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ab
The Kinks never got their due in the States because they were making their best music when they were banned from performing in the States. They did very little wrong between Kink Kontroversy (1965) and Muswell Hillbillies (1971). Their work from that period compares favorably with any of their contemporaries. Sure, they eventually got to headline arenas in the States in the early '80s, but so much of their new music from that time is sheer pandering.
and Ray was hardly pandering to Chrissie Hynde by marrying her. The Kinks 1965-1971 was certainly great, but why should it end there? Otherwise, they wouldn't have written and released all those albums up to 1993. They were lucky also to have had Jim Rodford come in on bass and Bob Henrit to have come in on drums, when in other bands such replacements would have been impossible. So that the brilliant songwriting of Ray (and Dave) Davies could have had such a rockin' template to push forward. And yes, still love the Kinks of the 80s, even if certain others don't hold them in such high regard.Quote
24FPS
As an American I remember some friends who were hard core Kinks fans when we were teenagers. I acknowledged their British Invasion monster hits, but I never put them in the pantheon. Although they are bigger band than the Small Faces, they both share a certain British sensibility that Americans just shake their heads and don't comprehend, or enjoy. Of course they have a hardcore group of fans that extol every new Ray Davies song, but in general it's a rather cultish fan base.
I think Between the Buttons is the Stones equivalent of a 'British' album. It's amusing and vaudevillian and all that and then the Americans say, "Okay, now, enough of that. Rock and Roll for gods sake!" Which is why All Day And All Of The Night is treasured here, and Musswell Hillbillies is practically unknown.
I remember when they wouldn't stop playing Lola on the radio, but they kept playing every popular song over and over in the 70s. We get it, it's a boy.
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keefriffhard4life
its a shame the kinks never got the respect they were due in the states. i guess some of the british humor never translated over the atlantic
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stonesnow
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keefriffhard4life
its a shame the kinks never got the respect they were due in the states. i guess some of the british humor never translated over the atlantic
It's a shame the Kinks never got the respect they were due in the UK, either. The album Something Else was the last album to chart in the UK--in 1967! Explain that one, UK record buyers!

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Youngie
The Kinks>>>>The Beatles?
Made me laugh anyway!
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keefriffhard4life
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stonesnow
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keefriffhard4life
its a shame the kinks never got the respect they were due in the states. i guess some of the british humor never translated over the atlantic
It's a shame the Kinks never got the respect they were due in the UK, either. The album Something Else was the last album to chart in the UK--in 1967! Explain that one, UK record buyers!
yikes i had no clue. funny enough they charted singles in the UK after 1967 but you're right i don't see and album charting positions. wtf???
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24FPS
Come Dancing, there's a perfect example of why the (later) Kinks sort of mystified American audience. It was the earliest days of MTV and they played that f-ing video over and over. It was an entertaining few minutes of old time English dance halls but no one would actually buy such a record and play it over and over.
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stonesnow
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24FPS
Come Dancing, there's a perfect example of why the (later) Kinks sort of mystified American audience. It was the earliest days of MTV and they played that f-ing video over and over. It was an entertaining few minutes of old time English dance halls but no one would actually buy such a record and play it over and over.
Come Dancing did chart in the U.S.--number 6 in 1983, but only made top 20 (number 12) in the UK. There is a new 3-CD collection out called Kinks Kollekted that has a stripped down reggae version of Come Dancing recorded in 1982 and released in the UK, but the single went nowhere. Then they dressed the song up in state-of-the-art production for inclusion on State of Confusion and the song became their biggest hit single since Tired Of Waiting For You. And it was also their last big hit.
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keefriffhard4life
shouldn't have made you laugh. ray davies was miles ahead of john and paulQuote
Youngie
The Kinks>>>>The Beatles?
Made me laugh anyway!
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keefriffhard4life
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stonesnow
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24FPS
Come Dancing, there's a perfect example of why the (later) Kinks sort of mystified American audience. It was the earliest days of MTV and they played that f-ing video over and over. It was an entertaining few minutes of old time English dance halls but no one would actually buy such a record and play it over and over.
Come Dancing did chart in the U.S.--number 6 in 1983, but only made top 20 (number 12) in the UK. There is a new 3-CD collection out called Kinks Kollekted that has a stripped down reggae version of Come Dancing recorded in 1982 and released in the UK, but the single went nowhere. Then they dressed the song up in state-of-the-art production for inclusion on State of Confusion and the song became their biggest hit single since Tired Of Waiting For You. And it was also their last big hit.
and thats a shame since some songs from uk jive and phobia are great
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whitem8
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keefriffhard4life
shouldn't have made you laugh. ray davies was miles ahead of john and paulQuote
Youngie
The Kinks>>>>The Beatles?
Made me laugh anyway!
I love the Kinks. Have all their albums, and have seen them 10 times. Phenomenal live act! But it is a bit of hyper-boil to say they were miles ahead of John and Paul. Both incredible in different ways.
Regarding their popularity and later albums. I have to disagree that they were subpar. NO WAY. Both Give the People What They Want and State of Confusion are fantastic. Low budget was their Some Girls, and a classic.
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keefriffhard4life
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Youngie
The Kinks>>>>The Beatles?
Made me laugh anyway!
shouldn't have made you laugh. ray davies was miles ahead of john and paul
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Youngie
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keefriffhard4life
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Youngie
The Kinks>>>>The Beatles?
Made me laugh anyway!
shouldn't have made you laugh. ray davies was miles ahead of john and paul
[giggles]
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stonesnow
Another, more-obscure album, To The Bone from 1996, was also their last. It features their final 2 new songs.
Funny how they split just as Britpop came to the fore praising the Kinks to the heavens.
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keefriffhard4life
imagine if ray davies had a songwriter in the kinks that was just as good as he was. please show me the string of great solo albums by john or paul, my point exactly. ray went it alone and the kinks while being a group were more like ray davies plus the rest of the guys. once the beatles broke up it showed they needed eachother as they are started to struggle to write consistanly good albums by the late 70's
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Youngie
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keefriffhard4life
imagine if ray davies had a songwriter in the kinks that was just as good as he was. please show me the string of great solo albums by john or paul, my point exactly. ray went it alone and the kinks while being a group were more like ray davies plus the rest of the guys. once the beatles broke up it showed they needed eachother as they are started to struggle to write consistanly good albums by the late 70's
Of course The Beatles was about the Lennon/McCartney songwriting partnership. That's what grabbed the headlines. However even individually Lennon and McCartney (while in Beatles) wrote better songs than Ray Davies ever did IMO...
No doubting Ray Davies' talents though...
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keefriffhard4life
yeah but john and paul bounced ideas off of eachother and co-wrote tunes together. other than the occasional dave tune the kinks were pretty much ray davies. did john or paul as a solo artist release a string of albums up to the level of quality as the kinks? thats really what i'm looking at when i say ray davies way better than john and paul
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Youngie
However even individually... McCartney wrote better songs than Ray Davies ever did IMO...