Manfred Mann

Down The Road Apiece: Their EMI Recordings 1963-1966

Play Down The Road Apiece: Their EMI Recordings 1963-1966

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1 Why Should We Not Ico_playlist_disabled save Buy song from iTunes
2 Brother Jack (Frère Jacques) Ico_playlist_disabled save Buy song from iTunes
3 Now You're Needing Me Ico_playlist_disabled save Buy song from iTunes
4 Chattering Ico_playlist_disabled save Buy song from iTunes
5 Cock-A-Hoop Ico_playlist_disabled save Buy song from iTunes
6 5-4-3-2-1 Ico_playlist_disabled save Buy song from iTunes
7 Without You Ico_playlist_disabled save Buy song from iTunes
8 I'm Your Hoochie Coochie Man Ico_playlist_disabled save Buy song from iTunes
9 You've Got To Take It Ico_playlist_disabled save Buy song from iTunes
10 Down The Road Apiece Ico_playlist_disabled save Buy song from iTunes
11 Mr Anello Ico_playlist_disabled save Buy song from iTunes
12 Sack O'Woe Ico_playlist_disabled save Buy song from iTunes
13 Hubble Bubble (Toil And Trouble) Ico_playlist_disabled save Buy song from iTunes
14 I've Got My Mojo Working Ico_playlist_disabled save Buy song from iTunes
15 Smokestack Lightning Ico_playlist_disabled save Buy song from iTunes
16 I'm Your Kingpin Ico_playlist_disabled save Buy song from iTunes
17 Ain't That Love Ico_playlist_disabled save Buy song from iTunes
18 Bring It To Jerome Ico_playlist_disabled save Buy song from iTunes
19 Sticks And Stones Ico_playlist_disabled save Buy song from iTunes
20 Untie Me Ico_playlist_disabled save Buy song from iTunes
21 Don't Ask Me What I Say Ico_playlist_disabled save Buy song from iTunes
22 It's Gonna Work Out Fine Ico_playlist_disabled save Buy song from iTunes
23 What You Gonna Do? Ico_playlist_disabled save Buy song from iTunes
24 All Your Love Ico_playlist_disabled save Buy song from iTunes
25 Do Wah Diddy Diddy Ico_playlist_disabled save Buy song from iTunes
26 Groovin' Ico_playlist_disabled save Buy song from iTunes
27 Can't Believe It Ico_playlist_disabled save Buy song from iTunes
28 The One In The Middle Ico_playlist_disabled save Buy song from iTunes
29 Did You Have To Do That Ico_playlist_disabled save Buy song from iTunes
30 A Love Like Yours (Don't Come Knocking Every Day) Ico_playlist_disabled save Buy song from iTunes
31 She Ico_playlist_disabled Buy song from iTunes
32 John Hardy Ico_playlist_disabled save Buy song from iTunes
33 Sha La La Ico_playlist_disabled save Buy song from iTunes
34 Watermelon Man Ico_playlist_disabled save Buy song from iTunes
35 Dashing Away With A Smoothing Iron Ico_playlist_disabled save Buy song from iTunes
36 Come Tomorrow Ico_playlist_disabled save Buy song from iTunes
37 What Did I Do Wrong Ico_playlist_disabled save Buy song from iTunes
38 I'll Make It Up To You Ico_playlist_disabled save Buy song from iTunes
39 With God On Our Side Ico_playlist_disabled save Buy song from iTunes
40 Look Away Ico_playlist_disabled save Buy song from iTunes
41 Sie (She) Ico_playlist_disabled save Buy song from iTunes
42 Weine Nicht (Come Tomorrow) Ico_playlist_disabled save Buy song from iTunes
43 Bare Hugg Ico_playlist_disabled save Buy song from iTunes
44 What Am I To Do Ico_playlist_disabled save Buy song from iTunes
45 Oh No, Not My Baby Ico_playlist_disabled save Buy song from iTunes
46 L.S.D Ico_playlist_disabled save Buy song from iTunes
47 I Can't Believe What You Say Ico_playlist_disabled save Buy song from iTunes
48 What Am I Doing Wrong? Ico_playlist_disabled save Buy song from iTunes
49 Poison Ivy Ico_playlist_disabled save Buy song from iTunes
