Something Else from The Move

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Something Else from The Move
EP by
Released21 June 1968
Recorded27 February & 5 May 1968
VenueThe Marquee Club, London
Genre
Length16:26
LabelRegal Zonophone
ProducerDenny Cordell
The Move chronology
Move
(1968)
Something Else from The Move
(1968)
Shazam
(1970)

Something Else from The Move is a five-track live EP by British pop band the Move, released on 21 June 1968 through Regal Zonophone. The Move established themselves with a series of singles that reached the top-five in the UK singles chart, generating hype for an album. After rumours about a live LP began circulating, the Move's manager Tony Secunda pitched an idea about recording an EP of live performances at the Marquee Club in central London. The recordings were taped by producer Denny Cordell at two seperate performances in February and May 1968. Technical difficulties forced the band to re-record certain aspects of their performance.

Reflecting the Move's setlist on stage, Something Else from The Move is exclusively made up of covers of songs by contemporary pop bands such as Love and 1950s singers such as Eddie Cochran. The EP has an eclectic blend between rockabilly and psychedelic music. Upon original release in June 1968, the EP was advertised as a "Mini-LP" as it was played at 33 ⅓ RPM. It was the first release by the Move that failed to chart in the UK, leading to speculation regarding the band's decreasing popularity. It received primarily positive reviews. The EP has been reissued twice, in 1999 and 2016, with added bonus tracks as extra content.

Background and recording[edit]

Something Else from The Move was recorded at the Marquee Club in London.[1]

By January 1968, The Move had established themselves as one of the most commercially successful groups in the United Kingdom over the past year, scoring three consecutive top-5 singles with "Night of Fear" (1966), I Can Hear the Grass Grow" and Flowers in the Rain" (both 1967), whilst a fourth, "Fire Brigade", had just been released.[2][nb 1] Despite this success, no album by the group had appeared; and following the cancellation of their intended 1967 debut album Move Mass,[3] rumours started spreading that the Move's first album would be a live one, in the same vein as Five Live Yardbirds by the Yardbirds.[4] Although manager Tony Secunda was keen on this idea, once it became clear that the band had recored enough material for a studio album, he instead began brainstorming Something Else from The Move as an extended play to follow up their debut album Move, which was released on 1 April 1968.[4][5]

Secunda booked the Move to perform a concert at the Marquee Club in central London on 27 February 1968 specifically to record the tracks meant for the EP.[6][nb 2] For this task, producer Denny Cordell was employed to tape the performance, which was done by feeding the microphone and amp outputs straight into a four-track tape soundboard.[8] The band's original five-piece lineup recorded 10 songs that day; a Bolero jam, "It'll Be Me", "Too Much In Love", "Flowers In The Rain", "Fire Brigade", "Stephanie Knows Who", the first rendition of "Something Else", "So You Want to Be a Rock 'n' Roll Star", "(Your Love Keeps Lifting Me) Higher and Higher" and "Hey Grandma".[9][10] According to writer Mark Powell, the atmosphere during this session was "wonderful" due to the enthusiastic reception by the crowd.[6]

However, during playback of the tapes at the Marquee backroom studios,[11] it was revealed that there had been technical difficulties with the vocal tracks for several of the songs recorded that day, including ones that eventually would make it onto the EP.[12][13] The Move returned to the Marquee in the middle of March to re-record the vocals for a number of tracks,[14] of which three were selected to appear on the EP.[15] Secunda booked the band for yet another performance at the Marquee on 5 May 1968.[16] In between the two performance, inner feuds between members alongside a mental breakdown caused bassist Ace Kefford to quit the band in April.[17][12] Rather than replace him, rhythm guitarist Trevor Burton switched to bass and the band carried on as a quartet.[17][18] The tracks recorded on 5 May were "Piece of My Heart", "Sunshine Help Me" alongside a second version of "Something Else".[9][10]

Musical content[edit]

The musical content on Something Else from The Move is entirely made up by covers of contemporary artists, including American rock band Love (pictured here in 1967).[12][19]

