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Where the Action Is! Los Angeles Nuggets 1965-1968
Various Artists
List Price:$77.03
Price:$66.98
 
Rating:
Sales Rank:51712
 
Release Year:2009
Label:Rhino
UPC:081227985868
Notes:Box Set
 
Styles:Psychedelic, Garage Rock, Folk-Rock, Baroque Pop, Sunshine Pop
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Tracks


[01] Riot on Sunset Strip 2:21
[02] You Movin' 2:05
[03] You I'll Be Following 2:22
[04] Dr. Stone 2:17
[05] Go and Say Goodbye 2:19
[06] Zig Zag Wanderer 2:31
[07] Gentle as It May Seem 2:24
[08] Candy Cane Madness 2:09
[09] If You Want This Love 2:47
[10] Baby My Heart 2:14
[11] All Night Long 2:51
[12] It's Gonna Rain 2:18
[13] For My Own 2:05
[14] Take a Giant Step 2:53
[15] One Too Many Mornings 2:50
[16] Time Waits for No One 2:07
[17] Take It as It Comes 2:13
[18] Pulsating Dream 1:54
[19] Tripmaker 2:41
[20] People in Me 2:50
[21] Saturday's Son 2:08
[22] Eventually 1:52
[23] Swim 2:42
[24] Third Eye 2:11
[25] Girl in Your Eye 3:09
[26] Jump, Jive & Harmonize 2:27
[27] Back Up 2:47
[28] To Die Alone 1:54
[29] Get on This Plane 2:28
[30] Little Girl, Little Boy 2:22
[31] Hideaway 2:43
[32] Listen, Listen! 2:34
[33] She Done Moved 2:26
[34] Grim Reaper of Love 2:20
[35] See If I Care 2:13
[36] He's Not There Anymore 2:01
[37] Back Seat '38 Dodge 2:25
[38] Eternal Prison 2:32
[39] Revenge 1:58
[40] Come Alive 2:58
[41] Acid Head 3:04
[42] Guaranteed Love 2:23
[43] Love's the Thing 1:59
[44] Underground Lady 2:13
[45] Pretty Little Thing 2:46
[46] You're Wishin' I Was Someone Else 2:21
[47] Hippy Elevator Operator 3:02
[48] That's for Sure 2:06
[49] Tomorrow's Girl 2:27
[50] Everything's There 2:13
[51] Our Time Is Running Out 2:36
[52] Action, Action, Action 2:20
[53] Rebel Kind 2:32
[54] High on Love 3:00
[55] Fan Tan 2:10
[56] Halloween Mary 2:37
[57] Somebody Groovy 3:07
[58] Daydreaming 2:46
[59] Just Can't Wait 2:44
[60] Yellow Balloon 2:11
[61] Times to Come 2:52
[62] No More Running Around 2:48
[63] Little Girl Lost-And-Found 3:00
[64] Mothers and Fathers 2:03
[65] My Girlfriend Is a Witch 2:04
[66] Montage Mirror 2:08
[67] Flower Eyes 2:29
[68] Come Down 2:32
[69] Jill 2:16
[70] Daily Nightly 2:29
[71] Night Time Girl 2:35
[72] Don't Say No 3:02
[73] Tin Angel (Will You Ever Come Down) 4:34
[74] Rainbow Woman 3:11
[75] Poor Old Organ Grinder 3:55
[76] Baby, Please Don't Go 3:09
[77] Sit Down I Think I Love You [#] 2:48
[78] Splendor in the Grass 2:21
[79] November Night 2:57
[80] Roses and Rainbows 2:06
[81] Lemon Chimes 2:33
[82] Here's Today 2:26
[83] I Love How You Love Me 2:37
[84] Words [#][Demo Version] 2:15
[85] (You Used To) Ride So High 2:32
[86] Angeles 2:34
[87] Once Upon a Time 2:17
[88] Darlin' You Can Count on Me 1:53
[89] I'll Search the Sky 2:14
[90] Come to the Sunshine 2:55
[91] Heroes and Villains [Alternate Take] 2:56
[92] She Sang Hymns out of Tune 2:16
[93] Sister Marie 2:59
[94] Last Night I Had a Dream [Single Version] 2:00
[95] Life Is a Dream 1:58
[96] Marshmallow Skies 2:13
[97] I Think I Love You 4:32
[98] Change Is Now 3:21
[99] Truth Is Not Real [Single Version] 9:46
[100] You Set the Scene 3:43
[101] Inner-Manipulations 3:40
Album Review


Where the Action Is! Los Angeles Nuggets 1965-1968, Rhino's 2009 sequel to their 2007 Nuggets box Love Is the Song We Sing, shifts the spotlight down the Californian coast, moving from the epicenter of the hippie universe in San Francisco to hipsville central in Los Angeles, the land where fringe-wearing folk-rockers strolled down the Sunset Strip alongside studio cats on the make. Both groups of hipsters are equally well-represented on Where the Action Is!, along with the teens raising a ruckus out in the suburbs and the stars who stretched out, all based on the sounds they heard coming from the Strip, the section of Sunset that serves as the fulcrum for this entire set. The compilers focus on a brief time, the four-year stretch from 1965 to 1968, where Los Angeles was overrun with dance clubs and nightspots, all giving bands as wonderful and distinct as the Byrds, Love, the Doors, the Seeds, Buffalo Springfield, and the Leaves places to explore, opening up avenues that others followed, either in music or spirit. Some of this filtered through the prism of the studio, where there were plenty of musicians infatuated with the sounds of Brian Wilson, who pops up toward the end on an alternate take of "Heroes and Villains," but there's also no denying the impact of hustlers and hucksters like Kim Fowley, or how Hollywood could package and polish all of this up in the form of the Monkees.

All of this is here in bright, flashing neon on Where the Action Is!, which helps make it one of the liveliest of the Nuggets boxes, but also the one that seems to stray furthest from the series' mission to excavate unheard garage rock and psychedelia; after all, the Beach Boys, the Byrds, and the Doors are hardly unknown quantities or one-hit wonders. Yet, in its own way, Where the Action Is! is as crucial as any of the boxes that followed the first Nuggets set, for it documents a brief, shining moment in time where everything and anything seemed possible. It's not archeology, it's pop culture anthropology that does an excellent job of charting the rise of the L.A. underground, illustrating its first surfacing in the mainstream, connecting the dots in a fashion that may surprise even some dedicated pop and rock fans, those that might not realize how the Turtles, Bobby Fuller Four, the Standells, the Association, the Electric Prunes, Nilsson, Captain Beefheart. and Iron Butterfly were all connected, however loosely, or how Rick Nelson and Del Shannon got weird as the decade started to draw to a close. These connections, along with discovering dozens of gems from lesser-known artists, are the reason why Where the Action Is! winds up being a blast, as well as a revelation just like any other Nuggets set. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine, Rovi