somewhat supplanted by the computer as the instrument of choice).
Artist: Blues Magoos
Title: Pipe Dream
Source: Mono LP: Electric Comic Book
Writer: Gilbert/Scala
Label: Mercury
Year: 1967
Pipe Dream, the Blues Magoos strong follow-up single to (We Ain't Got) Nothin' Yet was handicapped by having an equally strong track, There's A Chance We Can Make It, on the other side of the record. As it was not Mercury's policy to push one side of a single over the other, stations were confused about which song to play. The result was that each tune got about an equal amount of airplay. With each song getting airplay on only half the available stations, neither tune was able to make a strong showing in the charts. This had the ripple effect of slowing down album sales of Electric Comic Book, which in turn hurt the careers of the members of the Blues Magoos. Also, I'm sure the fact that they were treated like a novelty act on at least two TV variety shows hosted by famous comedians (Bob Hope and Jack Benny) did not exactly contribute to their longevity either.
Artist: Eric Burdon And The Animals
Title: Gratefully Dead
Source: Mono British import CD: Winds Of Change (bonus track originally released in UK as 45 RPM single B side)
Writer(s): Burdon/Briggs/Weider/McCulloch/Jenkins
Label: Repertoire (original label: M-G-M)
Year: 1967
One of the most successful singles by Eric Burdon And The Animals was a tribute to the summer of Love called San Franciscan Nights taken from their 1967 debut LP, Winds Of Change. The B side of that single was Good Times, from the same album. At first the band's British label was reluctant to release San Francisco Nights as a single, but eventually decided to go for it. Since Good Times had already been released as a single in the UK (making the top 10), the group recorded a new B side for San Franciscan Nights's UK release, a tune written by the band called Gratefully Dead. To my knowledge, the track has never been issued in the US.
Artist: Wyld
Title: If I Had It
Source: Mono German import LP: Sixties Rebellion Vol. 5-The Cave (originally released in US as 45 RPM single)
Writer(s): Huffman/Wyatt/Hammond
Label: Way Back (original label: Charay)
Year: 1967
The Wyld was a band from Greenville, South Carolina led by Rudy "Rude" Wyatt, who also recorded with a band called The Roots. Whether the two were actually the same band is debatable, since three of the four Wyld singles released on the Texas-based Charay label had the same B side as the only Roots single, released two years earlier on the Brownfield label (there is also reason to believe that the two labels were actually one and the same). Regardless, the fourth and final single to be released by the Wyld was If I Had It, which had the same catalog number as their other three and included one of those A sides as its B side. So to recap: The Wyld released five songs on four singles with the same catalog number, and one of those five was a recycled B side from a previous group that may have actually been an earlier incarnation of the Wyld itself. My head hurts.
Artist: Music Machine
Title: Astrologically Incompatible
Source: Mono British import CD: My Mind Goes High (originally released in US as 45 RPM single)
Writer: Sean Bonniwell
Label: Warner Strategic Marketing (original label: Warner Brothers)
Year: 1967
While touring extensively in 1967 the Music Machine continued to take every possible opportunity to record new material in the studio, while at the same time working to change record labels. The first single to be issued on the Warner Brothers label was Bottom Of The Soul, released in late 1967. The B side of that record was Astrologically Incompatible, one of the first rock songs to deal with astrological themes, albeit in a slightly tongue-in-cheek manner.
Artist: Mouse And The Traps (recording as Chris St. John)
Title: I've Got Her Love
Source: Mono British import CD: The Fraternity Years (originally released as 45 RPM single)
Writer(s): Barton/Brians
Label: Big Beat
Year: 1967
Ronnie "Mouse" Weiss had already established a reputation locally in Tyler Texas as a session musician by the time he had his first regional hit record, the Dylanesque A Public Execution, in 1966. The success of A Public Execution led to the formation of a backing band, the Traps, made up mostly of the same studio musicians who had played on the single. The band didn't take long to build a following, thanks to relentless touring across the southern US from Texas to Virginia. Still, they couldn't seem to get the kind of breakout hit single that would put them on the national map. At the insistence of Fraternity Records the band even released a 1967 single, I've Got Her Love, under the name Chris St. John, but the record failed to chart. Mouse continued to release singles with varying degrees of success (even having the number one record in Nashville at one point), but the rigors of touring and a fluctuating lineup eventually led to the Traps being dismantled in 1970.
