I Can't Hear You No More - The Move, Goffin, Gerald
Is It True - The Move, Carter, John
Respectable - The Move, Isley, O'Kelly Jnr.
Night of Fear [Alternate Version] - The Move, Wood, Roy
Disturbance [Undubbed Alternate Version] - The Move, Wood, Roy
I Can Hear the Grass Grow [Full-Length Version] - The Move, Wood, Roy
Move - The Move, Wood, Roy
Wave the Flag and Stop the Train - The Move, Wood, Roy
(Here We Go Round) The Lemon Tree - The Move, Wood, Roy
Flowers & Lemon Tea (Tony Visconti Talks to the Players...) - The Move,
Flowers in the Rain - The Move, Wood, Roy
Cherry Blossom Clinic - The Move, Wood, Roy
Vote for Me - The Move, Wood, Roy
Fire Brigade [Early Piano Version; Rough Mix] - The Move, Wood, Roy
Useless Information - The Move, Wood, Roy
Yellow Rainbow - The Move, Wood, Roy
Kilroy Was Here - The Move, Wood, Roy
Fire Brigade - The Move, Wood, Roy
The Girl Outside [Alternate Take] - The Move, Wood, Roy
Mist on a Monday Morning - The Move, Wood, Roy
Flowers in the Rain [Acoustic Version; Rough Mix] - The Move, Wood, Roy
Simple Simon [Backing Track Take 6; Rough Mix] - The Move, Wood, Roy
Track Listings (11) - Disc #2
It'll Be Me - The Move, Clement, Jack H
Too Much in Love - The Move, Laine, Denny
Flowers in the Rain - The Move, Wood, Roy
Fire Brigade - The Move, Wood, Roy
Stephanie Knows Who - The Move, Lee, Arthur
Somethin' Else - The Move, Cochran, Eddie
So You Want to Be a Rock'n'roll Star - The Move, Hillman, Chris [1]
The Price of Love - The Move, Everly, Don
Piece of My Heart - The Move, Berns, bert
(Your Love Keeps Lifting Me) Higher and Higher - The Move, Jackson, Gary Lee
Sunshine Help Me - The Move, Wright, Gary
Track Listings (15) - Disc #3
Somethin' Else [EP Version] - The Move, Cochran, Eddie
Sunshine Help Me [EP Version] - The Move, Wright, Gary
Wild Tiger Woman [UK Single Edit] - The Move, Wood, Ray
Omnibus - The Move, Wood, Ray
Blackberry Way - The Move, Wood, Ray
A Certain Something [Piano Version; Rough Mix] - The Move, Morgan, David
Curly - The Move, Wood, Ray
Second Class (She's Too Good for Me), Pt. 1 - The Move, Wood, Ray
Second Class (She's Too Good for Me), Pt. 2 - The Move, Wood, Ray
Beautiful Daughter [Reduced Mix] - The Move, Wood, Ray
This Time Tomorrow - The Move, Morgan, David
Hello Susie [Abridged] - The Move, Wood, Ray
Don't Make My Baby Blue - The Move, Mann, Barry
The Last Thing on My Mind - The Move, Paxton, Tom
Open My Eyes [Live] - The Move, Rundgren, Todd
Track Listings (12) - Disc #4
I Can Hear the Grass Grow [Live] - The Move, Wood, Roy
Brontosaurus - The Move, Wood, Roy
When Alice Comes Back to the Farm - The Move, Wood, Roy
Turkish Tram Conductor Blues [Take 5; Rough Mix] - The Move, Wood, Roy
Feel Too Good - The Move, Wood, Roy
Lightnin' Never Strikes Twice - The Move, Price, Rick
Ella James - The Move, Wood, Roy
Tonight [U.S. Edited Single] - The Move, Wood, Roy
Do Ya [Edited Version][Edit] - The Move, Lynne, Jeff
Chinatown - The Move, Wood, Roy
California Man - The Move, Wood, Roy
The Duke of Edinburgh's Lettuce - The Move, Lynne, Jeff
2008 limited edition four CD box set from the '60s band led by the genius mind of Roy Wood. The first pressing comes with five exclusive Move postcards and a double-sided poster! More than 40 years in the making. 62 career... more »-spanning tracks and well over three hours of Move magnificence in one superbly remastered box set! Contains classic hit singles, B-sides, choice album cuts, a wealth of previously unreleased material including never-before-heard songs, demos, alternate takes and live recordings from 1966-72. The full-colour 72-page booklet with rare and unseen photos and memorabilia includes extensive 10,000-word Move history and band interviews with complete track-by-track info and UK discography. The Move were one of THE great bands of the '60s and this set will make a believer out of you! Salvo.« less
2008 limited edition four CD box set from the '60s band led by the genius mind of Roy Wood. The first pressing comes with five exclusive Move postcards and a double-sided poster! More than 40 years in the making. 62 career-spanning tracks and well over three hours of Move magnificence in one superbly remastered box set! Contains classic hit singles, B-sides, choice album cuts, a wealth of previously unreleased material including never-before-heard songs, demos, alternate takes and live recordings from 1966-72. The full-colour 72-page booklet with rare and unseen photos and memorabilia includes extensive 10,000-word Move history and band interviews with complete track-by-track info and UK discography. The Move were one of THE great bands of the '60s and this set will make a believer out of you! Salvo.
