The Move has seen no shortage of reissues over the years, but collectors can now finally embrace the definitive editions of the Birmingham band's classic self-titled album and follow-up Shazam! from Cherry Red's Esoteric Recordings imprint. Esoteric has just reissued The Move in a 3-CD edition and Shazam! in a 2-CD expansion, both of which add copious previously unreleased material. ("Highlights" versions are also available.) These two titles kick off the Move campaign from Esoteric which will also see the May 27 releases of Something Else from The Move (an EP expanded to full-length CD form) and Looking On.
1968's Move - featuring the line-up of vocalist Carl Wayne, guitarists Roy Wood and Trevor Burton, bassist Chris "Ace" Kefford and drummer Bev Bevan (all of whom also sang) - showcased the group's blend of pop, psychedelia and mod soul as produced by Denny Cordell and arranged for strings, brass and woodwinds by Tony Visconti. Move boasts ten Roy Wood originals including two U.K. Top 3 singles in "Flowers in the Rain," the first-ever song played on BBC Radio One (and the cause of a legal action taken by then-Prime Minister Harold Wilson) and "Fire Brigade," a rocker with surf guitar and typically strong Move harmonies.
The album tracks penned by Wood are no less impressive, such as the baroque ballads "The Girl Outside" and "Mist on a Monday Morning," the catchy "(Here We Go Round) The Lemon Tree" (B-side of "Flowers") and "Useless Information," and the disconcerting "Cherry Blossom Clinic" - the latter in one of the album's most stirring and freewheeling productions, embellished with wild brass and strings. Three covers round out the LP: Eddie Cochran's R&B rave-up "Weekend," the electrified rock-and-roll boogie-woogie of Moby Grape's "Hey Grandma," and a Coasters-style, doo-wopping take on the standard "Zing! Went the Strings of My Heart." Even members of The Move felt that the LP was schizophrenic, but its stylistic variety today adds to its appeal as a snapshot of a time in music when anything was possible.
Disc One of Esoteric's new reissue has the original album in remastered mono plus thirteen choice bonuses (four of which are previously unissued). You'll hear both sides of The Move's first two pre-album 45s; three songs recorded in the studio in January 1966 and restored from an acetate; five more January '66 tracks from Birmingham Local Radio (complete with DJ intros); and one 1967 outtake, "Vote for Me." The explosive "You're the One I Need" from that early studio session has Ace Kefford channeling Ray Charles on his vocals, while "Winter Song" and "The Fugitive" (the latter recalling "You've Got to Hide Your Love Away") have a gentler, folk-rock feel. The radio covers, such as a previously unreleased take on The Marvelettes' Tamla-Motown classic "Too Many Fish in the Sea" and The Isley Brothers' "Respectable," reveal the soulful influences shared by the band members as does a storming version of Carole King and Gerry Goffin's "I Can't Hear You No More." The Move even took on the Philly pop of The Orlons' "Don't Hang Up" in another never-before-released performance.
The second disc of Move has twenty studio tracks in stereo, sixteen of which premiered on the second disc of Salvo's 2007 2-CD set. (Indeed, all of the bonus tracks from that release are happily reprised here.) The third disc is a treasure trove of BBC sessions all recorded prior to the album's April 1968 release, between January 1967 and January 1968. These in-studio takes from Top Gear, Easybeat and Saturday Club offer a tantalizing glimpse into The Move as live performers. Energetic covers are peppered throughout, like The Byrds' "So You Want to Be a Rock and Roll Star," Love's "Stephanie Knows Who," Joe Tex's "You Better Believe It, Baby," and Van McCoy's "Stop and Get a Hold of Myself" from the pre-Motown days of Gladys Knight and the Pips.
It took nearly two years, until February 1970, for The Move to return with a second studio album. By the time of the release of Shazam!, The Move had released a number of singles including the chart-topping "Blackberry Way." The band's line-up had altered, too. Ace Kefford had departed, and Rick Price had replaced Trevor Burton on bass and vocals. Shazam! introduced a "new" Move. The album only featured six songs - three from Roy Wood, and three covers. The tracks were of epic length (with four songs breaking the five-minute mark and one approaching eleven minutes) and spoken word "interview" segments with Carl Wayne on the street added an "in-the-moment" feel. In addition, co-producers Wood, Wayne and Price took full advantage of stereo, panning back and forth for a far-out effect.
A new, far more muscular direction was clear from the searing guitar that opened the LP's first track, Wood's "Hello, Susie." It had been previously recorded by Amen Corner as a slice of pure AM pop, and earned a berth in the U.K. Top 10. With its heavy instrumentation and swaggering vocal, The Move's rendition clearly anticipates glam rock and metal while nodding in a progressive direction. "All those gorgeous harmonies draped over hard rock arrangements," Bev Bevan accurately observes in Mark Paytress' liner notes. The heavy sound continued on a hard 'n' heavy reworking of the previous album's "Cherry Blossom Clinic," as "Cherry Blossom Clinic Revisited," without strings and brass, and with a classical interlude quoting Bach. Wood's third composition, the pretty and haunting "Beautiful Daughter," is the most atypical. Tony Visconti's slashing strings harken back to the group's first album, and the track is an oasis of serenity among the rock fury.
