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The Kinks - The Great Lost Kinks Album FLAC album

Tracklist Hide Credits

A1 Til Death Do Us Part 3:12
A2 There Is No Life Without Love
Written-By – Ray Davies
1:55
A3 Lavender Hill 2:53
A4 Groovy Movies
Written-By – Ray Davies
2:30
A5 Rosemary Rose 1:43
A6 Misty Water
Written-By – Ray Davies
3:01
A7 Mr. Songbird
Written-By – Ray Davies
2:24
B1 When I Turn Off The Living Room Light
Written-By – Ray Davies
2:17
B2 The Way Love Used To Be
Written-By – Ray Davies
2:11
B3 I'm Not Like Everybody Else
Written-By – Ray Davies
3:29
B4 Plastic Man
Written-By – Ray Davies
3:00
B5 This Man He Weeps Tonight 2:38
B6 Pictures In The Sand 2:45
B7 Where Did The Spring Go
Written-By – Ray Davies
2:10

Companies, etc.

  • Phonographic Copyright (p) – Warner Bros. Records Inc.
  • Manufactured By – ABKCO Records, Inc.
  • Published By – Noma Music, Inc.
  • Published By – ABKCO Music, Inc.
  • Published By – Al Gallico Music Corp.

Credits

  • Arranged By – The Kinks
  • Design – John Cabalka
  • Illustration – Jean Michel Folon
  • Liner Notes – John Mendelsohn
  • Photography By – Bob Gruen
  • Producer – Raymond Douglas Davies* (tracks: A1 to B2, B4 to B7), Shel Talmy (tracks: B3)

Notes

B2 "The Way Love Used To Be"previously released on LP "Percy". B3 "I'm Not Like Everybody Else" previously released as B-side of 1966 "Sunny Afternoon" single. B4 "Plastic Man" is a non-LP 1969 UK Pye A-side single, previously unreleased in the US. All other songs are previously unreleased.

Includes sheet with extensive liner notes by John Mendelsohn

Track A2 published by Noma Music Inc./Abkco Music Inc. - BMI
Tracks A4, A6 to B1, B3, B4 & B7 published by Noma Music Inc. - BMI
Track B2 published by Al Gallico Music Corp. - BMI

Manufactured by Abkco Records, Inc.
℗ 1973 Warner Bros. Records Inc.
Reprise Records, A Division of Warner Bros. Records Inc.
Made in U.S.A.

Barcode and Other Identifiers

  • Matrix / Runout (Matrix Side A): 31,538
  • Matrix / Runout (Matrix Side B): 31,539
  • Matrix / Runout (Etched Side A (Variation 1)): MS-2127 31538-2
  • Matrix / Runout (Etched Side B (Variation 1)): MS-2127 31539-1-1 5
  • Matrix / Runout (Etched Side A (Variation 2)): MS-2127 31538-1
  • Matrix / Runout (Etched Side B (Variation 2)): MS-2127 31539-1
  • Matrix / Runout (Etched Side A (Variation 3)): MS-2127 31538-1B
  • Matrix / Runout (Etched Side B (Variation 3)): MS 2127 31539-3 1C
  • Rights Society: BMI

Other versions

Category Artist Title (Format) Label Category Country Year
MS2127 The Kinks The Great Lost Kinks Album ‎(CDr, Album, Mono, Unofficial) Reprise Records MS2127 Japan 1997
MS 2127 The Kinks The Great Lost Kinks Album ‎(CD, Album, Mono, Unofficial) Reprise Records MS 2127 1996
MS 2127 The Kinks The Great Lost Kinks Album ‎(LP, Album, Mono, Promo) Reprise Records MS 2127 US 1973
RST 2127-c The Kinks The Great Lost Kinks Album ‎(Reel, 4tr Stereo, 7" Reel, Album) Reprise Records RST 2127-c US 1973
MS 2127 The Kinks The Great Lost Kinks Album ‎(LP, Album, Mono, San) Reprise Records MS 2127 US 1973


