BIG BEAT'S new 7" Garage 45 series will mess you up!!!

Frantic

G45 Legend
Joined
Apr 20, 2011
Alec Palao does it again........
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• Big Beat kicks off a projected series of 7” vinyl to excite even the most hardened collector of 60s garage rock. We’ve got a bevy of exciting two-siders in the pipeline all showcasing killers that are either unavailable on vinyl or so rare you need a second mortgage to even think about owning them.

• For this first salvo, we present three highly desirable artefacts including one that is not only one of rarest singles of the 1960s, but the ultimate girl-garage nugget: ‘Boy, What’ll You Do Then’ by Denise. Denise Kaufman would later be a founder member of SF hippie mainstays Ace Of Cups but in this ’66 stormer, hell hath no fury as the Berkeley wild-child lets loose on her then beau (reputed to be future Rolling Stone editor Jann Wenner). The handful of original copies that have turned up (selling for in excess of $8,000) all feature an earlier, weaker take. Our reissue utilizes the hyper-rare second pressing mix – one known copy - which is far more powerful.

• Memphis is well known for its small but perfectly formed coterie of mid-60s punkers, prominent amongst whom were Lawson & Four More, featuring future engineer / producer Terry Manning. The combo’s taut and atmospheric ‘If You Want Me, You Can Find Me’ is an acknowledged gem; here it is joined by an outstanding 1966 outtake ‘Smart Bird,’ with lead singer Bobby Lawson in full snarl mode. Both sides were written and produced by the legendary Jim Dickinson.
• Last but not least, the mighty Zakary Thaks of Corpus Christi, one of the most beloved of all 60s garage bands, deliver the unissued 1966 monster that is ‘She’s Got You,’ as good as anything they ever released at the time, backed with a noisy ad for Gulf Coast tipple Jax Beer set to the tune of their classic ‘Face To Face.’
 
It's hard to believe they're still turning up unheard Zakary Thaks' songs! These are must buys. Alec promises many more before the end of the year.
 
Anyway to hear these songs before buying them?

The "two versions of Denise" story is new to me...is the version we all know and love and readily available online the first press or second press version then?
 
Big Beat / Ace is a quality label no doubt, but why do these 45's have to cost almost as much as an entire album?
 
Big Beat / Ace is a quality label no doubt, but why do these 45's have to cost almost as much as an entire album?

I wondered that myself. Amazon has them for $20+ each, and Ace for the equivalent of $15 U.S.
 
There`s no indication of pic sleeves either...for that kinda $$, it would be nice.
 
chas_kit said:
who distributes Ace/Big Beat in the US?

I wonder this too. Ace/Kent's lack of US distribution for their soul comps is a shame, too. I have yet to find a store that has even heard of them. This allowed a lot of generic albums to lock that market in.
 
I wonder this too. Ace/Kent's lack of US distribution for their soul comps is a shame, too. I have yet to find a store that has even heard of them. This allowed a lot of generic albums to lock that market in.
Some of Ace's vinyl show up on Amazon, often at very good prices, but when I wanted to buy three LPs from one seller, Amazon just won't allow them to combine shipping - which meant $11.97 to ship 3 LPs within the US!
 
Anyway to hear these songs before buying them?

The "two versions of Denise" story is new to me...is the version we all know and love and readily available online the first press or second press version then?

I believe the version heard by all is the yellow label pressing. I guess they refer to the red label pressing whispered about here from time to time. Absurd that a record this scarce actually was pressed twice with two different versions! Really looking forward to hearing this as I muchly dig the song.
 
Their press is red, which supports that theory.

This is big news! Anyone shed light on this alternative pressing? Worth buying/superior to the known version?
 
PS by the sound of the Denise clip it's a different and better mastering of the same take. Sounds more roomy and boomy to my ears (through the small computer speakers) Lookin forward!