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Billy J Kramer - The Very Best Of Billy J Kramer (2005)

Billy J Kramer - The Very Best Of Billy J Kramer (2005)

BAND/ARTIST: Billy J Kramer

  • Title: The Very Best Of Billy J Kramer
  • Year Of Release: 2005
  • Label: EMI, Parlophone UK
  • Genre: Pop Rock, Merseybeat
  • Quality: Mp3 320 / Flac (tracks)
  • Total Time: 01:11:53
  • Total Size: 178/361 Mb
  • WebSite:
Tracklist:

01. I'll Keep You Satisfied
02. Do You Want to Know a Secret?
03. I Call Your Name
04. Sneakin' Around
05. Second to None
06. Bad to Me
07. The Cruel Sea
08. Magic Carpet
09. Oyeh
10. I'll Be on My Way
11. Sugar Babe
12. It's up to You
13. Little Children
14. From a Window
15. It's a Mad, Mad World
16. Neon City
17. Trains and Boats and Planes
18. It's Gotta Last Forever
19. That's the Way I Feel (Mono)
20. I'll Be Doggone
21. We're Doing Fine
22. Forgive Me
23. The Millionaire
24. Humdinger
25. My Girl Josephine
26. Take My Hand
27. San Diego
28. Ships That Pass in the Night
29. You Can't Live on Memories

One of the most popular Merseybeat singers, Billy J. Kramer (born Billy Ashton) was fortunate enough to become a client of Beatles manager Brian Epstein and was gifted with several Lennon-McCartney songs in 1963 and 1964, some of which the Beatles never ended up recording. Even tossing aside the considerable value of hearing otherwise unavailable Lennon-McCartney compositions, his best singles were enjoyably melodic pop/rock. Kramer's cover of "Do You Want to Know a Secret" -- which featured clever production by George Martin that hid the cracks in the singer's upper register with loud piano notes -- made it to number two in the U.K. in mid-1963, followed by another Lennon-McCartney effort, "Bad to Me." "I'll Keep You Satisfied" and "From a Window" were other gifts from the Beatles camp that gave Kramer solid hits; one Beatles reject, "I'll Be on My Way," was even relegated to a B-side (the Beatles' own BBC version was finally released in 1994). Kramer actually landed his biggest hit, the pop ballad "Little Children," without assistance from his benefactors; the single also broke him, briefly, as a star in the United States, where it and its flip side ("Bad to Me") both made the Top Ten. He appeared in the legendary 1964 The T.A.M.I. Show rockumentary film, and the Dakotas recorded some instrumental rock on their own, getting a Top 20 British hit with the Ventures-ish "The Cruel Sea." Early British guitar hero Mick Green, formerly with Johnny Kidd & the Pirates, was even a Dakota briefly. But after 1965's cover of Bacharach-David's "Trains and Boats and Planes," the hits ceased, as the Beatles' and Epstein's attention was lost. Kramer continued recording throughout the '60s, even briefly venturing into hard psychedelic-tinged rock, and subsequently toured often on the oldies circuit. ~ Richie Unterberger



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  • User offline
  • mufty77
  •  wrote in 00:52
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Many thanks for Flac.
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  • whiskers
  •  wrote in 11:37
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Many thanks