CD Reviews
Love The Move and some tracks are 1st rate but lots of repea
B. Margolis | Minneapolis, MN United States | 11/17/2008
(2 out of 5 stars)
"First, UK Salvo released an excellent 2-CD set of the first Move album, complete with excellent sound, some first-time stereo, and great packaging.
Then, they issued superb "Shazam" and "Lookin' On" reissues, both with excellent sound and lots of new stereo.
Finally they issued this boxset and in the main, it's a major disappointment.
First off, the plastic CD holders are the most complicated and poorest designed ever and if you don't drop or break the CD, you'll be darn lucky. Absolutely awful.
Disc 1 has a handful of excellent never-before-released tracks in mono and they're great. The remainder of disc 1 is stuff previously released on Salvo and those horrible, stupid "enhanced stereo" tracks, which they claimed were done for some unissued 1972 vinyl LP. Absolutely worthless, unless you get off on the first Elvis album in phony stereo.
Disc 2 is the best thing here; the complete live Marquee 1968 session in proper stereo, and with the exception of a few badly distorted vocals ("Fire Brigade"), this stuff has never sounded better.
Disc 3 is nearly a total washout except for the live "Open Your Eyes". More "enhanced stereo" and the remainder are repeated tracks found elsewhere on the Salvo reissues.
Disc 4 opens with a cool 1969 live "I Can Hear The Grass Grow" and the remainder is the same tracks that have reissued over and over again.
So, a difficult CD tray situation and 75% worthless repeats makes this a boxset that you should get only if you can a hellava deal for it.
I love The Move and Salvo's previous releases are first-rate, but this boxset is jam packed with repeats, phony stereo tracks and only about 1/4th of the set is exciting. If you're a fan like I am, you too will be disappointed."
THE MOVE-40th ANNIVERSARY ANTHOLOGY
Stuart Jefferson | San Diego,Ca | 11/18/2008
(5 out of 5 stars)
"Four discs 57,39,58,58 minutes each approximately. The sound is improved from the MOVEMENTS box set from a few years ago. Having been a Move fan since the days of vinyl(I still have the albums of course) I'm glad that this anniversary edition contains so many unissued tracks. Saying that,I still feel the best way to understand The Move is through their first few albums. Someone new to The Move will better enjoy this collection after having heard those albums.
The Move were a curious amalgam of several things-a large dose of pop music mixed with humor,slamming rock and roll,a bit of the "Mod" sound,a bit of psychedelia,and a bit of British dancehall much like the Kinks. Even today,forty-some years later,The Move are still not relegated to the upper echelons of more famous contemporary groups. They were(and continue to be) the quintessential sounding British band. Having few chart hits sealed their fate and made them the much loved cult band they are to this day. This set contains many gems either rarely or never heard,which only solidifies their stature. Singling out any tracks would not help other listeners,as everyone has their own favorites,and will find new ones.
This box set,while fairly expensive,is worth the money,if for nothing else than the unissued tracks which give an even better picture of this band,which is still the best yet most unknown of the "British invasion" groups from so long ago. If you want to get away from the "Stones,Beatles,Who" sound-pick this up,and while you're at it,pick up The Move's first few albums-you won't be sorry.
The enclosed booklet is crammed with information and pictures from the era,and is a nice addition to the story of The Move. The folded poster is ok-nothing that great,but the "postcards" are pretty cool-with information and photographs on individual band members. The packaging of the four discs is not the best-clipped in loose-they could fall out easily. Pick this up before this,too,goes the way of the thirtieth anniversary set MOVEMENTS-difficult to find."
