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The Herd - Paradise Lost: The Complete U.K. Fontana Recordings (2011)

The Herd - Paradise Lost: The Complete U.K. Fontana Recordings (2011)
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CD Rip | FLAC (tracks, cue, log, full scans) - 470 MB | MP3 CBR 320 kbps - 259 MB
1:12:57 | Psychedelic Rock | Label: Grapefruit

The Herd were an English pop rock, band, founded in 1965 in the UK. In 1966 a 16-year-old Peter Frampton joined as lead singer and guitarist. The band had three UK top twenty hits in the late 1960s, including "From the Underworld" and "I Don't Want Our Loving to Die", before Frampton left in 1968 to form Humble Pie with Steve Marriott. The band broke up shortly after, reforming briefly and unsuccessfully in 1971.

Paradise Lost: The Complete U.K. Fontana Recordings Review by Richie Unterberger
There have been a bunch of CD compilations of the Herd, and this isn't too different from some of the others that have appeared. In fact, it's less extensive than some of the more ambitious ones. So what does it have in its favor? Its aim, according to the liner notes, is to concentrate "on what was undoubtedly the Herd's golden period, assembling their complete U.K. releases during the tumultuous 1967-1969 time frame." In that, it succeeds as a good 24-song compilation, including everything from their half-dozen 1967-1969 U.K. singles and the entirety of their 1967 album Paradise Lost. (To be picky, there would have been room to add the 1967 U.S. B-side "Understand Me.") In addition, the 16-page booklet has excellent liner notes from renowned British rock historian David Wells, along with plenty of period pictures, clippings, and record sleeve repros. Musically, it's the same mixed bag that other Herd compilations offer, from the playful, light psychedelic pop of their Howard Blaikley-written singles to mediocre Walker Brothers-like tracks and their fitful attempts to establish a more respectable identity via their original material. Listening to this, it's easy to grasp why the Herd don't have the cult reputation of markedly less commercially successful British bands of the era like, say, the Creation. It sounds like the work of several groups, almost to the point where you can actually sense the Herd's frustration at not being able or allowed to organically develop their own approach. Only on occasion do you get a glimpse of a genuinely promising band, especially when they get into the moderately heavier and bluesier rock that was obviously closer to their heart, especially on Frampton's brooding "On Your Own," the jazzy instrumental "Impressions of Oliver," and, in a poppier vein, "She Loves Me, She Loves Me Not."

Tracklist
01. I Can Fly[Single Mix]
02. Diary of a Narcissist
03. From the Underworld[Single Mix]
04. Sweet William
05. Paradise Lost[Single Mix]
06. Come On - Believe Me
07. I Don't Want Our Loving to Die
08. Our Fairy Tale
09. Sunshine Cottage
10. Miss Jones
11. The Game
12. Beauty Queen
13. From the Underworld[Album Version]
14. On My Way Home
15. I Can Fly[Album Version]
16. Goodbye Groovy
17. Mixed Up Minds
18. Impressions of Oliver
19. Paradise Lost[Album Version]
20. Sad
21. Something Strange
22. On Your Own
23. She Loves Me, She Loves Me Not
24. Fare Thee Well

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