The Angry Young Them

The Angry Young Them is the first album by the Northern Irish rock and roll group Them. The album was released in the UK in June 1965. The band's lead singer and songwriter was Van Morrison. In the U.S., the album was released as Them with partly different tracks.

The Angry Young Them
Studio album by
Released11 June 1965 (1965-06-11)
Recorded1964-1965
StudioDecca Studios, West Hampstead, North London, England
Genre
Length39:06
LabelDecca
Producer
  • Tommy Scott
  • Bert Berns ("I Gave My Love a Diamond", "Go On Home Baby", "My Little Baby")
  • Dick Rowe ("Gloria")
Them chronology
The Angry Young Them
(1965)
Them Again
(1966)
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic[3]

Cover

As with several Decca releases of the period, the name of the group was conspicuously absent from the front cover and on the back of the LP they were introduced as The Angry Young Them with an essay on this theme declaring: "These five young rebels are outrageously true to themselves. Defiant! Angry! Sad! They are honest to the point of insult!"

Release history

Six of the songs on the album were Morrison originals, including the famous garage band anthem "Gloria". Another song on the album, "Mystic Eyes", was a spontaneous creation that came out of the band just "busking around" in Morrison's words and after seven minutes of instrumental playing he impulsively threw in the words of a song he had been working on. The lengthy versions of "Gloria" that the band performed at the Maritime and the ten-minute recording of "Mystic Eyes" have never surfaced. All that is left of the "Mystic Eyes" performance is the little over 212 minutes on the album that remained after splicing out from the beginning and ending. "You Just Can't Win" was a Dylan inspired song about a gold digger, set in specific places in London such as Camden Town. "Little Girl" was about a boy's obsession with a fourteen-year-old school girl (an earlier take on Lord's Taverners charity album had been deleted when a four-letter word was heard in the fade out at the end). "If You And I Could Be As Two" starts with a spoken introduction by Morrison with an aggressive Irish accent. Three Bert Berns originals were included and a cover of John Lee Hooker's "Don't Look Back" was considered by Morrison to be his finest vocal to date.[4]

Track listing

British version

Track listing

Side one

  1. "Mystic Eyes" (Van Morrison) – 2:41
  2. "If You and I Could Be as Two" (Morrison) – 2:53
  3. "Little Girl" (Morrison) – 2:21
  4. "Just a Little Bit" (Ralph Bass, Buster Brown, John Thornton, Ferdinand "Fats" Washington) – 2:21
  5. "I Gave My Love a Diamond" (Bert Berns, Wes Farrell) – 2:48
  6. "Gloria" (Morrison) – 2:38
  7. "You Just Can't Win" (Morrison) – 2:21

Side two

  1. "Go on Home Baby" (Berns, Farrell) – 2:39
  2. "Don't Look Back" (John Lee Hooker) – 3:23
  3. "I Like It Like That" (Morrison) – 3:35
  4. "I'm Gonna Dress in Black" (M. Gillon aka Tommy Scott, M. Howe) – 3:34
  5. "Bright Lights, Big City" (Jimmy Reed) – 2:30
  6. "My Little Baby" (Berns, Farrell) – 2:00
  7. "(Get Your Kicks On) Route 66" (Bobby Troup) – 2:22

North American version

Them
Studio album by
ReleasedJuly 1965 (1965-07)
Recorded1964-1965
StudioDecca Studios, West Hampstead, North London, England
Genre
Length34:17
LabelParrot
Producer
Them American chronology
Them
(1965)
Them Again
(1966)

Track listing

Side one

  1. "Here Comes the Night" (Berns) – 2:45
  2. "Mystic Eyes" – 2:41
  3. "Don't Look Back" – 3:23
  4. "Little Girl" – 2:21
  5. "One Two Brown Eyes" (Morrison) – 2:39
  6. "Gloria" – 2:38

Side two

  1. "One More Time" - 2:47
  2. "If You and I Could Be as Two" – 2:53
  3. "I Like It Like That" – 3:35
  4. "I'm Gonna Dress in Black" – 3:34
  5. "(Get Your Kicks On) Route 66" – 2:22
  6. "Go on Home Baby" – 2:39

Personnel

Them

Notes

  1. Fortnight. Fortnight Publications. 1989. p. 27.
  2. Masley, Ed (19 September 2008). "10 essential garage-rock albums". AZCentral. The Arizona Republic. Retrieved 8 November 2016.
  3. Allmusic review
  4. Rogan, No Surrender, pp. 126–127
gollark: It isn't complicated maths. And it's more of a "can you actually think about this enough to look it up" question.
gollark: Quite a lot of the people I interact with know more mathy stuff.
gollark: I expect that even if I said "HINT: try looking up "factorize number"" people would complain.
gollark: They don't need to know what potatOS is, only what a semiprime is, and it would be easy enough to just look it up.
gollark: It would be a utopia!

References

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