Craig Asplund And unlike what radio usually plays, it's the 3:23 length single that debuted 12/14/68---NOT the longer 5:23 one issued later on the Crimson and Clover Lp which, by the way, as mnost know, just HAD that longer instrumnetal part added instead of the second shorter guitar break..
Merci pour cette vraie version de Crimson and Clover, tout-à-fait semblable à celle que j'écoutais il y a une quarantaine d'années. Trop cool, ça n'a pas vieilli d'un pouce ;) Sublime...
True. They went back, recorded a guitar solo, and stretched out some sections by turning off the lead vocal track and splicing them together. If you listen closely, the edited portion is a little off-pitch (slightly flat). I was in the studio where this was recorded, many years ago, to cut some drum tracks for a demo. The ownership changed, but it was a real trip to be in the same room as Tommy, Melanie Safka, and so many others. Around the corner from where Birdland once existed.
The first time I ever heard this song... we were traveling across a metal bridge, I thought it was interference when the special effects began, lol. Later, I realized it was the song! Great music, love this song.
Joan Jett? I love Joan but this is one of the most important records in all of pop music. People don't remember, or never knew, just what a mind blowing single this was when it came out. Right up there with the Beatles this was. "The song contains a tremolo effect on the guitar, set so that it vibrated in time with the song's rhythm. Near the end of the recording, the band had an idea of utilizing the tremolo effect with vocals. To achieve this, the voice microphone was plugged into an Ampeg guitar amplifier with tremolo turned on, and the output from the amplifier was recorded while James sang "Crimson and clover, over and over". -Wikipedia Brilliant. So simple, and so unique. It made the song.
dirkbag .com I;ll bet Joan Jett fans don't even REALIZE that Tommy James even DID this first, in the FIRST place..on the beatles..Tommy sounds like John Lennon when hje sings, doesn't he? Love that ending..
This is THE SONG for Joan Jett for me! Thanks for adding a comment on guitar technique which is certainly significant and makes the recording even more memorable!
Tommy is playing all the tracks on "C and C" and all vocals. It was a studio experiment that became a hit song. They brought in a drummer to complete it.
I also have this 45. But as I said before, yours are in such pristine condition! I'm envious! Thanks for sharing...This is one of my favorite Shondells songs...
A favorite on Windsor/Detroit's CKLW station, which I used to listen to as a kid. Big Jim Edwards, Walt "Baby" Love" or Daryl B. would play this one a lot. It also appears on the 1971 compilation "CKLW-Solid Gold Volume 1" in it's three minute version, albeit in rather poor sounding reprocessed stereo. It sounded more powerful on a mono transistor radio.
Also true. The entrance was actually on West 50th St. This goes back to an old NYC cabaret law that forbid musicians and entertainers from entering the front door of any establishment. By the time I did my drum parts there, it had changed its' name to Generation Sound, and upgraded to 24-track analog. They still had those old Scully machines that Tommy used. From what I learned later, Allegro/Generation had a noise problem: the subway would rumble through the mic stands during rush hour.
the first song or one of the first songs ever to push the rock genre music to synthetic special effects that is so common today.... in that sense the song is revolutionary in how the song emerges from straight vocals into special effects vocals!
When this record was issued in Australia early in 1969, well after its US release, the Roulette label was still under EMI distribution so the label was white with eight coloured stripes across, horizontal, vertical and two diagonal. EMI relinquished Roulette to Phonogram Recordings(later known as Polygram) in 1970/71 and it's then when we saw the label design as it is here.
The original is always the best, but Joan Jett did do a great version. Billy Idol's "Mony Mony was great too. The crime was Tiffany's "I Think We're Alone Now".
Here's me thinking this record was a 1969 release when it actually debuted on the US charts in December, 1968, which meant it would've been released in November, or very early December, 1968. I have now made the necessary correction to my MP3 file of the stereo mix and moved it into my 1968 folder.
you've got the best version of the original, the rest seem to only have one side... in those days they separated tracks to different sides, great recording!
Thank you for posting up my all time favorite from Tommy and the Shondells. The much needed improvement would be eliminating that obnoxious ambient hum at the beginning that is most likely caused by not having your equipment grounded. Hope you get that glitch figured out, man! Thanks again.
As a young boy I always loved this song. As a teen fumbling with his first guitar, I always wanted to know how to duplicate that tremolo effect. I can do it with the modern digital crap equipment, but it still doesn't sound authentic.
was I the only one that was treated to not playing MONO records on STEREO's because it will ruin the needle and or record? anyone else subjected to this experience besides myself?
