Pete Wingfield - Breakfast Special (1975) - Lp

William Peter "Pete" Wingfield (born 7 May 1948) is an English record producer, keyboard player, songwriter, singer and music journalist.
In 1969, Wingfield played keyboards and sang on Jellybread's First Slice album, which was produced by Mike Vernon for the Blue Horizon label.
In the 1970s, Wingfield was a specialist in soul music and regularly contributed articles and reviews to the monthly journal, "Let It Rock" and "Melody Maker". As a performer, he played with the British soul band The Olympic Runners, and Albert Lee & Hogan's Heroes.
He played piano for the Alan Parsons rhythm section at Abbey Road Studios, with Pete Moss on bass guitar, for Dexys Midnight Runners and Paul McCartney.

Wingfield hit the singles charts on both sides of the Atlantic in 1975 with "Eighteen With a Bullet", a pastiche doo-wop number involving word play on hit record chart positions - a bullet, in record-chart parlance, referring to a song still selling strongly and/or moving up the charts. It entered the Billboard Hot 100 chart on 23 August 1975.
On the Billboard Hot 100 for the week ending 22 November 1975, the tune lived up to its name by charting at no. 18 – with a bullet. The song peaked at no. 15 a week later. It also reached no. 7 in the UK Singles Chart. T
aken from the album, Breakfast Special, "Eighteen with a Bullet" later featured on the soundtrack to the 1998 film Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels.

Side A
A1. Eighteen With A Bullet – 3:29
A2. A Whole Pot Of Jelly (For A Little Slice Of Toast) – 2:58
A3. Hold Me Closer – 5:01
A4. Shadow Of A Doubt – 3:28
A5. Anytime – 5:32

Side B
B1. Please – 2:55
B2. Lovin’ As You Wanna Be – 5:00
B3. Kangaroo Dip – 3:23
B4. Number One Priority – 5:09
B5. Shining Eyes – 2:59

Companies, etc.
Credits
Notes
Release: 1975
Genre: Pop Rock
Format: LP
Label: Island Records
Catalog# ILPS 9333
Prijs: € 7.00

Vinyl: Goed
Cover: Goed

Spirit - ´T Bevalt Me Best Zo (1982) - Lp




Spirit is een nederlandse gospel/pop band met als hoofdpersoon, de komponist/tekstdichter Siebren Rijpma, die alle nummers van dit album heeft geschreven. Verder is er weinig van deze groep bekend.    https://www.bing.com/translator

Side A
A1. Stormt Het Buiten  
A2. Jammer Dan  
A3. 'K Wil Dat Je Het Weet
A4. Je Leven Duurt Niet Lang  
A5. Liefde Komt, Liefde Gaat  

Side B
B1. 'T Bevalt Me Best Zo  
B2. Dichtbij Hem  
B3. Het Is Volbracht  
B4. Naam Boven Alle Naam  
B5. Wat Wist Ik

Companies, etc.
Credits

Notes
Release: 1982
Genre: Nederlandstalig Pop
Format: LP
Label: GMI Records
Catalog# GMI-1014
Prijs: € 7,00

Vinyl: Goed
Cover: Goed

http://www.ad-vinylrecords.com/product/spirit-t-bevalt-me-best-zo-lp/

Kamahl - The Elephant Song (1975) - Lp

Kamahl is the stage name of Kandiah Kamalesvaran; born 13 November 1934, in Kuala Lumpur to Tamil Hindu parents. He grew up in Brickfields, Kuala Lumpur, and studied at the Victoria Institution.
He arrived in Adelaide, South Australia in 1953 to receive a higher education at King's College (now Pembroke School).
Kamahl is a singer and recording artist active in Australia, perhaps best known for "The Elephant Song", and his repertoire of popular music.
At his first public performance in 1958 he shortened his name to Kamal, but the Master of Ceremonies announced him as "Camel". After that he changed the spelling to Kamahl.
As he made his way into the Australian music industry, Rupert Murdoch was an early important mentor. Murdoch tipped Kamahl £10 at a concert in December 1958 and encouraged him to move to Sydney. Without asking, Murdoch arranged for Kamahl to perform a six-week season at the Hotel Australia in Sydney. After that season, he boarded with the Murdochs for two years. Kamahl was a finalist in the Sydney Eisteddfod Sun Aria in 1966 singing Verdi's Ella giammai m'amò and Mussorgsky's Farewell and death of Boris.