Despite the fact that all of their singles and the majority of their debut album were composed by the Move's lead guitarist Roy Wood, only two of his compositions were recorded live at the Marquee, neither of which would end up on Something Else from The Move.[12][nb 3] The rest of the songs were covers from various, largely contemporary artists; none of which adhere to eachother genre-wise.[17] The EP's eclectic choice in covers range from rockabilly ("Something Else", "It'll Be Me") to psychedelia ("Stephanie Knows Who").[6][20] Cub Koda of AllMusic states that the band's performances throughout the entire EP "are pub rock bash 'n' crash all the way".[20] Unlike the five-part harmonies that both their singles and early live performances were noted for, none of the recordings on the EP feature more than two-part vocal harmonies in the arrangement.[21] Lead vocal duties are split, with vocalist Carl Wayne singing solo on "Stephanie Knows Who" and "It'll Be Me". He shares lead vocals with Wood on "So You Want to Be a Rock 'n' Roll Star" and "Sunshine Help Me", whilst Burton sings lead on the title track.[21]

Side one of Something Else from The Move opens with a brief band introduction by Secunda, before the band launches into a cover of the the Byrds' "So You Want to Be a Rock 'n' Roll Star" from 1967.[21] The Move's arrangement of the song largely revolve around Wayne and Wood's split lead vocals, alongside Wood's usage of the wah-wah pedal on his guitar.[21] The band follows this performance with "Stephanie Knows Who", a cover of Love from their 1966 album Da Capo.[22] Writer Tony Robinson believes that the song in particular was a "interesting choice of cover", given the song's irregular waltz time rhythm. As with their cover of the Byrds, Robinson states the Move add a "Black Country-twang" to the recordings.[22] Wood's wah-wah guitar is prominent in the arrangement on it.[21] Side one closes with a "raunchy" cover of Eddie Cochran's rockabilly song "Something Else", which gave the EP it's title.[23] Robinson attributes the choice in that cover to the Move returning to their roots of "being hardcore rockers".[23]

Something Else from The Move's second side opens abruptly with the Jerry Lee Lewis song "It'll Be Me", another cover of a rockabilly song. Robinson hypothizes that both "Something Else" and "It'll Be Me" were specifically included on the EP as a nod to the contemporary British rock and roll revival, in which artists and songs from the 1950s saw a resurgence in popularity.[23][nb 4] It is the only song on the EP to feature harmonized backing vocals.[25] Side two's final track is a rendition of Spooky Tooth's debut single "Sunshine Help Me", a cover which Robinson states was performed because the members of both bands were aqcuainted.[26] James Turner writes that "Sunshine Help Me" is an odd cover in that it's an established and commercially successful band covering a song by an smaller, obscurer band, rather than vice-versa.[25] It was intended to be a vehicle to showcase Wood's musical talent on lead guitar.[26] The original recording ran well over 6 minutes, resulting in 90 seconds of the guitar solo being edited out for the EP release.[26]

Release and reception[edit]

After being mentioned in British trade papers for months, Something Else from The Move was released as a 7-inch vinyl EP in mono only on 21 June 1968 through Regal Zonophone.[16][27][nb 5] It was both the Move's and Regal Zonophone's first EP release, and in the press it was advertised as a "mini-album", as it was played at 33 ⅓ RPM rather than the standard 45 RPM.[16] It was sold at the same retail price as regular EPs.[16] In addition, a one-sided promotional vinyl single containing "Something Else", complete with a picture sleeve was also distributed around radio disc jockeys at the time.[28] Mark Powell states that the EP proved to be a "fine souvenir" for anybody who was a fan of the Move's live act.[16] Despite being heavily marketed, the EP was the first release by the band to fail to chart in the UK.[2] This, combined with the relatively low charting of their debut album alongside the commercial failure of their fifth single "Wild Tiger Woman" a month later, led to speculation that the band were beginning a decline in appeal amongst British teenagers.[2][28][nb 6]

Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic[20]

As the EP was a medium out of fashion in 1968, reviews of Something Else from The Move in the press were sparse. In a review for Melody Maker, journalist Chris Welch writes that the EP was part of a plan to "give pop fans value for money" with the tracks capturing the "excited atmosphere of a power-packed Move show".[29] In the Express & Star, the EP is described as "another winner" for the band since the live recordings captures them at their "typical best; full of power and musical talent".[30] In a retrospective review, Cub Coda writes that the disc captures the Move "in full cry going through a brace of their favorite covers", but notes that it acts primarily as a "nice souvenir of how bands truly sounded before PA systems, monitors, and assorted electronic voodoo boxes".[20] He gives the EP three and a half stars.[20] Mark Powell believes that the live recordings are a "marvellous" collection,[16] whilst Tony Robinson calls the EP a "fascinating, vibrant and colorful snapshot" of the era.[26]