50 The Way You Do The Things You Do Ico_playlist_disabled save Buy song from iTunes
51 The Abominable Snowmann Ico_playlist_disabled save Buy song from iTunes
52 Watch Your Step Ico_playlist_disabled save Buy song from iTunes
53 Stormy Monday Blues Ico_playlist_disabled save Buy song from iTunes
54 I Really Do Believe Ico_playlist_disabled save Buy song from iTunes
55 You Don't Know Me Ico_playlist_disabled save Buy song from iTunes
56 My Little Red Book Ico_playlist_disabled save Buy song from iTunes
57 Since I Don't Have You Ico_playlist_disabled save Buy song from iTunes
58 You Gave Me Somebody To Love Ico_playlist_disabled save Buy song from iTunes
59 You're For Me Ico_playlist_disabled save Buy song from iTunes
60 Hi Lili Hi Lo Ico_playlist_disabled save Buy song from iTunes
61 If You Gotta Go, Go Now Ico_playlist_disabled save Buy song from iTunes
62 Stay Around Ico_playlist_disabled save Buy song from iTunes
63 There's No Living Without Your Loving Ico_playlist_disabled save Buy song from iTunes
64 Tired Of Trying, Bored With Lying, Scared Of Dying Ico_playlist_disabled save Buy song from iTunes
65 I Put A Spell On You Ico_playlist_disabled save Buy song from iTunes
66 God Rest Ye Merry Gentlemenn Ico_playlist_disabled save Buy song from iTunes
67 Let's Go Get Stoned Ico_playlist_disabled save Buy song from iTunes
68 That's All I Ever Want From You Baby Ico_playlist_disabled save Buy song from iTunes
69 Spirit Feel Ico_playlist_disabled save Buy song from iTunes
70 Tennessee Waltz Ico_playlist_disabled save Buy song from iTunes
71 When Will I Be Loved Ico_playlist_disabled save Buy song from iTunes
72 Tengo, Tango Ico_playlist_disabled save Buy song from iTunes
73 Still I'm Sad Ico_playlist_disabled save Buy song from iTunes
74 I Got You Babe Ico_playlist_disabled save Buy song from iTunes
75 My Generation Ico_playlist_disabled save Buy song from iTunes
76 (I Can't Get No) Satisfaction Ico_playlist_disabled save Buy song from iTunes
77 You're Standing By Ico_playlist_disabled save Buy song from iTunes
78 She Needs Company Ico_playlist_disabled save Buy song from iTunes
79 Machines Ico_playlist_disabled save Buy song from iTunes
80 Driva Man Ico_playlist_disabled save Buy song from iTunes
81 It's Getting Late Ico_playlist_disabled save Buy song from iTunes
82 Pretty Flamingo Ico_playlist_disabled save Buy song from iTunes
83 Come Home Baby Ico_playlist_disabled save Buy song from iTunes
84 Why Should We Not (Take 1) Ico_playlist_disabled save Buy song from iTunes
85 I Don't Want To Know (Take 6) Ico_playlist_disabled save Buy song from iTunes
86 Let's Go (Take 1) Ico_playlist_disabled save Buy song from iTunes
87 Tell Me What Did I Say (Take 3) Ico_playlist_disabled save Buy song from iTunes
88 Brother Jack (Frère Jacques) (Take 3) Ico_playlist_disabled save Buy song from iTunes
89 Without You (Take 2) Ico_playlist_disabled save Buy song from iTunes
90 5-4-3-2-1 (Parts 1 & 2) Ico_playlist_disabled save Buy song from iTunes
91 5-4-3-2-1 (Ready Steady Go Theme) Ico_playlist_disabled save Buy song from iTunes
92 Mr Anello (Mono Version) Ico_playlist_disabled save Buy song from iTunes
93 You've Got To Take It (Mono Version) Ico_playlist_disabled save Buy song from iTunes
94 Untie Me (Mono Version) Ico_playlist_disabled save Buy song from iTunes
95 You Gave Me Somebody To Love (Mono Single Version) Ico_playlist_disabled save Buy song from iTunes
96 The One In The Middle (Later Version) Ico_playlist_disabled save Buy song from iTunes
97 Group Interview Ico_playlist_disabled save Buy song from iTunes
  • MOG Editorial Review

