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The Village Green Preservation Society (CD - 1968)( UPC: 00075992621724)
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| Album Description | |
| Contains original 15-track mono album as well as 12-track stereo version. The Kinks: Ray Davies (vocals, guitar, keyboards); Dave Davies (vocals, guitar); Pete Quaife (bass, background vocals); Mick Avory (drums). Additional personnel: Nicky Hopkins (keyboards); Rasa Davies (background vocals). Recorded at Pye Studios, London, England. Includes liner notes by Peter Doggett. Ray Davies' sentimental, nostalgic streak emerged on Something Else, but it developed into a manifesto on The Village Green Preservation Society, a concept album lamenting the passing of old-fashioned English traditions. As the opening title song says, the Kinks -- meaning Ray himself, in this case -- were for preserving "draught beer and virginity," and throughout the rest of the album, he creates a series of stories, sketches, and characters about a picturesque England that never really was. It's a lovely, gentle album, evoking a small British country town, and drawing the listener into its lazy rhythms and sensibilities. Although there is an undercurrent of regret running throughout the album, Davies' fondness for the past is warm, making the album feel like a sweet, hazy dream. And considering the subdued performances and the detailed instrumentations, it's not surprising that the record feels more like a Ray Davies solo project than a Kinks album. The bluesy shuffle of "Last of the Steam-Powered Trains" is the closest the album comes to rock & roll, and Dave Davies' cameo on the menacing "Wicked Annabella" comes as surprise, since the album is so calm. But calm doesn't mean tame or bland -- there are endless layers of musical and lyrical innovation on The Village Green Preservation Society, and its defiantly British sensibilities became the foundation of generations of British guitar pop. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine It's easy to imagine the confusion with which this manifesto for the defense of the status quo was received on its release in 1968. The world was in turmoil and the pose of the Street Fighting Man, rebellious and politically aware, was far sexier than the quaint homebody image the Kinks present here. The title track finds Ray Davies proudly declaring himself a preservationist of custard pies, vaudeville, and such comic book characters as Desperate Dan. However, these slices of suburban life have weathered a lot better than most of their contemporaries. The Kinks were working in their own homey little world, as evidenced by songs such as the album's title track, "Picture Book," about family snapshot albums, and "All of My Friends Were There" whose very un-rebellious subject is public embarrassment. To compound the weirdness there's also "Big Sky," a classic Kinks song about God that's not remotely religious, and a rocker about a steam engine. The overarching theme of VILLAGE GREEN is that of unalloyed nostalgia--it's only today, now that many of the things Davies feared would disappear have actually vanished, that the truth and clarity of his vision is apparent. |
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| Track Listing | |
| 1. | Village Green Preservation Society |
| 2. | Do You Remember Walter? |
| 3. | Picture Book |
| 4. | Johnny Thunder |
| 5. | Last of the Steam-Powered Trains |
| 6. | Big Sky |
| 7. | Sitting by the Riverside |
| 8. | Animal Farm |
| 9. | Village Green |
| 10. | Starstruck |
| 11. | Phenomenal Cat |
| 12. | All of My Friends Were There |
| 13. | Wicked Annabella |
| 14. | Monica |
| 15. | People Take Pictures of Each Other |
| Album Information | |
UPC: |
00075992621724 |
| Release Date: | May 15, 1990 |
| Type: | Performer |
| Genre: | Oldies - British Invasion |
| Label: | Reprise |
| Distributor: | WEA (Distrib |
| Producer: | Ray Davies |
| Country of Origin: | USA |
| Original Release Year: | 1968 |
| # of Discs: | 1 |
| Studio / Live: | Studio |
| Mono / Stereo: | Stereo |
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