You Can All Join In
You Can All Join In | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Compilation album (Sampler) by Various Artists | ||||
Released | March 1969[1][2] | |||
Recorded | 1966 – 1968 | |||
Genre | Rock | |||
Label | Island IWPS 2 | |||
Producer | Various | |||
Series chronology | ||||
|
Review scores | |
---|---|
Source | Rating |
AllMusic | [3] |
You Can All Join In is a budget-priced sampler album from Island Records released in 1969. Priced at 14 shillings and 6 pence (£0.72), it reached no. 18 on the UK Albums Chart.[4]
The album is described at Allmusic.com as:[5]
(...) one of those seamless compilations that simply cannot be improved upon. A dozen tracks highlight the best - and that is the best - of Island's recent and forthcoming output
It was combined with the follow-up, Nice Enough To Eat for a CD Re-release in August 1992 entitled Nice Enough To Join In (Island Records IMCD 150).
Track listing
[edit]- Side one
- "A Song for Jeffrey" (Ian Anderson) – Jethro Tull – (Alternative mix, original version from This Was) (ILPS 9085)
- "Sunshine Help Me" (Gary Wright) – Spooky Tooth – (from It’s All About Spooky Tooth) (ILPS 9080)
- "I’m a Mover" (Paul Rodgers, Andy Fraser) – Free – (from Tons of Sobs) (ILPS 9089)
- "What’s That Sound"[6] (Stephen Stills) – Art[7] – (from Supernatural Fairy Tales) (ILP 967)
- "Pearly Queen" (Steve Winwood, Jim Capaldi) – Tramline – (from Moves of Vegetable Centuries) (ILPS 9095)
- "You Can All Join In" (Dave Mason) – Traffic – (from Traffic) (ILPS 9081T)
- Side two
- "Meet on the Ledge" (Richard Thompson) – Fairport Convention – (from What We Did on Our Holidays) (ILPS 9092)
- "Rainbow Chaser" (Alex Spyropoulos, Patrick Campbell-Lyons) – Nirvana – (from All of Us) (ILPS 9087)
- "Dusty" – (Martyn) - John Martyn – (from The Tumbler) (ILPS 9091)
- "I’ll Go Girl" (Billy Ritchie, Ian Ellis, Harry Hughes) – Clouds – (from Scrapbook) (ILPS 9100)
- "Somebody Help Me" (Jackie Edwards) – Spencer Davis Group – (from The Best of the Spencer Davis Group) (ILPS 9070)
- "Gasoline Alley" (Mick Weaver) – Wynder K. Frog – (from Out of the Frying Pan) (ILPS 9082)
The album cover
[edit]Designed by Hipgnosis, the front cover photograph was taken in Hyde Park and is said to feature "every single one of the Island artistes ... bleary eyed after a party."[8] The rear cover consists merely of a track listing and monochrome images of the covers of eight of the sampled albums (Tracks 1.1, 1.2, 1.4, 1.6, 2.1, 2.2, 2.3 & 2.6).
Artists shown
[edit]- Clive Bunker
- Neil Hubbard
- Gary Wright
- Glenn Cornick
- Bruce Rowland
- Martin Barre[10]
- Mick Weaver
- Ian Anderson
- Patrick Campbell-Lyons
- Ashley Hutchings
- Alex Spyropoulos
- Chris Wood
- Richard Thompson
- Ian Matthews
- Steve Winwood
- Ian A. Anderson[11]
- Jim Capaldi
- Mike Harrison
- Martin Lamble
- Simon Nicol
- Harry Hughes
- Rebop Kwaku Baah
- Chris Mercer
- Simon Kirke
- Paul Rodgers
- Billy Ritchie
- Andy Fraser
- Ian Ellis
- Sandy Denny
References
[edit]- ^ Weston, Penny; Jones, Brian K. (20 March 1969). "From Gutbucket to Beatle music – the new discs". Western Daily Press. Retrieved 14 December 2024.
- ^ Jones, Alan (12 March 1969). "New Discs". Lincolnshire Echo: 6. Retrieved 14 December 2024.
- ^ Allmusic review
- ^ Martin Roach (ed.), The Virgin Book of British Hit Albums, 2009, ISBN 978-0-7535-1700-0, p.346
- ^ You Can All Join In at Allmusic.com
- ^ This song is sometimes titled "For What It's Worth"
- ^ The band "Art" had reformed as Spooky Tooth by the time the sampler was released
- ^ "creativematch: FEATURE: Meet the man who puts the creative spin on Island Records". www.creativematch.com. Retrieved 2009-12-16.
- ^ "King Crimson to Bumpers - Island Rock LPs, Part 4". Record Collector (208): 125. 1996.
- ^ Martin Barre was not a member of Jethro Tull when the sampled track A Song for Jeffrey was recorded.
- ^ At the time Ian A. Anderson was signed to Liberty Records and did not play on any of the sampled tracks. His music appears on the sampler album Son of Gutbucket.