Great music, short run time
Kevin D. Rathert | Carbondale, IL | 07/26/2009
(4 out of 5 stars)
"Being a long time fan of Roy Wood and the Move I was excited when Salvo announced this box set. I have mixed feelings about it, so let me share them with you. First, I was really let down by the short, 200 minute, run time. That doesn't even fill 3 discs let alone 4. Bummer! The box is half unreleased material, exactly 31 of 62 tracks see light of day for the first time. Not an automatic plus, but in this case its the best part of the package. The 72 page booklet rocks. The guys at Salvo put lots of tlc into the sound and booklet. So 5 stars on that account. Like the 4 disc Peter Green anthology on Salvo the box design is the pits. I've written them letting them know that its risky every time you take a disc out, because the way they're packaged in pairs, you take one out, its mate slides everywhich way. If you're lucky. If not, it comes completely out and you risk scratches. I had a friend who had to have 3 copies shipped to him because the discs were damaged in shipping. Drag! The price is down to earth. Now. Started way too high, but now even the list is reasonable, so you can pick a copy up for about $25 plus s & h. Cool! Ray Wood is a musician's musician and thus some of his stuff is a bit quirky to say the least. But the pre-Jeff Lynne Move had a real knack for hit singles, in the UK, absolutely ignored stateside. Bummer. But the songs sound as fresh in 2009 as they did in 1966=1969 before Lynne left the Idle Race and the Move morphed into ELO. Looking On was pretty good, even Message to the Country, their final lp had lots of bright moments, but for most of us, the early psychedelic Move is where its at. Wood never touched drugs, so it goes to show good psych doesn't require the ingestion of controlled substances. At their best, like "I Can Hear The Grass Grow" and "Cherry Blossom Clinic" the Move had a wonderful mixture of pop and rock, and boy can Roy play. Guitar, sitar, you name it. Problem was he was too talented and was easily bored so he kept stretching out and the Move never quite had an album that stuck together, save perhaps their first eponymous album. The songs varied so widely on albums that people here in the States, unaware of the wonderful singles, couldn't put a handle on the Move's place in rock and roll history. In the UK, the hit singles became a yolk around their necks, and their label and music buyers saw them as a singles only band. What a shame. Lots of really interesting stuff on the lps. So without big lp sales, and no exposure of the singles in the US, the Move quietly flew in under the radar and just as quietly became ELO. The first ELO album, with Roy on board, was where he was headed musically, but again no commercial appeal. Wood split, Lynne took over, ELO II with its extended version of Chuck Berry's "Roll Over Beethoven" hit big and ELO became larger than life. Wood, meanwhile, continued/continues to put out quirky stuff with Wizzard cum Wizzo, etc. Bottom line, this box set has wonderful moments, all the great singles, the complete concert which was released as an EP "Something Else" in the UK, and has alternate versions and unreleased material galore. Kudos to Salvo. The sound is exquiste. Ditto to Salvo. But why the short run time? They stretched the 1st lp into a very interesting 2 cd set, why only 50 minutes per disc? No explanation there. Sum it up now. The set is worth its weight due to the excellent sound, unreleased material, and great booklet. Don't overpay, however. The short run time cuts the value. The Green anthology runs 270 minutes. Why only 200 here? But with the price properly adjusted, this is a must have for anyone remotely familiar with the Move. Roy Wood is a wizard and his lead guitar/vocal/songwriting work are impeccable though quirky. Buy it, listen to it, love it. 4 stars for short run time. 5 star quality, 4 star value."
A Move in the Wrong Direction...
Kid Charlemagne | Washington, District of Columbia USA | 02/11/2009
(3 out of 5 stars)
"Frankly, I bought this set for the unreleased tracks as I already had the heretofore mentioned "Movements" box set. While the mastering is great and the booklet is superb, this is really a set for only the most fanatical Move fan. The packaging is simply atrocious. The discs sit in trays secured by clips and it is nearly impossible to remove and replace them without scratching them. Actually, one of the discs in my set became dislodged during shipping and it arrived seriously scratched. I eventually just took them out of the trays and put them in paper sleeves to stem further damage. For those new to the band, I would suggest picking up the recent reissues of the separate LPs rather than this set. As an aside, Note to label: I would really love to see the entire Filmore Concert released at some point!"
Another "Must Have" For Any Move Fan
Christopher L. Dolmetsch | Hurricane, WV USA | 11/17/2008
(5 out of 5 stars)
"Admittedly I am biased. I've been a huge fan of The Move since their earliest days, and probably have more duplication of Move tracks in my collection (vinyl and CD) than I'd care to admit. Hence, word of a new multi-disc anthology filled me with both pleasure and dread. Would this be yet another recycling of now-available material or give me something truly new?
The reality turned out to be a little of both. Yes, there are a number of tracks on this four disc set that have been available to collectors before and many times over. Still, it is the previously unavailable material that makes this relatively expensive box set worth the money. For starters CD 1 picks up where Mike Sheridan's Lot left off -- literally within weeks if not days -- with a track from the earliest known Move recording session in January 1966. Too bad the entire surviving acetate could not have been included here, as it should have been, but I'm sure there is a story behind that decision somewhere. Three radio recordings of the embroyanic Move follow before the remainder of the first disc is given over to a variety of excellent versions and mixes of previously released Move tracks.
It is disc 2 that makes this set what it is: nothing short of amazing. The careful reconstruction of the Move's 1968 Marquee show, portions of which appeared on the legendary live EP "Something Else from the Move," are the highpoint of this box. Not only are all but a couple of songs from the first February show lovingly resurrected with original vocals restored, but also the adding on of tunes from a subsequent May show intended to aid in the release of the promised but technically plagued EP make this the closest thing to a typical live Move show from this classic period one is ever likely to hear.
Again praise for the third and fourth discs may be a little more muted since more of the tracks there have been available before with only slight variations noticed. The taste of the now-legendary Move performance at the Fillmore West in 1969 via two tracks, makes this reviewer hunger for the entire show, which apparently the late singer Carl Wayne's estate now holds. There is no doubt that while Roy Wood was and still is a genius in the recording studio, it was often the live Move that demonstrated the musical virtuosity that was the group.
Thirty-One previously unreleased cuts and the splendid reconstruction of the 1968 Move at the Marquee all combine to make this a very desirable boxset for serious collectors."