His first album was A Voice to Remember, which was released in Australia in October 1967. He has released singles and albums in the United States, Canada, Britain, New Zealand, South America, India, Singapore, Malaysia and Germany (the last in German, as well as in the Netherlands, Belgium, and Scandinavia. From 1967 onwards in Australia his records, tapes and CDs were primarily on the Philips label, but he also recorded on EMI, Mercury, Festival, Dino and Reader's Digest.
In 1975, his single, "The Elephant Song" (composed and produced by Hans van Hemert) hit the number one spot on the Dutch Top 40. This song was part of the soundtrack of a World Wildlife Fund TV documentary.
On his 1975 album "The Elephant Songs" are some fine covers of songs such as, "If", "Annie´s Song", "You’ve Got A Friend" and "Leaving On A Jetplane".

Side A
A1. The Elephant Song  (3:25)
A2. There I’ve Said It Again  (2:57)
A3. I Won’t Last A Day Without You  (4:20)
A4. If  (3:12)
A5. You’ve Got A Friend  (4:21)
A6. Annie’s Song  (3:21)

Side B
B1. Make The World Go Away  (2:34)
B2. A Daisy A Day  (3:03)
B3. It’s All In The Game  (2:56)
B4. Let It Be Me  (3:02)
B5. Night And Day  (3:49)
B6. Leaving On A Jetplane  (4:17)

Credits
Notes
Release: 1975
Genre: Easy Listening
Format: LP
Label: Philips Records
Catalog# 6357029
Prijs: € 6,99

Vinyl: Goed
Cover: Goed

http://www.ad-vinylrecords.com/product/kamahl-the-elephant-song-lp/

Neil Richardson And His Orchestra ‎- Music From The Godfather (1972) - Lp

Neil Grant Richardson (5 February 1930 – 8 October 2010) was an English composer and conductor. As a composer, he is perhaps best known for "Approaching Menace" (the Mastermind theme tune) and "The Riviera Affair".
During the 1960s–1990s, he was an arranger and conductor of various BBC Radio Orchestras, working on programmes such as String Sound and The Radio Orchestra Show.
He was a prolific composer of library music for companies such as KPM, and his music has been used in numerous TV, film and radio productions.
The music for The Godfather was written by Nino Rota, whose score has captured the ultimate paradox of the life of the mafiosi, in which an exaggerated love for the family, and especially its children, exists alongside a sadistic affection for violence and brutality. Rota has represented this with two musical themes: The stark opening to the Main Title played first on a solo trumpet, and reappearing in "The Halls of Fear" and The "Godfather Waltz"; and the "Love Theme", which is introduced in the "Sicillian Pastorale" and again in "Apollonia". The musical plot is ultimately resolved when the two themes interchange in the "Godfather Finale".

The Godfather is a 1972 American crime film directed by Francis Ford Coppola and produced by Albert S. Ruddy, based on Mario Puzo's best-selling novel of the same name.
It stars Marlon Brando and Al Pacino as the leaders of a fictional New York crime family. The story, spanning 1945 to 1955, chronicles the family under the patriarch Vito Corleone, focusing on the transformation of Michael Corleone (Pacino) from reluctant family outsider to ruthless mafia boss.

