The Left Banke
There's Gonna Be A Storm: The Complete Recordings 1966-1969
Play There's Gonna Be A Storm: The Complete Recordings 1966-1969
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MOG Editorial Review
Few bands earned more credit for shaping the sound of baroque pop than New York act the Left Banke. Despite their brief career, they managed to add an orchestral element to pop-rock that felt natural rather than experimental, and the rest is history. Songs like "Walk Away, Renee" and "I've Got Something on My Mind" have a clear, direct influence even on modern indie pop acts like Grizzly Bear and Jens Lekman, combining pop's romantic sense of yearning with a sound that was sophisticated but accessible. In retrospect, it's strange to think that the songs on There's Gonna Be a Storm only gained them modest stardom, but the fact that their songs have stood the test of time better than their peers serves as a nice consolation prize.
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AMG Review of There's Gonna Be a Storm: The Complete Recordings 1966-69
Richie Unterberger
All Music GuideThough it's missing a few rarities -- namely the Steve Martin single for Buddha that reunited him with Michael Brown -- this is the most definitive Left Banke compilation. It features the entirety of their two late-'60s albums, as well as a couple of singles that didn't make it onto LPs at the time (though they later appeared on Rhino's History) and a previously unissued cut, "Men Are Building Sand." Their debut 1967 LP, Walk Away Renee/Pretty Ballerina, is an underrated classic of the time, matching smart harmonies and pop hooks to baroque orchestration. Its brilliance casts a bit of a shadow over the rest of this collection. The group's 1968 album, Too, suffered from bloated production and, more importantly, the absence of chief songwriter/arranger Michael Brown. In turn, the 1967 single Brown cut under the Left Banke moniker with singer Bert Sommer suffers from the absence of lead vocalist Steve Martin. By the time Brown and Martin tenuously reunited for a late-1969 single, some of the spark had gone. All of the aforementioned highs and lows of this prodigiously talented but strife-ridden group are on this disc.







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