As it was a chart failure, Regal Zonophone deleted Something Else from The Move from their catalogue not long after the EP was release, leading to original copies of the disc becoming a collector's item amongst vinyl collectors.[26] In addition, the master tapes for the EP went missing, prohibiting a reissue of the disc for three decades until they were located during the 1990s.[31] The EP's first reissue occured in 1999, when it was remastered from the tapes and released on CD through Edsel Records.[32] This release features the bonus tracks "Piece Of My Heart", "Too Much In Love", "(Your Love Keeps Lifting Me) Higher And Higher" alongside the unedited, full-length version of "Sunshine Help Me".[32] As part of their reissue campaign of the Move's material, Esoteric Recordings released a remastered version of the EP that was reimagined as a full-length album by featuring a completely different track listing and running order.[33] This CD saw the first official releases of "Move Bolero", "Flowers In The Rain", "Fire Brigade" and "The Price Of Love", alongside the other tracks released by Edsel.[33]

Track listing[edit]

Side Two
No.TitleWriter(s)Original artistLength
1."It'll Be Me"Jack ClementJerry Lee Lewis2:41
2."Sunshine Help Me"Gary WrightSpooky Tooth5:19
Total length:8:00

Personnel[edit]

Personnel according to the liner notes of the 2016 re-issue of Something Else from The Move.[35]

References[edit]

Notes

  1. ^ "Fire Brigade" would also peak in the top-5 of the UK Singles Chart.[2]
  2. ^ The Marquee Club was chosen specifically because the Move were comfortable performing there; they had held a residency at the club during the summer of 1966.[7]
  3. ^ Those songs being "Flowers In The Rain" and "Fire Brigade".[11]
  4. ^ The Move's fourth single "Fire Brigade" was inspired by the revival, with Cochran and Duane Eddy as the primary inspirations.[24]
  5. ^ Catalogue number TRZ 2001.[16][1]
  6. ^ The Move's fortunes changed with their sixth single, "Blackberry Way", which was released in November 1968 and became their only number one single in the UK.[2]
  7. ^ The song's original title is "Somethin' Else". On the EP sleeve and label, it is referred to as "Something Else".[34]

Citations

  1. ^ a b Robinson & Rounce 1999, p. 1.
  2. ^ a b c d e Roberts 2006, p. 278.
  3. ^ Paytress 2007, pp. 6−7.
  4. ^ a b Turner 2020, p. 34.
  5. ^ Powell 2016, pp. 6−7.
  6. ^ a b c Powell 2016, p. 5.
  7. ^ Paytress 2007, p. 4.
  8. ^ Paytress 2008, p. 36.
  9. ^ a b Powell 2016, p. 16.
  10. ^ a b Robinson & Rounce 1999, pp. 1–2.
  11. ^ a b Powell 2016, p. 14.
  12. ^ a b c d Platt 1997, p. 7.
  13. ^ Robinson & Rounce 1999, pp. 5–6.
  14. ^ Robinson & Rounce 1999, p. 6.
  15. ^ Powel 2016, p. 6.
  16. ^ a b c d e f g Powell 2016, p. 7.
  17. ^ a b c Turner 2020, p. 36.
  18. ^ Powell 2016, pp. 5–6.
  19. ^ Robinson & Rounce 1999, pp. 2–3.
  20. ^ a b c d e Coda, Cub. "Something Else from the Move Review". AllMusic. Retrieved 27 May 2024.
  21. ^ a b c d e Turner 2020, p. 37.
  22. ^ a b Robinson & Rounce 1999, pp. 4–5.
  23. ^ a b c Robinson & Rounce 1999, p. 3.
  24. ^ Robinson & Rounce, pp. 3–4.
  25. ^ a b Turner 2020, p. 38.
  26. ^ a b c d e Robinson & Rounce 1999, p. 4.
  27. ^ "Ace plays on new EP" (PDF). Disc and Music Echo: 7. 22 June 1968. Retrieved 27 May 2024 – via WorldRadioHistory.
  28. ^ a b Turner 2020, p. 41.
  29. ^ Welch, Chris (6 July 1968). "Chris Welch Pop Singles" (PDF). Melody Maker: 17 – via WorldRadioHistory.
  30. ^ "New disc could be a good success". Express & Star: 9. 4 July 1968 – via British Newspaper Archive.
  31. ^ Robinson & Rounce 1999, p. 2.
  32. ^ a b Robinson & Rounce 1999, Back cover.
  33. ^ a b Powell & 20166, Back cover.
  34. ^ Robinson & Rounce 1999, Insert.
  35. ^ Powell 2016, pp. 14, 16.

Sources