Side A
A1. Main Title (The Godfather Waltz)
A2. I Have But One Heart (Vocals – Rudy Cellini)
A3. The Pickup
A4. Connie’s Wedding
A5. The Halls Of Fear
A6. Sicilian Pastorale

Side B
B1. Love Theme From The Godfather
B2. The Godfather Waltz
B3. Apollonia
B4. The New Godfather
B5. The Baptism
B6. The Godfather Finale

Companies, etc.
Credits
Notes
Release: 1972
Genre: Stage & Screen, Score
Format: LP
Label: Music For Pleasure
Catalog# MFP 50036
Prijs: €6,99

Vinyl: Goed
Cover: Goed

The Kids From Fame - Songs (1982) - Lp

The Kids from "Fame" was the group name of several cast members from the US TV series Fame who had a number of hit singles and albums at the height of the show's success in the US And Europe.
The group came to prominence in the summer of 1982 when the series first aired in the UK and a single "Hi Fidelity" reached No.5. Along with this an album was released: The Kids from "Fame", which reached No.1 for 12 weeks. A series of singles and albums followed over the next 12 months with songs taken from the show's first three seasons.
By the summer of 1983, interest in the show was beginning to wane and the releases abruptly stopped, although the TV series carried on until 1987.

The main vocalists of the group were Debbie Allen, Valerie Landsburg, Erica Gimpel, Carlo Imperato, Gene Anthony Ray, Lee Curreri, and Lori Singer.
The "Kids From Fame" album (the original release featuring "Starmaker" and the chart-topping "Hi-Fidelity") was released in 1982. The songs are not quite as universally powerful as what appeared on the first release, but "Songs" has its own charms—Erica Gimpel's marvellous "Be Your Own Hero", Debbie Allen's beautiful duet of "Just Like You", the groove-shaking "Body Language", and the delicate, pure beauty of Valerie Landsberg's "Beautiful Dreamer". Gene Anthony Ray's two contributions, "Lay Back and Be Cool" and "Mannequin" are quite enjoyable, Ironically, perhaps the worst song is the title track, a collaboration between Jimmy Osmond and Erica Gimpel.


Side A
A1. Be Your Own Hero – 3:23
A2. Just Like You – 3:33
A3. There’s A Train – 3:28
A4. Mannequin – 3:04
A5. Could We Be Magic Like You – 3:12
A6. Lay Back And Be Cool – 3:21

Side B
B1. Songs – 3:13
B2. Body Language – 3:17
B3. Beautiful Dreamer – 3:20
B4. Dancing Endlessly – 3:20
B5. Bet Your Life It’s Me – 3:30

Companies, etc.
Notes
Release: 1982
Genre: Pop, Novelty
Format: LP
Label: RCA Victor Records
Catalog# PL 14525
Prijs: € 6.99

Vinyl: Goed
Cover: Goed

Julien Clerc - À Mon Age Et À L’heure Qu’il Est (1976) - Lp

Julien Clerc, (4 October 1947), born as Paul Alain Leclerc, is a French singer and songwriter.
Born in Paris, Clerc grew up listening to classical music in his father Paul Alain Clerc's home, while his mother Evelyn Merlot introduced him to the music of such singers as Georges Brassens and Edith Piaf.
He began to learn the piano at six, and by 13, started to play by ear everything he heard on the radio.
During his secondary school and university days, he met Maurice Vallet and Etienne Roda-Gil, two of his main songwriters, and began to compose his first songs.
He changed his name to Julien Clerc upon signing a contract with Pathé Marconi, releasing his first album in May 1968.

Though sometimes dismissed in his native land as little more than a "chanteur de charme" -- in other words, "a ladies' singer" -- Julien Clerc in fact enjoyed one of the most successful and longest-lived careers in contemporary French pop, shaping the nouvelle chanson aesthetic across a span of decades that began in the shadow of the student rebellions of 1968 and continued well into the following century. Born Paul-Alain LeClerc in Paris on October 4, 1947, he was the product of a wealthy bourgeois family.
Following his parents' divorce he was sent to live with his father, a high-ranking UNESCO official, and began studying piano at the age of six. During adolescence Clerc's love of music reached a fever pitch, and he regularly transcribed his favorite songs from the radio.