You cut off the video just before the end of the song! Part of the instrumental background is a descending 4 note bell. On the last descending sequence, all the other instruments have faded away but for the bell on the last two notes. You've got the next to last one here, but not the very last note, which completes the song quite nicely.
I was in Okinawa when this came out.
I just bought this record on eBay! Cant wait to play it on my Turntable!
I said this exact thing not too long ago and now I have a video out of my copy being played!
Exactly like it sounded on the jukebox back then. Back to mono!!
this is the very best version of this song..
I don't like the long version..
Well a lot of folks like the long version, but for some of us, this is the best :)
I'm only 17, but I find this song stunningly beautiful throughout.
Great song from January 1969 and hit No.1.
Craig Asplund And unlike what radio usually plays, it's the 3:23 length single that debuted 12/14/68---NOT the longer 5:23 one issued later on the Crimson and Clover Lp which, by the way, as mnost know, just HAD that longer instrumnetal part added instead of the second shorter guitar break..
Love playing this record !!
Had mine since 1968 ❤️❤️
OMG the 60's stoned awesome music and friends
Out of hundreds of 45’s , this is my Favorite ! ❤️❤️🥰👍
So trippy that I'm watching this video on December 14th, the day this song was released!
My favorite from a local Pittsburgh boy. Who could ever get tired of this classic
Thanks for the upload. Nothing beats mono on all these older tracks.
Merci pour cette vraie version de Crimson and Clover, tout-à-fait semblable à celle que j'écoutais il y a une quarantaine d'années. Trop cool, ça n'a pas vieilli d'un pouce ;) Sublime...
True. They went back, recorded a guitar solo, and stretched out some sections by turning off the lead vocal track and splicing them together. If you listen closely, the edited portion is a little off-pitch (slightly flat).
I was in the studio where this was recorded, many years ago, to cut some drum tracks for a demo. The ownership changed, but it was a real trip to be in the same room as Tommy, Melanie Safka, and so many others. Around the corner from where Birdland once existed.
Omg! Love this more then I ever could express. Thank you!
This is a true great
The music of the 60s got me through Jr High as I tried to figure out life, Still love it.
My first car only had an am radio, so I have listened to WABC and that other radio station up the dial. Love it!!!!
One of best songs to roller skate to in little town; Bernadotte, Il. right before I enlisted in Army 1971
The first time I ever heard this song... we were traveling across a metal bridge, I thought it was interference when the special effects began, lol. Later, I realized it was the song! Great music, love this song.
Joan Jett? I love Joan but this is one of the most important records in all of pop music. People don't remember, or never knew, just what a mind blowing single this was when it came out. Right up there with the Beatles this was. "The song contains a tremolo effect on the guitar, set so that it vibrated in time with the song's rhythm. Near the end of the recording, the band had an idea of utilizing the tremolo effect with vocals. To achieve this, the voice microphone was plugged into an Ampeg guitar amplifier with tremolo turned on, and the output from the amplifier was recorded while James sang "Crimson and clover, over and over". -Wikipedia
Brilliant. So simple, and so unique. It made the song.
dirkbag .com I;ll bet Joan Jett fans don't even REALIZE that Tommy James even DID this first, in the FIRST place..on the beatles..Tommy sounds like John Lennon when hje sings, doesn't he? Love that ending..
Steve Carras I would call it one of the best 60s singles ever, right up there with anything the Beatles did.
There were plenty of younger Tiffany fans who didn't know Tommy James & the Shondells did,"I Think We're Alone Now,"first.
This is THE SONG for Joan Jett for me! Thanks for adding a comment on guitar technique which is certainly significant and makes the recording even more memorable!
Tommy Joked "Many thought their radio speakers had broken".
Great song from early 1969, #1. Frankly I prefer the longer LP version though, but both are great!!
Tommy is playing all the tracks on "C and C" and all vocals. It was a studio experiment that became a hit song. They brought in a drummer to complete it.
I also have this 45. But as I said before, yours are in such pristine condition! I'm envious! Thanks for sharing...This is one of my favorite Shondells songs...
Great song to dance to and whisper in her ear those little things that drive them crazy.😇
Always liked this original single version better than the extended version created for the album. Great mono mix!
A favorite on Windsor/Detroit's CKLW station, which I used to listen to as a kid. Big Jim Edwards, Walt "Baby" Love" or Daryl B. would play this one a lot. It also appears on the 1971 compilation "CKLW-Solid Gold Volume 1" in it's three minute version, albeit in rather poor sounding reprocessed stereo. It sounded more powerful on a mono transistor radio.
Also true. The entrance was actually on West 50th St. This goes back to an old NYC cabaret law that forbid musicians and entertainers from entering the front door of any establishment.
