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As & Bs Scrapbook
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As & Bs Scrapbook in Chattanooga, TN
Current price: $13.99

Barnes and Noble
As & Bs Scrapbook in Chattanooga, TN
Current price: $13.99
Loading Inventory...
Size: OS
This collection is a stunner.
Zoot Money & His Big Roll Band
were a mainstay in the swinging London scene from the mid-'60s through 1971. The band included a young guitarist named
Andy Somers
(aka
Summers
). They played
soul
,
R&B
jump blues
, and rave-up
rock
and flirted with
jazz
and
blues
. They were the live equal of
Georgie Fame
the Yardbirds
Geno Washington
the Animals
, and
Spencer Davis
but on record -- despite the critics' claims that they never measured up to their live gigs -- they wasted all of those bands. The 24 tracks collected here, ranging from
the Big Roll Band
's first single, the astonishing
"The Uncle Willie"
in 1964, to the band's breakup effort in 1970, the smoking
"No One But You,"
tore up jukeboxes across the U.K. and France even if they seldom made the
Melody Maker
charts (only once, actually). Simply put, there is no British music with as much carefree abandon and showmanship as these sides display in spades. Every 45 (both sides) is included here, and there isn't a substandard millisecond in the bunch. This is essential listening for anybody interested the music of the era. ~ Thom Jurek
Zoot Money & His Big Roll Band
were a mainstay in the swinging London scene from the mid-'60s through 1971. The band included a young guitarist named
Andy Somers
(aka
Summers
). They played
soul
,
R&B
jump blues
, and rave-up
rock
and flirted with
jazz
and
blues
. They were the live equal of
Georgie Fame
the Yardbirds
Geno Washington
the Animals
, and
Spencer Davis
but on record -- despite the critics' claims that they never measured up to their live gigs -- they wasted all of those bands. The 24 tracks collected here, ranging from
the Big Roll Band
's first single, the astonishing
"The Uncle Willie"
in 1964, to the band's breakup effort in 1970, the smoking
"No One But You,"
tore up jukeboxes across the U.K. and France even if they seldom made the
Melody Maker
charts (only once, actually). Simply put, there is no British music with as much carefree abandon and showmanship as these sides display in spades. Every 45 (both sides) is included here, and there isn't a substandard millisecond in the bunch. This is essential listening for anybody interested the music of the era. ~ Thom Jurek
This collection is a stunner.
Zoot Money & His Big Roll Band
were a mainstay in the swinging London scene from the mid-'60s through 1971. The band included a young guitarist named
Andy Somers
(aka
Summers
). They played
soul
,
R&B
jump blues
, and rave-up
rock
and flirted with
jazz
and
blues
. They were the live equal of
Georgie Fame
the Yardbirds
Geno Washington
the Animals
, and
Spencer Davis
but on record -- despite the critics' claims that they never measured up to their live gigs -- they wasted all of those bands. The 24 tracks collected here, ranging from
the Big Roll Band
's first single, the astonishing
"The Uncle Willie"
in 1964, to the band's breakup effort in 1970, the smoking
"No One But You,"
tore up jukeboxes across the U.K. and France even if they seldom made the
Melody Maker
charts (only once, actually). Simply put, there is no British music with as much carefree abandon and showmanship as these sides display in spades. Every 45 (both sides) is included here, and there isn't a substandard millisecond in the bunch. This is essential listening for anybody interested the music of the era. ~ Thom Jurek
Zoot Money & His Big Roll Band
were a mainstay in the swinging London scene from the mid-'60s through 1971. The band included a young guitarist named
Andy Somers
(aka
Summers
). They played
soul
,
R&B
jump blues
, and rave-up
rock
and flirted with
jazz
and
blues
. They were the live equal of
Georgie Fame
the Yardbirds
Geno Washington
the Animals
, and
Spencer Davis
but on record -- despite the critics' claims that they never measured up to their live gigs -- they wasted all of those bands. The 24 tracks collected here, ranging from
the Big Roll Band
's first single, the astonishing
"The Uncle Willie"
in 1964, to the band's breakup effort in 1970, the smoking
"No One But You,"
tore up jukeboxes across the U.K. and France even if they seldom made the
Melody Maker
charts (only once, actually). Simply put, there is no British music with as much carefree abandon and showmanship as these sides display in spades. Every 45 (both sides) is included here, and there isn't a substandard millisecond in the bunch. This is essential listening for anybody interested the music of the era. ~ Thom Jurek

















