Picture Book [Box Set]

RELEASE
December 08, 2008
LABEL
Universal Distribution

Album Review

One problem with a long wait is that things happen in the interim. In the case of the highly anticipated Kinks box set, these things were a steady stream of reissues and repackages -- some of these were pulled from the shelves before the unveiling of the six-disc Picture Book in late 2008, but at that late date almost all of the Kinks vaults had been emptied on deluxe reissues of every album from 1964's The Kinks until 1984's Word of Mouth (capped off by a triple-disc version of Village Green Preservation Society), with various other compilations like Live at the BBC and Dave Davies' Unfinished Business filling out the gaps. All this means that Picture Book isn't quite the clearinghouse for rarities it once would have been -- and many of the unreleased tracks here are often alternate takes or mono mixes, although there are some quite interesting demos here -- but the main purpose of Picture Book, as it would be with any box set this size for an artist with a career as significant and lengthy as the Kinks, is to tell the story as thoroughly as possible and on that level, it's very successful, even observant. As always, it's possible to quibble over song exclusions, this time with some justification -- since they had a surplus of great songs in the '60s many are left behind, singles from "Plastic Man" to "Jukebox Music" are overlooked, and another opportunity to reissue the studio version of "When I Turn Off the Living Room Light" is missed -- but to dwell on what's missing is to ignore what's here: 138 tracks that tell the tale of one of Britain's greatest bands -- and one of their strangest -- in detail.
This detail does mean each act of the story gets almost equal treatment, with the band's heyday of 1966-1970 deservedly receiving a slight emphasis, with precisely a third of this set devoted to these glory years. Even this cold statistic suggests that the box leans heavily on Face to Face through Lola, which isn't quite right: it lingers on the prime but not at the expense of either the group's early or later years or even their early-'70s detour into odd theatrics. Picture Book takes a little while to get going, cycling through some standard-issue British beat before the band starts to hit its groove after cutting "You Really Got Me," which non-chronologically opens the set like a fanfare. Similarly, it also has a bit of a long close, as the Davies brothers drag into the mid-'90s with Phobia and To the Bone, but between this slow start and finish lies one of the greatest pop sagas in all its glory and occasional bewildering embarrassment. Fortunately, there's not much of the latter, as the set cherry-picks Ray Davies' convoluted concept albums well and gets the best of the uneven '80s LPs (although the choice to include the smash comeback "Come Dancing" as only a demo is a bit puzzling), making this a full-bodied, representative portrait of a band that's notoriously difficult to pigeonhole.
Inevitably, some partisans will grouse that there's too much latter-day stuff at the expense of that classic '60s run, but that's not quite right: Picture Book does a remarkable job of getting into the flow of their career, so the transition from the delicate Village Green to the America-conquering arena rockers of a decade later makes sense. The group had to go through the loose-limbed, ragged Muswell Hillbillies before settling into the concept albums where every gesture became grander -- all theatrics amped up for the time when the amps themselves ruled the roost. As this covers the Kinks itself, not Ray Davies, this stops during his fallow period in the '90s -- ever the misfit, he managed not to capitalize on the Brit-pop moment he godfathered -- so there's not quite an upward swing at the conclusion as there would be if his solo albums were taken into equation. Even so, Picture Book has a wealth of riches, proof that the Kinks are in the first ranks of rockers, right up there with the Beatles and the Rolling Stones. What other band could invent hard rock and metal with a two-chord riff, then detour into wry social satire, then establish modern British pop with Something Else, retreat into nostalgia before inventing the rock opera before the Who, then sell America tongue-in-cheek hard rock about gas shortages and the falling dollar, then feel totally at ease on MTV...all the while having a second command as exuberant and open as Dave Davies, who does get his fair shake here. No other band could claim that because there is no other band like the Kinks, as this long-awaited, largely essential, always absorbing box set proves conclusively.
Stephen Thomas Erlewine, Rovi