    Editors_picks_badge
    Of all the British Invasion bands, few were ever able to hold a candle to Manfred Mann's ability to fully incorporate both R&B and the blues into their accessible pop sound. Collecting their entire discography with EMI, Down the Road Apiece tracks the band's ascent from a straightforward blues and jazz cover act to a group destined for mainstream and inevitable cult success. As the band starts hitting its radio-friendly stride with upbeat smash "5-4-3-2-1," the band slowly finds its stride with a poppy strain of R&B, giving distinct recognizable takes on everything from blues classic to "Smokestack Lightning" to "I Got You Babe." While they were quickly eclipsed by their fellow Invasion acts, Manfred Mann remain one of the most unique to music geeks everywhere.
  • AMG Review of Down the Road Apiece: Their EMI Recordings 1963-1966

    Amg
    Stephen Thomas Erlewine & Bruce Eder
    All Music Guide

    Manfred Mann was a band that never got a lot of respect, least of all from their own record label, EMI. They generated hits on both sides of the Atlantic and released their share of albums, singles, and EPs. But apart from the hit singles (which, in keeping with the practice of the time, were separate from and not represented on their U.K. albums), one had a real sense that it was only the most serious listeners (and primarily other musicians) who were listening to their records, especially when you took original lead singer Paul Jones out of the equation, which is exactly what EMI did in 1966 by signing him as a solo act and then dropping the band from its roster. They survived this indignity and went on to record a string of subsequent hits on Fontana with lead singer Mike d'Abo, and more albums that showed off what they could really do, before the members went their separate ways in music at the end of the '60s. Over the years, however, few bands covered them and they weren't often cited as an influence the way that the Who, the Kinks, the Animals, the Small Faces, and even the Move were. There have been earlier reissues of their EMI recordings -- still, the exhaustive (yet not exhausting) four-CD set Down the Road Apiece: Their EMI Recordings 1963-1966 can almost be regarded as the company's apology to the band, a long-overdue vault raid that issues every single, EP track, and LP track ever released by the band, plus a tiny handful of surviving outtakes, that the group left behind.

    Influence is not the same as accomplishment, and Manfred Mann, in their earliest incarnation, were certainly accomplished, as musically adept as any of their peers, and more versatile than most. With the exception of the Beatles, there's not a major act on the EMI roster whose library contains so much seriously worthwhile music, so densely packed with virtuosity and inventiveness -- and none (including that of the Beatles) that veers so wildly around the definition of pop/rock, the singles usually serving as nothing more musically than an accessible anchor for all kinds of jazz-cum-R&B excursions, all compartmentalized in neat little three- to five-minute packages; for all of their ambitions, the Manfreds understood the needs and limitations of pop listeners, and as this set demonstrates, they were always trying to reach them in form if not style, and draw them to their "real" sound and the sensibilities behind it. In that sense, they were every bit a musically subversive (in the best sense) as the Rolling Stones -- what's more, collectively, they were also a bit reminiscent of big-band jazz legend Jimmy Dorsey, a heartbreakingly talented musician for whom stardom, band leadership, and pop success were merely the means to get to play what he liked. The very size of this set -- four discs, just three cuts shy of 100 tracks, over four hours long -- means it's for serious listeners, but that doesn't mean that it's only for the already converted, as this, more than hits compilations, really illustrates how different Manfred Mann were from their peers: jazzier and stylish, not as gritty or hard -- the cover photo illustrates just how odd they were in the company of the Beatles, Gerry & the Pacemakers et. al, five guys who looked more like ex- (and not so ex-) beatniks and jazz musicians (and one who could pass for an accountant), more than pop stars. But they pulled off the masquerade musically and generated enough hits to keep countless best-of compilations in circulation for decades. Here's the chance to hear the rest of their work, in phenomenal sound, and all annotated by bassist/guitarist Tom McGuinness, no less (supported by a full sessionography and discography).

    That Manfred Mann were a different band than the rest is immediately evident from the first track here, "Why Should We Not," a slinky minor-key instrumental that plays like Ellington's "Caravan" with a blues harp. Throughout their EMI recordings, Manfred Mann alternated between these jazzy numbers and rave-ups that sounded like a cleaned-up Yardbirds. Manfred Mann's organ could be reminiscent of the Zombies, but they never were as pop as the Zombies -- they were a hardcore rhythm & blues outfit, grooving like an Animals with no sense of menace. This isn't a detraction, it's a distinction, as that sense of jazzy, swinging sophistication separates them from the rest of the British Invasion. Indeed, it's hard to think of another band of their era whose biggest hit -- of course, a cover of the girl group classic "Do Wah Diddy Diddy," a single that remained omnipresent for decades -- was so misleading, not giving a real hint of what the band was all about. Certainly, their first album, 1964's The Five Faces of Manfred Mann, was a better representation of their jazz and R&B sensibility, but their jazz nature is easier to discern on this set, assembled as it is in session order and ending in 1966. All of this is not to say that Manfred Mann didn't cut pop singles in an attempt to follow up "Do Wah Diddy Diddy" -- there are other poppier covers of girl group tunes, plus an early cover of Dylan's "If You Gotta Go, Go Now" in 1965, and they finally had another big hit in both sides of the Atlantic with 1966's "Pretty Flamingo" -- and there are enough relatively hidden pop nuggets like the wonderful "Tired of Trying, Bored with Lying, Scared of Dying" to make this well worth digging through for British Invasion pop fanatics. But the enduring impression here is of an exceptionally skilled, versatile R&B combo, one whose nimble touch is easier to appreciate and love when heard in bulk as it is in this set, their gift becoming more apparent the more music is heard.

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