| | Litter $100 Fine CD Litter Discography of CDs
$100 FINE was originally released on the Hexagon label in 1968. The Litter: Denny Waite (vocals, organ, keyboards); Dan Rinaldi (guitar, vocals); Tom "Zip" Caplan (guitar); Jim Kane (bass, Moog sythesizer); Tom Murray (drums). Digitally remastered by Ray Janos. The Litter: Larry Loofbourrow; Dan Rinaldi, Zippy Caplan, Denny Waite, Jim Kane, Bill Strandlof, Tom Murray. Arranger: Randy Resnick. Not all of the garage-punk spirit was gone from the Litter by the time of their second album, when they were moving in a more hard rock and psychedelic direction. It's not on the level of the debut, however, because the material, about half original and half covers, is often unmemorable, and boring at times. "Mindbreaker" moves along in a pretty crunching garage-pop style with guitar that would have fit in with Distortions, and "Morning Sun" is fair California-type psychedelia with those meltdown sustain guitar riffs. Trendy guitar phasing is all over "Kaleidoscope," and things take a down-turn with the blues-rock stomp "Blues One" and a nine-minute cover of "She's Not There." $100 Fine has been reissued in several guises, but the 1999 CD reissue on Arf! Arf! is the most recommended package. It adds a strange ballad outtake with J. Frank Wilson (yes, the "Last Kiss" guy) on lead vocals, and no less than 18 1965-1968 demos of songs written by one Larry Loofbourrow, author of "Morning Sun." Loofbourrow and Litter guitarist Ziggy Caplan appear on all of these selections, which sometimes feature other members of the Litter too. They're pretty routine, simplistic numbers, usually with a strong British Invasion pop/rock influence; "For All the Times I'm Happy (Version 2)" sounds like a raw, garage version of Billy J. Kramer & the Dakotas, as ludicrous as that seems. ~ Richie Unterberger
Re-Issue
Q (10/99, p.152) - 3 stars out of 5 - "...confirms the power of The Litter: a loud and slightly leftfield garage band....who deserved a slightly wider audience." Litter $100 Fine Songs | 1. | Mindbreaker |
| 2. | Tallyman |
| 3. | Here I Go Again |
| 4. | Morning Sun |
| 5. | Eagle, (Under the Screaming Double) |
| 6. | Apologies to 2069 |
| 7. | Kaleidoscope |
| 8. | Blues One |
| 9. | She's Not There |
| 10. | Angelica |
| 11. | For All the Times I'm Happy |
| 12. | Where Is She Now |
| 13. | I Can't Forget You |
| 14. | I'm Really Not Used to Being Treated Bad |
| 15. | I Love My Love |
| 16. | Oh, So Sad |
| 17. | I Lost Another Girl Today |
| 18. | Second Hand Woman |
| 19. | Only Love |
| 20. | He Couldn't Find One Anywhere |
| 21. | I'll Never Love Again (The Egyptian) |
| 22. | Let Me Feel It Too |
| 23. | Candy |
| 24. | Because I Need Somebody to Love |
| 25. | Because I'm Taking All Your Happiness Away |
| 26. | For All the Times I'm Happy |
| 27. | I Lost Another Girl Today |
| 28. | He Couldn't Find One Anywhere |
| $100 Fine Review
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Purchase $100 Fine CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Hatfield & The North Hatfield & The North CD (1974)
$100 Fine
$9.35
| | Hatfield & The North Rotters' Club CD (1975)
$100 Fine
$9.19
| | Litter Distortions CD (1967)
$100 Fine
$12.59
| | Tomorrow CD (1968) Bonus Tracks; Remastered
$100 Fine
$10.49
| | United States Of America CD (1968) Bonus Tracks; Reissue
$100 Fine
$13.99
| | Around Grapefruit CD (1968) (Import) United Kingdom
$100 Fine
$18.39
| | Kinda Kinks CD (1965) (Import) Bonus Tracks; England; Reissue; Remastered; United Kingdom
$100 Fine
$10.49 UK digitally remastered and expanded edition of this 1965 album from the British Rock band led by the ever-bickering Davies brothers, Ray and Dave. Contains the original album joined by a myriad of non-album tracks, rare mixes and more. 23 tracks. Sanctuary.
The Kinks: Ray Davies, Dave Davies (vocals, guitar); Pete Dalton (bass); Mick Avory (drums). Additional personnel includes: Jimmy Page (12-string guitar); Perry Ford (piano); Jon Lord (Hammond B-3 organ); Bobby Graham (drums). Recorded at Pye Studios, London, England in 1964. Originally released on Pye (18096). Includes original liner notes by Brian Sommerville and reissue liner notes by Peter Doggett. Digitally remastered by Simon Heyworth. The Kinks: Ray Davies, Dave Davies (vocals, guitar); Peter Quaife (bass); Mick Avory (drums). Includes liner notes by Peter Doggett. Remastered U.K. edition featuring 11 bonus recordings: "Everybody's ...
| | Pink Fairies What A Bunch Of Sweeties CD (1972) (Import) Germany
$100 Fine
$13.15
| | Peggy Lee Marvelous Miss Lee CD (2002)
$100 Fine
$13.85
| | Edie Brickell Volcano CD (2003)
$100 Fine
$12.59
| | Fax Remixes And Collaborations CD (2005)
$100 Fine
$12.39
| | Bryan Adams Anthology CDs (2005) Remastered
$100 Fine
$14.89 Personnel: Bryan Adams (acoustic ...
| | Zeebra New Beginning CD (2006) (Import)
$100 Fine
$48.59
| | Bluetones CD (2006)
$100 Fine
$11.79 2006 studio album sees the band reunited with producer Hugh Jones who helmed both their classic debut Expecting To Fly & Return To The Last Chance Saloon.
The Bluetones: Eds Chesters, Adam Devlin, Scott Morriss, Mark Morris. Personnel: Caroline LaVelle (cello); Peter Baker (trumpet). Audio Mixer: Hugh Jones. Recording information: 2006. At the height of Brit-pop in 1996, few would have pegged the Bluetones as a band that would stick around for a decade, but persevere they have, weathering a fall from fashion around the time of their second album Return to the Last Chance Saloon, and then soldiering on through, ...
| | Chieftains 7 CD (1977) (Import)
$100 Fine
$9.89 The Chieftains: Sean Keane (fiddle, tin whistle); Martin Fay (fiddle, bones); Derek Bell (neo-Irish & mediaeval harps, oboe, tiompan); Michael Tubridy (flute, concertina, tin whistle); Paddy Moloney (Uillean pipes, tin whistle); Sean Potts (tin whistle, bones); Kevin Conneff (bodhran). Producer: Paddy Moloney. Reissue producer: Lawrence Cohn. Recorded at Dublin Sound Studio, Dublin, Ireland. Includes liner notes by David McGee. All tracks have been digitally remastered. 7 was the first Chieftains album released in the States by Columbia, though the group had been playing together and recording in some form since the early '60s. (Actually, 7 was first released in Ireland on the Claddagh label, and issued in America the subsequent year.) Truth be told, Chieftains albums don't vary enormously from one to the other. But this is one is, as expected, Irish traditional music of a high standard, ...
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