In time he began writing his own original material, often collaborating with friend Maurice Vallet; under his professional name, Momo, Vallet would continue writing with Clerc for years to follow.
However, the singer would not meet his most notable collaborator until 1968, while a student at the Sorbonne. Instead of studying, Clerc spent the majority of his time in area cafés, and while in his favorite haunt, L'Ecritoire, he met Etienne Roda-Gil, the son of Spanish Republicans who had recently returned to Paris after spending almost a decade abroad in opposition to the conflict in Algeria. Clerc asked Roda-Gil to add lyrics to one of his original melodies -- the result was "La Cavalerie," a sardonic protest song that soon earned Clerc a seven-year recording contract with the Pathé-Marconi label.
Upon its May 1968 release, "La Cavalerie" made Clerc an overnight superstar, topping the French pop charts and emerging as one of the anthems of the concurrent student rebellions, thanks in large part to its oft-quoted lyric "I'll abolish boredom." The follow-up, "Ivanovitch," also reached number one and so impressed French superstar Gilbert Bécaud that he invited Clerc to open for his upcoming show at Paris' famed Olympia. The singer's third single, 1969's "Yann et les Dauphins," was his third consecutive chart-topper, and his self-titled debut LP was also a success, winning the prestigious Prix du Disque de l'Académie Charles Cros and earning critical favor for combining Clerc's Beatles-inspired pop ingenuity and neo-symphonic arrangements with Roda-Gil and Momo's often surreal and reliably complex lyrics.

Clerc was then invited to star in the French production of the hit Broadway musical Hair, initially refusing the offer but ultimately accepting. Premiering at Paris' Théatre de la Porte Saint Martin on May 31, 1969, the production was a runaway success, as was Clerc's next single, the chart-topping "La Californie," released in July. He also made headlines for going public about his burgeoning relationship with French pop ingénue France Gall. Clerc remained with Hair until February of 1970, when he resigned to resume his recording career; his sophomore LP, Des Jours Entiers à T'Aimer followed three months later, and that December he headlined the Olympia for the first time.
A vacation to Argentina inspired the tango-like rhythms of his next single, 1971's "Le Couer Volcan," followed in succession by the Roda-Gil-penned "Ce N'Est Rien" and "Niagara."
Clerc abruptly shifted gears with 1973's Julien, recorded in London with arranger Bill Shepherd, replacing his longtime collaborator Jean-Claude Petit. He returned to Paris in time to begin rehearsals for a new run at the Olympia, with the highlights documented on his 1974 live LP, Julien Clerc avec Vous. Still dismissed in some quarters as little more than a teen idol, Clerc yearned for a more mature image, and in 1975 -- despondent over the end of his romance with Gall -- he reteamed with Momo for the bleak, elegiac No. 7, his most critically acclaimed effort to date. Soon after he agreed to a starring role in the film D'Amour et d'Eau Fraîche, and while on the set entered into a relationship with co-star Miou-Miou that would continue for five years. For his next album, 1976's A Mon Âge et à l'Heure Qu'il Est, he enlisted material from songwriters beyond Roda-Gil and Momo, working for the first time with Maxime Le Forestier and Jean-Loup Dabadie.

Side A
A1. Black Out (Faire L’amour Ici)  (3:28)
A2. Le Cœur Trop Grand Pour Moi  (3:53)
A3. Je Suis Mal  (3:33)
A4. À Mon Age Et À L’heure Qu’il Est  (4:03)
A5. Aujourd’hui Rien N’est Normal  (3:57)

Side B
B1. Les Jours De Joie  (4:09)
B2. Amis  (3:05)
B3. À La Fin Je Pleure  (4:14)
B4. Romina  (2:36)
B5. J’aime Ton Corp s (4:20)

Companies, etc.
Credits
Side A
A1. Black Out (Faire L’amour Ici) (3:28)
A2. Le Cœur Trop Grand Pour Moi (3:53)
A3. Je Suis Mal (3:33)
A4. À Mon Age Et À L’heure Qu’il Est (4:03)
A5. Aujourd’hui Rien N’est Normal (3:57)

Side B
B1. Les Jours De Joie (4:09)
B2. Amis (3:05)
B3. À La Fin Je Pleure (4:14)
B4. Romina (2:36)
B5. J’aime Ton Corps (4:20)

Notes
Release: 1976
Genre: Fransatlig, Chanson
Format: LP
Label: EMI Records
Catalog# 5C 062-14363
Prijs: €4,99

Vinyl: lichte gebruikerssporen
Cover: Goed