The Animals’ Early LPs Reappear in Expanded Editions

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Like Fleetwood Mac, the Bee Gees, the Moody Blues and a few other acts, England’s Animals had more than one distinct career. In the second, between 1966 and 1968, they billed themselves as Eric Burdon and the Animals and favored psychedelia-tinged material that included such U.S. hits as “San Franciscan Nights,” a hat-tip to the hippie world; “Monterey,” a tribute to the group’s fellow performers at the landmark 1967 California pop festival; and the antiwar “Sky Pilot.”

Much of this work was excellent, but the slightly earlier output of the Animals’ first incarnation—in which an entirely different lineup backed vocalist Burdon—arguably proved more significant. Part of the original British Invasion, that group found Burdon accompanied by bassist Chas Chandler, guitarist Hilton Valentine, drummer John Steel (who was replaced near the end by the Nashville Teens’ Barry Jenkins) and keyboardist Alan Price (who was replaced after the debut LP by Mick Gallagher and later by Dave Rowberry). They scored numerous hits, all of which showed that, like the Rolling Stones, their members were heavily influenced by American R&B and blues.

There’s much to be said for the Searchers, the Dave Clark Five, Peter and Gordon, and many of the other British pop groups whose hits crossed the Atlantic in the mid-’60s, but few of them conveyed as much intensity, rebelliousness and raw emotion as the original Animals. In their hands, even pop material from Brill Building songwriters sounds tough and bluesy.

This ad appeared in the July 25, 1964 issue of Record World

It is this initial version of the group that is the subject of a new reissue series. It includes the Animals’ first four U.S. albums, which originally appeared between 1964 and 1966 and have been out of print for many years. (The U.K. versions, like those of many other bands at the time, had somewhat different track lists.)

Related: A “lost” interview with the five original Animals

Though the group’s label released this material in the 1960s in simulated (rechanneled) stereo, the Animals recorded nearly all of it in mono, and the remastered versions here are from the first-generation mono tapes. The albums, which feature the original artwork as well as new liner notes by David Fricke, are being issued on ABKCO, both on 180-gram vinyl and CD, with the latter adding bonus tracks.

Here’s a look at what’s included:

The Animals: The group got off to a flying start with the first track on their eponymous September 1964 debut album—a chart-topping cover of “The House of the Rising Sun,” the traditional tune about a New Orleans prostitute, which features Price’s organ work and arrangement. (The credits erroneously indicate that he wrote the song, which is included on this reissue in its full-length, four-and-a-half-minute version rather than the three-minute radio-ready edit that showed up on the original LP.)

Also on the program is the Animals’ hard-driving first U.K. single, “Baby, Let Me Take You Home,” which the brilliant producer Bert Berns (aka Bert Russell) coauthored. Here, too, are gritty blues covers of Fats Domino’s “I’m in Love Again” and “I’ve Been Around,” Chuck Berry’s “Memphis, Tennessee” and “Around and Around,” and six other numbers, to which the new CD adds an unedited version of the Charles track that clocks in at 7:05, more than five minutes longer than the originally released cut.

The Animals on Tour: The group’s misleadingly titled March 1965 second studio album—which consists largely of recordings originally intended for but not used on U.K. releases—finds the Animals again covering blues and R&B-based material. John Lee Hooker’s “Boom Boom” and “Dimples” are here, for example, as are Charles’ “Hallelujah, I Love Her So,” Jimmy Reed’s “Bright Lights, Big City,” and Shirley and Lee’s “Let the Good Times Roll.” But the album’s biggest hit, “I’m Crying,” is by Burdon and Price.

The reissue supplements the original album’s 12 tracks with two bonus numbers and a brief, inconsequential London radio interview.

Animal Tracks: Released in September 1965, the third American Animals LP (which shares the title of their sophomore British album) features more self-penned material than its predecessors, with six of the original record’s 10 selections written by Burdon and/or Price. The best tracks, though, are three covers: a version of Sam Cooke’s “Bring It On Home to Me,” which produced a major U.K. hit;  “Don’t Let Me Be Misunderstood,” which Nina Simone first recorded and which made it to the Top 20 on the U.S. charts; and Barry Mann and Cynthia Weil’s “We Gotta Get Out of This Place,” another Top 20 hit, of which Bruce Springsteen has said, “That’s every song I’ve ever written…That’s ‘Born to Run,’ ‘Born in the U.S.A.,’ everything I’ve done for the past 40 years.”

On the reissue, five bonus tracks supplement the original album, among them, the U.K. single version of “We Gotta Get Out of This Place” and “It’s My Life,” a potent declaration of independence that provided a yet another hit.

Animalization: This July 1966 release, which includes four band originals, finds Mickie Most, producer of the group’s first three albums, replaced by Tom Wilson (Bob Dylan, Simon and Garfunkel, et al.). It includes such standouts as an organ-and fuzz-guitar-flavored reading of Gerry Goffin and Carole King’s “Don’t Bring Me Down”; a funky reading of Joe Tex’s “One Monkey Don’t Stop No Show” in which Burdon replaces “New York City” in the spoken intro with a reference to the Animals’ Newcastle upon Tyne home base; and the ballads “You’re on My Mind,” by Burdon and Rowberry, and “What Am I Living For,” a 1958 Chuck Willis hit.

The reissue supplements the original album’s dozen tracks with true stereo versions of three of its tunes: “Don’t Bring Me Down” as well as Burdon and Chandler’s “Cheating” and “See See Rider,” the Ma Rainey classic.

If your wallet is thin, be advised that you can find all the hits on the single-disc Best of the Animals, which has been available on CD (with somewhat varying track lists) since 1987. But digging deeper has its rewards, and here’s your chance.

Jeff Burger

3 Comments so far

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  1. TyStick
    #1 TyStick 29 July, 2022, 09:19

    I love the Animals and I love Eric Burdon & The Animals. Both of these bands had some really big hits and were a really big part of the 60s music scene. Now, on to the release of the Animals and extra tracks. I hope these CDs will be in STEREO. Eric Burdon and the Animals released a boxed set of all their CDs in Stereo a few years ago. I have been waiting for The Animals to release their CDs in stereo. Hopefully they will be.

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  2. AnimalsFan
    #2 AnimalsFan 29 July, 2022, 10:56

    Mickey Gallagher was only used as a sub for less than 2 weeks for live shows while they were waiting for Dave Rowberry to join them. That’s like calling Jimmie Nichol a Beatle because he subbed on drums for Ringo.

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  3. RCola
    #3 RCola 29 July, 2022, 11:36

    Wait, no Animalism? I believe the first song on side one, (All night long) was produced by Frank Zappa.

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