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The Pretty Things is the self-titled debut album by the English rock band Pretty Things.Released in 1965 in alternate track listings in the United Kingdom and United States, the album demonstrated the band's raw, loud sound, influenced by American rock and roll musician Bo Diddley.
Pretty Things' first three singles appeared in the UK Singles Chart in 1964 and 1965: "Rosalyn" No. 41, "Don't Bring Me Down" No. 10, and the self-penned "Honey I Need" at No. 13. [ 6 ] [ 2 ] They never had a hit in the United States, but had considerable success in their native United Kingdom and in Australia, New Zealand, Germany and the ...
The Pretty Things: Fontana (TE 17434) 6 – October 1965 Rainin' in My Heart: Fontana (TE 17442) 12 – 1965 Road Runner: Fontana (465 279 TE) – 11 August 1966 The Pretty Things on Film: Fontana (TE 17472) – – 13 August 2012 SF Sorrow Live in London: Fruits De Mer (CRUSTACEAN 31) – – 2 January 2018 The Same Sun: Fruits De Mer ...
It was first published in 1965 and registered at number 46 in the UK Singles Chart [3] and 19 in the Netherlands. The arrangement is one of the fullest on early Pretty Things cuts, due to the piano of Nicky Hopkins (who played similar R&B piano on the Who 's My Generation album) and Margo Lewis, the organist from the all-female band Goldie and ...
(The Pretty Things album) 4 languages. Français; ... Get the Picture? is the second album by the English rock band Pretty Things, released in 1965. Recording
(1965) Rainin' in My Heart is an extended play 45 rpm record released by the English rock band Pretty Things in 1965. [ 1 ] The record reached # 12 in the British EP charts in October of that same year.
Or, maybe even a five-peat, with a 33-14 beating of the Oakland Raiders in Miami on Jan. 14, 1968, in the second non-Super Bowl Super Bowl. Actually, the concept of the Packers’ streak being ...
"Honey I Need" is a song written by Dick Taylor and first performed by English rock band Pretty Things in 1965. It was first published in 1966 and registered at number 13 in the UK [3] Pretty Things guitarist Dick Taylor wrote the tune, along with a couple of friends who weren't in the band.