The original LP's second side transformed three tunes, Move-style. "Fields of People" was introduced by the American progressive band Ars Nova. The Move lengthened it, and lathered on sound effects, spacey harmonies, spoken-word asides and a raga break; the result is a slice of psych-pop that sounds as if Wood could have written it himself. Barry Mann and Cynthia Weil's "Don't Make My Baby Blue" (also recorded by The Shadows and western crooner Frankie Laine!) got the full-on "heavy" treatment, with a scorching riff and slowed-down tempo. Carl Wayne's vocal sounds a bit like a template for glam-era Bowie, and the same can be said for that of the album's closing track, a psych-folk treatment (with more than a dash of The Byrds!) of Tom Paxton's "The Last Thing on My Mind."
Esoteric's reissue allows listeners to trace the development of the group up to Shazam! as it also includes the pre-Shazam!, post-Move singles among the bonus material on Disc One. Among the other finds here are the U.S. single edit of "Hello, Susie," the 1968 recording of "Second Class (She's Too Good for Me)" and a host of demos and alternate mixes. The second disc kicks off with two alternates from Shazam! before launching into another splendid array of BBC session material recorded between May 1968 and November 1969. The covers here once again are most fascinating. There are previously released versions of The Beach Boys' "California Girls," Janis Joplin's "Piece of My Heart" and The Byrds' "Goin' Back" (another Goffin/King number) as well as previously unheard versions of Little Anthony and the Imperials' "Goin' Out of My Head," Dion's "Abraham, Martin and John," The Nazz's "Open My Eyes" and Simon and Garfunkel's "The Sound of Silence," and even The Rooftop Singers' "Walk Right Back," plus Spooky Tooth's "Evil Woman" - not the song of the same title written by a future Move member! Few bands could have handled such wildly diverse material, but the bandmates in The Move were used to keeping a widely-varied repertoire as they split their time between cabaret venues and "proper" rock concerts.
Everything from the last Salvo edition of Shazam! is here other than an alternate mix of "Blackberry Way" and the stereo version of "A Certain Something" which have been dropped. (The one-channel "Reduced Mix" of "Beautiful Daughter" from the '07 edition is still credited as such here, but is actually the two-channel stereo version.)
Both Move reissues are housed in handsome digipaks designed by Phil Smee, and both contain both a booklet of liner notes and a foldout poster (with artwork or an advertisement on one side, and reprinted newspaper clippings on the reverse). Mark Paytress' comprehensive liner notes have been adapted and updated from his previous essays crafted for the 2007 reissues. Ben Wiseman has remastered from Rob Keyloch's tape transfers, and Peter Mew at Abbey Road has remastered and remixed the acetate tracks on Move. Sound is an improvement over the 2007 discs, particularly on Shazam! - and the quality of the previously unreleased BBC tracks should handily impress anyone familiar with the tracks that have circulated non-commercially in the past.
The Move's catalogue can be a daunting one, but Esoteric has done a fine job in streamlining it as much as possible via these first two reissues. Move and Shazam! are available now at the links below; Something Else from The Move and Looking On will arrive on May 27!
The Move, Move (Regal Zonophone LRZ 1002, 1968 - reissued Esoteric/Cherry Red ECLEC 32536, 2016) (Amazon U.S. / Amazon U.K. / Amazon Canada)
CD 1: The Original Album (Tracks 1-13) plus Bonus Tracks
- Yellow Rainbow
- Kilroy Was Here
- (Here We Go) Round the Lemon Tree
- Weekend
- Walk Upon the Water
- Flowers in the Rain
- Hey Grandma
- Useless Information
- Zing! Went the Strings of My Heart
- The Girl Outside
- Fire Brigade
- Mist on a Monday Morning
- Cherry Blossom Clinic
January 1966 - Studio Recordings
- You're the One I Need
- Winter Song (previously unreleased)
- The Fugitive (previously unreleased)
January 1966 - Birmingham Local Radio Recordings
- Is It True
- Too Many Fish in the Sea (previously unreleased)
- Respectable
- Don't Hang Up (previously unreleased)
- I Can't Hear You No More
Singles and More
- Night of Fear (Deram single DM 109-A, 1966)
- Disturbance (Deram single DM 109-B, 1966)
- I Can Hear the Grass Grow (Deram DM 117-A, 1967)
- Wave the Flag and Stop the Train (Deram DM 117-B, 1967)
- Vote for Me (Recorded at Advision Studios, London, 1967)
CD 2: Stereo Mixes
- Night of Fear
- Don't Throw Stones at Me
- Move Intro