Artist: H.P. Lovecraft
Title: Anyway You Want Me
Source: Two Classic Albums from H. P. Lovecraft: H. P. Lovecraft/H. P. Lovecraft II (bonus track originally released as 45 RPM single)
Writer(s): Chip Taylor
Label: Collector's Choice/Universal Music Special Markets (original label: Philips)
Year: 1967
Sometime in early 1967 Dunwich Records, the Chicago label that released the Shadows Of Knight version of Gloria the previous year, decided to stop being a record company and instead became a production house shopping master recordings to other labels. One of the first of these Dunwich Productions was a cover of the Troggs' Anway You Want Me by (appropriately) H.P. Lovecraft, which at this point was a duo made up of guitarist/vocalist George Edwards, who had been the second artist to release a record on the Dunwich label a year earlier, and keyboardist Dave Michaels. Over the next couple of months Edwards and Michaels put together a more or less permanent lineup to record the band's first self-titled LP.
Artist: People
Title: I Love You
Source: 45 RPM single
Writer(s): Chris White
Label: Capitol
Year: 1968
By 1968 the major labels had signed just about every San Francisco band with any perceived potential. Capitol, having had some success with the Chocolate Watchband from San Jose on its Tower subsidiary, decided to sign another south bay band, People, to the parent label. The most successful single for the band was a new recording of an obscure Zombies B side. I Love You ended up hitting the top 20 nationally, despite the active efforts of two of the most powerful men in the music industry, who set out to squash the song as a way of punishing the record's producer for something having nothing to do with the song or the band itself.
Artist: Al Kooper/Stephen Stills/Harvey Brooks/Eddie Hoh
Title: You Don't Love Me
Source: LP: Super Session
Writer(s): Willie Cobb
Label: Sundazed/Columbia
Year: 1968
You Don't Love Me was originally recorded and released as a single by Willie Cobbs in 1960. Although the song is credited solely to Cobbs, it strongly resembles a 1955 Bo Diddley B side, She's Fine She's Mine, in its melody, lyrics and repeated guitar riff. The Cobbs single was a regional hit on the Mojo label in Memphis, but stalled out nationally after being reissued on Vee-Jay Records, due to the label pulling promotional support from the song due to copyright issues. A 1965 version by Junior Wells with Buddy Guy saw some minor changes in the lyrics to the song; it was this version that was covered by Al Kooper and Stephen Stills for the 1968 Super Session album. The recording extensively uses an effect called flanging, a type of phase-shifting that was first used in stereo on the Jimi Hendrix Experience track Bold As Love.
Artist: Kinks
Title: Who'll Be The Next In Line
Source: 45 RPM single
Writer(s): Ray Davies
Label: Reprise
Year: 1965
Once upon a time a band called the Kinks released a song called Tired Of Waiting For You. It was a huge international hit, going into the top 10 in several countries, including the UK, where it topped the charts. The followup single, Ev'rybody's Gonna Be Happy, didn't do as well, peaking at # 17 on the British charts. As a result, Reprise Records decided to cancel the single's US release, instead moving up the release date of a song called Set Me Free, which was stylistically much more in line with Tired Of Waiting For You. The Kinks' next single was to be a song called See My Friends, but Reprise decided to instead release Ev'rybody's Gonna Be Happy in July of 1965, but with a slight change, making the original UK B side, a song called Who'll Be The Next In Line, the A side of the US single. This time the strategy didn't work out so well, as the song barely made the US top 40. By this time, the American Federation of Musicians had imposed a performance ban on the Kinks (due mostly to their onstage rowdiness) that would last five years, and the band would not have another top 10 hit in the US until Lola was released in 1970.
Artist: Vanilla Fudge
Title: Bang Bang
Source: LP: Vanilla Fudge
Writer: Sonny Bono
Label: Atco
Year: 1967
Vanilla Fudge made their reputation by taking popular hit songs, such as the Supremes' You Keep Me Hangin' On, and extensively re-arranging them, giving the songs an almost classical feel. In fact, some of their arrangements incorporated (uncredited) snippets of actual classical pieces. One glaring example is the Vanilla Fudge arrangement of Cher's biggest solo hit of the 60s, Bang Bang (written by her then-husband Sonny Bono). Unfortunately, although I recognize the classical piece the band uses for an intro to Bang Bang, I can't seem to remember what it's called or who wrote it. Anyone out there able to help? I think it may have been used in a 1950s movie like The King And I or Attack of the Killer Women from Planet X.