Track Listing

  1. Brian Matthews Introduces The Kinks
  2. You Really Got Me
  3. I'm A Hog For You, Baby [#][Demo Version]
  4. I Believed You
  5. Long Tall Sally
  6. I Don't Need You Anymore More
  7. Stop Your Sobbin'
  8. I Gotta Move
  9. Don't Ever Let Me Go [#]
  10. All Day And All of the Night
  11. Tired of Waiting For You
  12. Come On Now
  13. There Is A New World Opening For Me [#][Demo Version]
  14. Ev'rybody's Gonna Be Happy
  15. Who'll Be The Next In Line
  16. Time Will Tell
  17. Set Me Free
  18. I Need You
  19. See My Friends
  20. Wait Till The Summer Comes Along
  21. I Go To Sleep [Demo Version]
  22. A Little Bit of Sunlight [Demo Version]
  23. This I Know [Demo Version]
  24. A Well Respected Man
  25. This Strange Effect
  26. Milk Cow Blues
  27. Ring The Bells
  28. I'm On An Island
  29. Till The End of the Day
  30. Where Have All The Good Times Gone?
  31. All Night Stand [#][Demo Version]
  32. And I Will Love You [#]
  33. Sittin' On My Sofa
  34. Dedicated Follower of Fashion [alternate version] [Version]
  35. She's Got Everything
  36. Mr. Reporter [Alternate version] [Take][Version]
  37. Sunny Afternoon
  38. I'm Not Like Everybody Else
  39. This Is Where I Belong
  40. Rosy Won't You Please Come Home
  41. Too Much On My Mind
  42. Session Man
  43. End Of The Season
  44. Dead End Street [#][Version]
  45. Village Green
  46. Two Sisters
  47. David Watts
  48. Mister Pleasant
  49. Waterloo Sunset [Version]
  50. Death Of A Clown
  51. Lavender Hill
  52. Good Luck Charm (Good Luck Child) [#]
  53. Autumn Almanac
  54. Susannah's Still Alive
  55. Animal Farm
  56. Rosemary Rose
  57. Berkeley Mews
  58. Lincoln County
  59. Picture Book
  60. Days
  61. Misty Water
  62. Love Me Til The Sun Shines
  63. The Village Green Preservation Society
  64. Big Sky
  65. King Kong
  66. Drivin'
  67. Some Mother's Son
  68. Victoria
  69. Shangri-la
  70. Arthur
  71. Got To Be free
  72. Lola [Version]
  73. Get Back in the Line
  74. The Moneygoround
  75. Strangers
  76. Apeman [Alternate version] [Version]
  77. Gods Children
  78. The Way Love Used To Be
  79. Moments
  80. Muswell Hillbilly
  81. Oklahoma USA
  82. 20th Century Man
  83. Here Come The People In Grey
  84. Skin And Bone
  85. Alcohol [Live version] [Live][Version]
  86. Celluloid Heroes
  87. Sitting In My Hotel
  88. Supersonic Rocketship
  89. You Don't Know My Name
  90. One of the Survivors
  91. Sitting In the Midday Sun
  92. Sweet Lady Genevieve
  93. Daylight
  94. Mirror of Love
  95. Artificial Man
  96. Preservation
  97. Slum Kids [Live]
  98. Holiday Romance
  99. (A) Face in the Crowd
  100. No More Looking Back
  101. Sleepwalker
  102. The Poseur
  103. Sleepless Nights
  104. Father Christmas
  105. Misfits
  106. Rock'N'Roll Fantasy
  107. A Little Bit Of Emotion
  108. Attitude
  109. Hidden Quality [#]
  110. Gallon Of Gas
  111. Catch Me Now I'm Falling
  112. Nuclear Love [#][Demo Version]
  113. Duke [#][Demo Version]
  114. Maybe I Love You [#][Demo Version]
  115. Stolen Away Your Heart [#][Demo Version]
  116. Low Budget [Live]
  117. Better Things [Edit]
  118. Destroyer
  119. Yo-Yo
  120. Art Lover [#]
  121. Long Distance
  122. Heart of Gold
  123. Come Dancing [Demo version] [Demo Version][Version]
  124. State Of Confusion
  125. Do It Again
  126. Living On A Thin Line
  127. Summer's Gone
  128. How Are You?
  129. The Road [Live]
  130. Million Pound Semi-Detached
  131. Down All The Days (To 1992)
  132. The Informer
  133. Phobia
  134. Only A Dream
  135. Drift Away
  136. Scattered
  137. Do You Remember Walter? [Live]
  138. To The Bone [Demo Version]