The Pink Fairies - Up the Pinks: Introduction

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Album Details

Title: Up the Pinks: Introduction
Artist: The Pink Fairies
Release Date: 4/22/2003
Label: Universal International
Album Type(s): Greatest Hits
UPCs: 0731458989820, 766489298320, 731458989820
Genre: Rock
Styles: Hard Rock, Psychedelic
Moods: Aggressive, Boisterous, Cerebral, Complex, Confident, Difficult, Dramatic, Druggy, Eccentric, Energetic, Exciting, Fiery, Freewheeling, Gutsy, Indulgent, Intense, Lively, Meandering, Quirky, Raucous, Rousing, Searching, Sentimental, Sophisticated, Sprawling, Theatrical, Trippy, Visceral
Total Copies: 0
Members Wishing: 1
Number of Discs/SwapaCD Credits: 1

Track Listings

  1. Prologue
  2. Right on, Fight On
  3. Portobello Shuffle
  4. Street Urchin
  5. The Snake
  6. City Kids
  7. Say You Love Me
  8. Do It [Album Version]
  9. I Saw Her Standing There
  10. Walk, Don't Run [First Version]
  11. Uncle Harry's Last Freak-Out
  12. Thor

Additional Releases

YearTypeLabelCatalog #
2003CDUniversal International589898
2003CDUniversal International589898

Other Editions

  • No other editions were found for this album.

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Album Review

Up the Pinks is part of Universal's "Introduction" series, so it's not exactly a greatest-hits package. But it does live up to its title, painting a valid picture of early '70s drughead rockers Pink Fairies as a happily uneven mess of pre-punk noise, weird-beard psychedelia, and petrol-fueled blues rock boogie. "It's rock & roll, and the message is...DO IT!" Twink proclaims on the acid rock-tinged hit single of the same name, and it's a pretty good summation of the Pink Fairies' debauched M.O. "Do It"'s equally scabrous B-side, "The Snake," is here, too; its stripped-down distortion chug suggests Motörhead covering Cream. "Thor" is one minute of backward sludge, while "Uncle Harry's Last Freak Out" and a cover of "Walk, Don't Run" travel in blurry circles of over ten minutes each, alternating blistering noise with echoing atmosphere and the idealistic lyrical ramblings typical of the age ("Everyone should be so happy/Everyone should be so merry/You and me can be so very free," etc.). An additional run through "I Saw Her Standing There" is noneventful rave-up fun, while "Portobello Shuffle" deconstructs the blues into parcels of piercing guitar and pounding, drunken percussion. Universal's bonus track-laden reissues of Neverneverland and Kings of Oblivion are probably the best statement on the Pink Fairies. Still, for those unconvinced of the band's prowess as balladeers, Up the Pinks is a solid collection of its harder-rocking legacy. ~ Johnny Loftus, All Music Guide

Credits

No credits were found for this album.