Artist: Vanilla Fudge
Title: Need Love
Source: LP: Rock And Roll
Writer: Stein/Bogart/Martell/Appice
Label: Atco
Year: 1969
By 1969 Vanilla Fudge was doing more of their own material, as can be heard on Need Love, the opening track of their fifth studio album, Rock And Roll. However, Vanilla Fudge would cease to exist in 1970, only to reform twelve years later in support of a Greatest Hits album. Since then, various versions of the band, featuring anywhere from one to all four of the original members, have popped up from time to time.
Artist: Love Sculpture
Title: Summertime
Source: CD: Blues Helping
Writer(s): Gershwin/Hayward
Label: EMI (original US label: Rare Earth)
Year: 1968
Founded in Cardiff, Wales in 1966 by guitarist Dave Edmunds, bassist John David and drummer Rob "Congo" Jones, Love Sculpture, a power trio from South Wales, was one of the hottest bands on the British blues-rock scene. Their first album, Blues Helping, consisted mainly of cover tunes, including this version of Gershwin's Summertime, with Edmunds on vocals. Following the group's breakup in 1970, Edmunds went on to have a successful career, both as a solo artist and as co-founder of the band Rockpile.
Artist: Who
Title: Summertime Blues
Source: LP: The Who Sell Out Super Deluxe Edition (bonus track originally released on CD: The Who Sell Out Deluxe Edition)
Writer(s): Cochrane/Capehart
Label: Track/Polydor/UMC
Year: Recorded 1967, released 2009
During their "maximum R&B" period the Who performed a lot of cover versions of US hits, including Eddie Cochrane's Summertime Blues. Around the time they were recording The Who Sell Out, they added the song back into their stage repertoire, recording a studio version of the tune for reference. This arrangement doesn't rock out quite as hard as the 1971 live version heard on the Live At Leeds album (or their 1969 Woodstock version, for that matter), but the basics are there.
Artist: Cherry Slush
Title: I Cannot Stop You
Source: Mono LP: Nuggets Vol. 2 (originally released as 45 RPM single)
Writer(s): Dick Wagner
Label: Elektra (original labels: Coconut Grove/USA)
Year: 1967
I Cannot Stop You, released by the Cherry Slush in 1967, has the distinction of being one of the few garage-rock singles to show up on all three of the US charts: Billboard, Cashbox and Record World. Not that it charted particularly high on all of them (its highest position was #35 on the Cashbox chart), but it was successful enough to keep the band going for a couple more years. The group was originally formed in late 1964 as the Wayfarers by a group of eigth-graders at Saginaw's Arthur Hill High School. As one of the first garage bands to jump on the folk-rock bandwagon they changed their name to the Bells Of Rhymny in 1966. That year, the band recorded a few demos that they later played for Dick Wagner, a popular local guitarist who fronted his own band, the Bossmen. Wagner liked what he heard and agreed to produce their first single, a song he wrote himself called The Wicked Old Witch. The song was released on the local Dicto label. The band recorded Wagner's I Cannot Stop You as a followup single, but personnel changes and a search for a record deal delayed the song's release until late in the year, by which time the band had changed its name to the Cherry Slush. Once the single had been released, on the local Coconut Grove label, it quickly gained popularity on local top 40 radio, and the band was close to signing with Columbia Records when they found out their contract with Coconut Grove had been sold to the Chicago based USA label, which reissued the song nationally in early 1968. Unfortunately, USA itself went bankrupt just as the band was releasing their next single, dashing their hopes of breaking out nationally. After releasing one more single (as The Slush) on yet another small local label (Chivalry) the group decided to call it quits in 1969.
Artist: Red Squares
Title: You Can Be My Baby
Source: Mono CD: Nuggets II-Original Artyfacts From The British Empire And Beyond 1964-1969 (originally released in Sweden as 45 RPM single B side)
Writer(s): Martin/Bell
Label: Rhino (original label: Columbia)
Year: 1967
Originally formed in Boston, England, in 1964, the Red Squares relocated to Denmark in 1966 and soon became massively popular. For the most part the band's sound was similar to the Hollies, as can be heard on the original 1966 LP version of You Can Be My Baby. The re-recorded single version of the song however, released in 1967 in Sweden as a B side, cranks up the energy levels to something approaching the early Who records.
