Retrospective

Home > A > Animals > Discography > Retrospective

Retrospective The 22 tracks on Retrospective deftly chronicle the best years of the Animals, who were far and away the grittiest band in the British Invasion of the mid-1960s. Eric Burdon's magnificently raw vocals and the stabbing chords of Alan Price's Vox Continental organ gave their covers of American blues and R&B classic such as Sam Cooke's "Bring it on Home" and John Lee Hooker's "Boom Boom" an authenticity that no other British groups could match. Their rough sound also gave songs like "Please Don't Let Me Be Misunderstood" and "We've Got to Get of This Place" a real sense of rage and menace. By 1967 Burdon was the only remaining original member and he formed a new band that eschewed the blues and R&B of his early years in Newcastle in favor of a psychedelic, San Francisco-influenced sound. Songs like "When I Was Young" showed he had a real gift for the type of personal songwriting that was becoming popular in the late 1960s while the lyrically obscure "San Franciscan Nights" and "Sky Pilot" suggested he spent too much time hanging out with hippies. Even when they stumbled, the Animals were interesting, and when they hit the mark, they were as good as any band from the British Invasion. --Michael John Simmons

Buy


Tracks
1House Of The Rising Sun
2I'm Crying
3Baby Let Me Take You Home
4Gonna Send You Back To Walker
5Boom Boom
6Don't Let Me Be Misunderstood
7Bring It On Home To Me
8We Gotta Get Out Of This Place
9It's My Life
10Don't Bring Me Down
11See See Rider
12Inside - Looking Out
13Hey GYP
14Help Me Girl
15When I Was Young
16A Girl Named Sandoz
17San Franciscan Nights
18Monterey
19Anything
20Sky Pilot
21White Houses
22Spill The Wine



Copyright © 2008 NetVision. All Rights Reserved. Privacy Statement
Celebrity Link
Contents
Home
New Additions
Write to any Celebrity
Top 30
Make Money
Birthdays
Celebrity Shop
Place a Button
Add a Site
Report dead/changed Site
Feedback

Other Sites
Celebrity Site of the Day
Celebrity Search
CelebMatch.com