- Move
- Yellow Rainbow (Enhanced Stereo Version)
- Kilroy Was Here
- (Here We Go Round) The Lemon Tree
- Weekend
- Walk Upon the Water
- Flowers in the Rain
- Useless Information
- Zing! Went the Strings of My Heart
- The Girl Outside (Alternate Take)
- Fire Brigade
- Mist on a Monday Morning
- Cherry Blossom Clinic
- Vote for Me (Alternate Take)
- Night of Fear (Alternate Take)
- Disturbance (Undubbed Version)
- Fire Brigade (Undubbed Early Piano Version)
CD 3: BBC Sessions January 1967 - January 1968
BBC Light Programme Saturday Club, January 31, 1967
- You Better Believe It Baby
- Night of Fear
- Stop and Get a Hold of Myself
BBC Light Programme Saturday Club, April 10, 1967
- Kilroy Was Here
- Interview with Carl Wayne (previously unreleased)
- I Can Hear the Grass Grow
- Walk Upon the Water
BBC Light Programme Easybeat, September 14, 1967
- Morning Dew
- Interview with Carl Wayne (previously unreleased)
- Stephanie Knows Who
- Flowers in the Rain
- So You Want to Be a Rock 'n' Roll Star
BBC Radio One Top Gear, October 1, 1967
- Hey Grandma
- Cherry Blossom Clinic
BBC Radio One Top Gear, January 28, 1968
- Fire Brigade
- Weekend
- It'll Be Me
- Walk Upon the Water (previously unreleased)
- Useless Information
The Move, Shazam! (Regal Zonophone SLRZ 1012, 1970 - reissued Esoteric/Cherry Red ECLEC 22538, 2016) (Amazon U.S. / Amazon U.K. / Amazon Canada)
CD 1: The Original Album (Tracks 1-6) plus Bonus Tracks
- Hello Susie
- Beautiful Daughter
- Cherry Blossom Clinic Revisited
- Fields of People
- Don't Make My Baby Blue
- The Last Thing on My Mind
Singles and More
- Wild Tiger Woman (Regal Zonophone single RZ 3012-A, 1968) (mono)
- Omnibus (Regal Zonophone single RZ 3012-B, 1968) (mono)
- Blackberry Way (Regal Zonophone single RZ 3015-A, 1968) (mono)
- A Certain Something (Regal Zonophone single RZ 3015-B, 1968) (mono)
- Curly (Regal Zonophone single RZ 3021-A, 1968)
- This Time Tomorrow (Regal Zonophone single RZ 3021-B, 1968)
- Hello Susie (Abridged U.S. Single Version)
- Second Class (She's Too Good for Me) (Recorded at Olympic Studios - 9/23/68)
- Wild Tiger Woman (Stereo Mix)
- Omnibus (Full Version)
- Curly (Alternate Mix)
- This Time Tomorrow (Demo Version) (mono)
CD 2: Outtakes and BBC Sessions May 1968-November 1969
- That Certain Something (Demo) (mono)
- Beautiful Daughter (Reduced Mix)
- Interview with Carl Wayne (previously unreleased)
- (Your Love Keeps Lifting Me) Higher and Higher
- Kentucky Woman
- Interview with Bev Bevan (previously unreleased)
- Wild Tiger Woman
- Long Black Veil
- Piece of My Heart
- Goin' Back
- Blackberry Way
- California Girls
- The Christian Life
- Bev Bevan Interview (previously unreleased)
- Beautiful Daughter (previously unreleased)
- Goin' Out of My Head (previously unreleased)
- Evil Woman (previously unreleased)
- Carl Wayne Interview (previously unreleased)
- Curly (previously unreleased)
- The Sound of Silence (previously unreleased)
- Abraham, Martin and John (previously unreleased)
- Open My Eyes (previously unreleased)
- Hello, Susie (previously unreleased)
- Walk Right Back (previously unreleased)
- Fields of People (previously unreleased)
Tracks 3-5 recorded May 2, 1968
Tracks 6-9 recorded September 4, 1968
Tracks 10-11 recorded November 6, 1968
Tracks 12-13 recorded November 18, 1968
Tracks 14-16 recorded April 22, 1969
Tracks 17-21 recorded June 9, 1969
Tracks 22-23 recorded August 18, 1969
Tracks 24-25 recorded November 13, 1969
Jeff says
Awesome! The 2008 box set had some great additional material and looking forward to having more Move with these expanded editions!
Steve Bruun says
Disc 1 of "Shazam" clocks in at 80:33, which is the longest CD running time I've ever seen. Disc 2, however, is only 71 minutes long, so there should have been room for the two tracks they cut from the 2007 Salvo edition, or maybe other rarities like the Italian-language "Something" (which is in fact mentioned in the liner notes).
These are small quibbles, though - the new Esoteric discs are very highly recommended for Move fans.
AC says
I'm listening to Disc 1 of "Shazam" now and am pretty impressed by the remastering. I consider it a definite improvement over the Salvo edition. Same goes for the debut album. I'm really looking forward to completing the collection in a few weeks.
It would be awesome if Esoteric could get the rights to "Message From the Country," as that album hasn't been treated terribly well on CD thus far. The One Way pressing is probably the least offensive of the ones I've heard.
Michael Roche says
An excellent set, as all the other MOVE releases have been.