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-   -   The Animals (https://www.musicbanter.com/rock-n-roll-classic-rock-60s-rock/57216-animals.html)

Scarlett O'Hara 06-26-2011 07:41 PM

The Animals
 
I checked to see if there is a thread on them but alas, none!

The Animals are a great blues rock English group from the 60's. After having a blue/folk sound in the early 60's they then changed management and ended up doing more psychedelic style music with silent beginnings and heavy/raw endings. They were considered part of the "British Invasion".

http://2.bp.blogspot.com/_ARDo07TDQl...B-%2Bfront.jpg

The song I most enjoy is the one they covered:



Their albums include:

The Animals (1964; The Animals; US)
The Animals (1964; The Animals; UK)
The Animals on Tour (1965; The Animals; US)
Animal Tracks (1965; The Animals; UK)
Animal Tracks (1965; The Animals; US)
Animalisms (1966; The Animals; UK)
Animalization (1966; The Animals; US)
Animalism (1966; The Animals; US)
Eric Is Here (1967; Eric Burdon & The Animals; US)
Winds of Change (1967; Eric Burdon & The Animals)
The Twain Shall Meet (1968; Eric Burdon & The Animals)
Every One of Us (1968; Eric Burdon & The Animals; US)
Love Is (1968; Eric Burdon & The Animals)
Before We Were So Rudely Interrupted (1977; The Animals)
Ark (1983; The Animals)

Captain Ron 06-26-2011 10:59 PM

i like their early stuff before they got psychedelic. burdon's voice is only good for blues or soul music

captaincaptain 06-27-2011 05:29 PM

They wrote one of the better songs about a city. I love the spoken word opening.


dumont 10-25-2011 08:12 AM

Please could anyone help me find sheet music book of The Animals?

Howard the Duck 10-26-2011 04:04 AM

not really a big fan, no

liked them a lot when i was a kid

these days, i find them grating

blastingas10 10-29-2011 02:37 AM

Their rendition of "the house of the rising sun" will always be a classic. Killer organ solo

Mojo 10-29-2011 04:20 AM

Being from the North East of England and calling myself a music fan, it is unofficially the law that I must at least know of Brian Johnson's pre-AC/DC days in Geordie (and trust me, I have been quizzed, especially when I used to go out in Newcastle wearing an AC/DC jacket), Dire Straits (even though none of them were born around here, this is where the band were formed and they are loved here), and The Animals.

Given The Animals' members were from all over the North East and not just Newcastle, Alan Price being from my little town, about 2 minutes from here, then it is considered especially important to know their stuff.

I haven't listened to the band for years. It may be time to dig out their self titled and Animalism!

Scarlett O'Hara 11-06-2011 11:35 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by mojopinuk (Post 1114544)
Being from the North East of England and calling myself a music fan, it is unofficially the law that I must at least know of Brian Johnson's pre-AC/DC days in Geordie (and trust me, I have been quizzed, especially when I used to go out in Newcastle wearing an AC/DC jacket), Dire Straits (even though none of them were born around here, this is where the band were formed and they are loved here), and The Animals.

Given The Animals' members were from all over the North East and not just Newcastle, Alan Price being from my little town, about 2 minutes from here, then it is considered especially important to know their stuff.

I haven't listened to the band for years. It may be time to dig out their self titled and Animalism!

Oh you have to! It's nice to see there are some people out there that appreciate the Animals.

Necromancer 11-07-2011 06:44 AM

The Animals - We Gotta Get Out Of This Place
 
From a 1965 T.V. show and the vocals are live. This is not a lip-synch. Although the music itself sounds pre-recorded.


killcreek 11-09-2011 06:03 PM

eric burdon had the most powerful voice of any british invasion singer. but his voice only worked for blues and r&b, not for psychedelia

*JR* 12-23-2011 07:38 PM

A definite fave British Invasion group of mine. If I had to pick a top 3 by them, it would be:

3)

2)

1)

This is the short version of Sky Pilot, but the missing nearly 4 minutes are instrumental (like a simulated aerial dogfight) and the lyrics are all here, I believe. I'm told that this was a classic antiwar anthem of the Vietnam Era. (Whoever uploaded it dubbed in the religious text on the vid, I'm rather agnostic).

Lisnaholic 01-07-2012 09:56 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by mojopinuk (Post 1114544)
Given The Animals' members were from all over the North East and not just Newcastle, Alan Price being from my little town, about 2 minutes from here, then it is considered especially important to know their stuff.

^ Hey, congratulations !
I saw AP once in a small pub venue; a wonderful, professional set that included songs as diverse as My Girl and Simon Smith. I still remember how he introduced the song that everyone wanted to hear; "We`re going to do a song now made famous by the Animals..." - which of course was a very well-received version of House of the Rising Sun.

I think Winds of Change is one of the Animals most interesting albums; it represented a bold change of direction, but despite including the top-quality pop hit, San Franciscan Nights, it was rather overlooked at the time of its release. Well, maybe that`s because it came out in 1967 and had to fight for attention with albums like Sgt. Pepper, Piper at the Gates, Surrealistic Pillow, and The Doors first. Also, this was the year when American record-buyers enjoyed a love affair with The Monkees. (Little-known fact; for an extraordinary 31 weeks of that year a Monkees album was at number one in the Billboard charts, leaving second-raters like The Beatles to jostle with Herb Alpert for the remaining honours.)

Anyway, Winds of Change has a lot of great moments, not least the first three tracks that run together so neatly. For anyone interested, here are two of them to give you a taste :



Although some of the album`s psychedelic explorations don`t work so well, EB`s voice delivers a mixture of celebration and menace that IMO was only rivalled by Jim Morrison. In fact, when EB chants this line (from the over-ambitious Black Plague), "Diseased eyes roll upwards as if knowing in which direction their souls will travel", it sounds uncannily like a line from Horse Latitudes , which I think JM wrote later the same year.


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