Lou Reed’s Pre–Velvet Underground Songwriting Compiled on New Album: Listen to a Song

Lou Reed’s Pre–Velvet Underground Songwriting Compiled on New Album: Listen to a Song

Music

Products You May Like

Before co-founding the Velvet Underground, Lou Reed was a staff songwriter for other artists at Pickwick Records. Now, his mid-1960s songs, performed by assorted artists on the label (with occasional Reed contributions), have been compiled on an album. Out September 27, Why Don’t You Smile Now: Lou Reed at Pickwick Records 1964-65 is the product of a partnership between Light in the Attic, Laurie Anderson, and the Lou Reed Archive, following their reissues of the late solo album Hudson River Wind Meditations and the Velvets demos set Words & Music, May 1965. The opening track, the Primitives’ “The Ostrich,” features Reed on vocals—listen to it below.

The Primitives song, co-written by Reed and performed with Pickwick honcho Terry Phillips, sowed the seeds for the Velvet Underground when John Cale joined the outfit on an early tour. Another song on the record, the All Night Workers’ “Why Don’t You Smile,” was Cale’s first credit as a commercial songwriter; soon after its release, he and Reed broke off from Pickwick to form the Velvet Underground.

John Baldwin restored and remastered the new record, which comes with liner notes by Richie Unterberger, an essay by Lenny Kaye, and more. Masaki Koike designed the double-LP package; check out the cover and tracklist below.

Why Don’t You Smile Now: Lou Reed at Pickwick Records 1964-65:

View original source here.

Products You May Like

Articles You May Like

‘Everything’s Hard Now… Except Maybe Not Deadpool’: Nicole Kidman Calls Out The State Of Hollywood Amidst Major Disruptions
Valve Celebrates 20 Years of ‘Half-Life 2’ by Giving It Away for Free Until November 18 [Video]
SZA teases new album ‘Lana’ might arrive later this autumn
BSNL Launches Fibre-Based Intranet TV Service With Over 500 Live Channels in India
India’s Capital Chokes on Toxic Smog 50 Times Above WHO Limit : ScienceAlert