Artist: Lovin' Spoonful
Title: You Didn't Have To Be So Nice
Source: LP: The John Sebastian Songbook (originally released as 45 RPM single and included on LP: Daydream)
Writer: John Sebastian
Label: Kama Sutra
Year: 1965
The second single released by the Lovin' Spoonful proved to be just as popular as their first one and helped establish the band as one of the premier acts of the folk-rock movement. Unlike the West Coast folk rock artists such as the Byrds and Barry McGuire, who focused on the socio-political issues of the day, John Sebastian tended to write happy songs with catchy melodies such as You Didn't Have To Be So Nice. As a result, the Lovin' Spoonful for a while rivaled the Beatles in popularity while still managing to maintain some street cred due mainly to their Greenwich Village roots.
Artist: Cream
Title: I Feel Free
Source: LP: Fresh Cream
Writer(s): Bruce/Brown
Label: Atco
Year: 1966
After an unsuccessful debut single (Wrapping Paper), Cream scored a bona-fide hit in the UK with their follow-up, I Feel Free. As was the case with nearly every British single at the time, the song was not included on Fresh Cream, the band's debut LP. In the US, however, hit singles were commonly given a prominent place on albums, and the US version of Fresh Cream actually opens with I Feel Free. To my knowledge the song, being purely a studio creation, was never performed live by the band.
Artist: Captain Beefheart And His Magic Band
Title: Zig Zag Wanderer
Source: Mono CD: Where The Action Is: L.A. Nuggets 1965-68 (originally released on LP: Safe As Milk)
Writer(s): Van Vliet/Bermann
Label: Rhino (original label: Buddah)
Year: 1967
Don Van Vliet made his first recordings as Captain Beefheart in 1965, covering artists like Bo Diddley in a style that could best be described as "punk blues." Upon hearing those recordings A&M Records, despite its growing reputation as a hot (fairly) new label, promptly cancelled the project. Flash forward a year or so. Another hot new label, Buddah Records, an offshoot of Kama Sutra Records that had somehow ended up being the parent rather than the subsidiary, was busy signing new acts, and ended up issuing Safe As Milk in 1967 as their very first LP. The good captain would eventually end up on his old high school acquaintance Frank Zappa's Bizarre Records, turning out classic albums like Trout Mask Replica, and the world would never be quite the same.
Artist: Rolling Stones
Title: Jumpin' Jack Flash
Source: CD: Singles Collection-The London Years (originally released as 45 RPM single)
Writer(s): Jagger/Richards
Label: Abkco
Year: 1968
After the late 1967 LP Their Satanic Majesties Request was savaged by the critics, the Rolling Stones decided to make a big change, severing ties with their longtime producer Andrew Loog Oldham and replacing him with Jimmy Miller, who had made a name for himself working with Steve Winwood on recordings by both the Spencer Davis Group and Traffic. The collaboration resulted in a back-to-basics approach that produced the classic single Jumpin' Jack Flash. The song was actually the second Stones tune produced by MIller, although it was the first to be released. The song revitalized the band's commercial fortunes, and was soon followed by what is generally considered to be one of the Stones' greatest albums, the classic Beggar's Banquet (which included the first Miller-produced song, Street Fighting Man).
Artist: Floating Bridge
Title: Don't Mean A Thing
Source: LP: Nuggets Vol. 8-The Northwest (originally released as 45 RPM single)
Writer(s): Pat Gossan
Label: Rhino (original label: Vault)
Year: 1969
One of the forgotten bands from the late 1960s Seattle music scene was Floating Bridge. Formed in 1967, the band consisted of Rich Dangel, Joe Johansen and Denny MacLeod on guitars, Pat Gossan as vocals, Michael Jacobsen on electric Cello & saxophone, Joe Johnson on bass, Andrew Lang on trumpet and Michael Marinelli on the drums. In addition to a highly collectable self-titled LP, Floating Bridge only released two singles before disbanding in 1969. The second of these was a non-album track, Don't Mean A Thing, which was released on the independent Vault label in 1969.
Artist: Penny Peeps
Title: Model Village
Source: Mono British import CD: Insane Times (originally released as 45 RPM single)
Writer(s): Alexander
Label: Zonophone (original label: Liberty)
Year: 1968
Although the British psychedelic era was considerably shorter (only about two years long) than its American counterpart, there are a surprisingly large number of British psych-pop singles that were never issued in the US. Among those was a somewhat forgettable song called Little Man With A Stick, released in 1967 by a band called the Penny Peeps. The band took its name from the risque coin-fed viewers at Brighton Beach (apparently London's version of Coney Island). Emulating his American counterparts, producer Les Reed (who wrote Little Man), allowed the band itself to come up with its own B side. The result was Model Village, a track that manages to convey a classic garage-rock energy while remaining uniquely British.