The Kinks - The Great Lost Kinks Album FLAC album

Musician performer: The Kinks

Title: The Great Lost Kinks Album

Country: Japan

Date of release: 1973

Style: Classic Rock

Genre: Rock

Size FLAC: 1881 mb

Rating: 4.6 / 5

Votes: 145

Other Formats: ASF VOX AU TTA MPC AAC MP2

Related to The Kinks - The Great Lost Kinks Album FLAC Albums

xander
This is NOT the Great Lost Kinks album that I had back in the 70's or '80's. The one I had had the same cover, but it was a double album, and contained a lot of tracks that are missing on here. Like Autumn Almanac, Dead End Street, and maybe 10 more. Just the two I have listed would be a significant loss to such a collection. Obviously there is another version of this album out there somewhere, and it would be worth significantly more than those listed on here: there is more to the Great Lost Kinks Album than meets the eye here.
xander
This is NOT the Great Lost Kinks album that I had back in the 70's or '80's. The one I had had the same cover, but it was a double album, and contained a lot of tracks that are missing on here. Like Autumn Almanac, Dead End Street, and maybe 10 more. Just the two I have listed would be a significant loss to such a collection. Obviously there is another version of this album out there somewhere, and it would be worth significantly more than those listed on here: there is more to the Great Lost Kinks Album than meets the eye here.
santa
From your description I believe you are thinking about Kink's Kronicles which had everything you listed and was a double album. The Great Lost Kinks album was a release for tracks that had no previous official release. Autumn Almanac & Dead End Street were released as singles and then later collected with other great hits in the Kronicles double album (great album in its own-right.) The Great Lost Kinks Album is an amazingly good album of tracks that you can't get anyway else.
santa
From your description I believe you are thinking about Kink's Kronicles which had everything you listed and was a double album. The Great Lost Kinks album was a release for tracks that had no previous official release. Autumn Almanac & Dead End Street were released as singles and then later collected with other great hits in the Kronicles double album (great album in its own-right.) The Great Lost Kinks Album is an amazingly good album of tracks that you can't get anyway else.
Rko
An irreverent, sardonic contempt is justified through genuine wistfulness. The portrayal of characters, surroundings, and feelings smoothly breeze towards mournful bliss. Brief touches of brash, acerbic outbursts suppress gloomy emotions. Inflexible melodies contour a harrowing mind-set, rendering overpowering social prerogatives of individual formalities. The Great Lost Kinks Album is a statement of valor from London’s dignified sound artists. It was produced in the midst of The Kinks most innovative years. Anti-establishment dominated a myriad of bands from 1967 through 1970, spurring ghastly focus on revolution. Composer Ray Davies's sheer personal delight of English customs was aversely bestowed upon the group. Brother Dave Davies could not persuade his obstinate sibling away from personal sabotage. His delightful homage The Village Green Preservation Society was released in 1968, leaving a vast missing song cycle on the cutting room floor. The toned down remedy of humble and quirky songs varies from the solemn overtones on Village Green. Rarely are Ray and Dave in such dire need of a hug then on Ray's “There Is No Life Without Love” or Dave's “This Man He Weeps Tonight”. Less audacious songs, “Groovy Movies”, “Misty Water”, show a discrepancy from the modest assertions, creating a slight lack of conformity. Great Lost Kinks can certainly be acknowledged as a proper Kinks album, but falls slightly short of perfection.
Rko
An irreverent, sardonic contempt is justified through genuine wistfulness. The portrayal of characters, surroundings, and feelings smoothly breeze towards mournful bliss. Brief touches of brash, acerbic outbursts suppress gloomy emotions. Inflexible melodies contour a harrowing mind-set, rendering overpowering social prerogatives of individual formalities. The Great Lost Kinks Album is a statement of valor from London’s dignified sound artists. It was produced in the midst of The Kinks most innovative years. Anti-establishment dominated a myriad of bands from 1967 through 1970, spurring ghastly focus on revolution. Composer Ray Davies's sheer personal delight of English customs was aversely bestowed upon the group. Brother Dave Davies could not persuade his obstinate sibling away from personal sabotage. His delightful homage The Village Green Preservation Society was released in 1968, leaving a vast missing song cycle on the cutting room floor. The toned down remedy of humble and quirky songs varies from the solemn overtones on Village Green. Rarely are Ray and Dave in such dire need of a hug then on Ray's “There Is No Life Without Love” or Dave's “This Man He Weeps Tonight”. Less audacious songs, “Groovy Movies”, “Misty Water”, show a discrepancy from the modest assertions, creating a slight lack of conformity. Great Lost Kinks can certainly be acknowledged as a proper Kinks album, but falls slightly short of perfection.