By the time I did my drum parts there, it had changed its' name to Generation Sound, and upgraded to 24-track analog. They still had those old Scully machines that Tommy used.
From what I learned later, Allegro/Generation had a noise problem: the subway would rumble through the mic stands during rush hour.
Thanks for all your great time and effort puting these cool old tunes out there for everyone.....very nice.
Sweet nostalgia.
awesome
so is the joan jett cover
also I THINK WERE ALONE NOW
all cover versions and original!!!
the first song or one of the first songs ever to push the rock genre music to synthetic special effects that is so common today.... in that sense the song is revolutionary in how the song emerges from straight vocals into special effects vocals!
This origin disc is priceless. Bring back good memories from 1969.Thank you very much Wabcradio77
When this record was issued in Australia early in 1969, well after its US release, the Roulette label was still under EMI distribution so the label was white with eight coloured stripes across, horizontal, vertical and two diagonal. EMI relinquished Roulette to Phonogram Recordings(later known as Polygram) in 1970/71 and it's then when we saw the label design as it is here.
love this song
I founded one at Goodwill back in 2017 and I bought it with the other records I found there.
You have fabulous music. Thanks.
My sister use to have the same 45!!
treat from the past
This takes me back
The #10 song of 1969, according to 'Billboard' magazine.
This was one of the first records to be recorded on a 16 track recorder. In1968 4 track was the norm, rarely 8 track.
What a nice song :).
Thank you for uploading this :).
I do have to agree the stereo version is way too wide, as are most stereo mixes of this time. This shorter version in mono sounds a lot better.
Dude so awesome.
Great venture into psychedelia!
Para todos ustedes con todo mi corazón 💕
Please include their other big hit from 1969: "Crystal Blue Persuasion" .....
One of their greats
The original is always the best, but Joan Jett did do a great version.
Billy Idol's "Mony Mony was great too.
The crime was Tiffany's "I Think We're Alone Now".
Here's me thinking this record was a 1969 release when it actually debuted on the US charts in December, 1968, which meant it would've been released in November, or very early December, 1968. I have now made the necessary correction to my MP3 file of the stereo mix and moved it into my 1968 folder.
love this song !
This was the first 45 I ever had which IMHO is better than the album version.
@zman291977 Another good example of a poor "too wide stereo version" is Crystal Blue Persuasion.
I think Candace Hudson would love this song Crimson and Clover from Tommy James & The Shondells
Yes ! 1968 ❤️❤️❤️🥰
very cool... thanks.
The best ever.
Always loved the sound of vinle
you've got the best version of the original, the rest seem to only have one side... in those days they separated tracks to different sides, great recording!
simplemente...excelente
still doing it!
I seem to remember I preferred to play it either at 78 rpm or 33 ..I can't remember which it was.
Fabuloso som
Ahh when AM radio played psychedelic songs...
Sweet!
We want "Crystal Blue Persuasion" too 😉
Thank you for posting up my all time favorite from Tommy and the Shondells. The much needed improvement would be eliminating that obnoxious ambient hum at the beginning that is most likely caused by not having your equipment grounded. Hope you get that glitch figured out, man! Thanks again.
As a young boy I always loved this song. As a teen fumbling with his first guitar, I always wanted to know how to duplicate that tremolo effect. I can do it with the modern digital crap equipment, but it still doesn't sound authentic.
A psychedelic Masterpiece !
would you play the other side of this please?...The Prism Song"...i cant find it anywhere on youtube....thanks..
Flip on some was "Some Kind Of Love" others had "(I'm) Taken".
Lois Griffin brought me here
Peaked the week ending February 1, 1969
Best
Totally agree on the mono version. Split stereo sucks! This is the only version playing on my stereo system.
This label makes you think that it would cause eye strain when spinning a Roulette label on a 45.
was I the only one that was treated to not playing MONO records on STEREO's because it will ruin the needle and or record? anyone else subjected to this experience besides myself?
how does he do the echo and the song with his voice
My brother got hanky panky as a import single
You cut off the video just before the end of the song! Part of the instrumental background is a descending 4 note bell. On the last descending sequence, all the other instruments have faded away but for the bell on the last two notes. You've got the next to last one here, but not the very last note, which completes the song quite nicely.
alexa, play music that sounds like i’m on drugs.
“playing the last quavery 45 seconds of crimson and clover.”
2:50
is this John Lennon's brother on vocals?
he never had a brother
@@youtubeviewer7030 brother from another mother
Ah...I don't hardly know her
Who the hell thought this song was by the Velvet Underground?
О чём эта песня?
This may be the original, but I'm sorry, nobody does this song like Joan Jett.
Superb! :-D