For the first time, I heard songs "Deadend Street," "Autumn Almanac," and "Did You See His Name?" I don't know how I missed these songs in the first place, but by late 1966 and early '67, the Kinks sort of disappeared in the U.S. marketplace. "The Kinks Kronikles" is an excellent compilation of those years, and it shows the genius of Ray Davies but also the sound and vision of the band, as they focus on the little things in life that are significant in one's life. "Lola" a song about gender confusion on the dance floor has enough detail in its story to be a novella.
More important this is an album for the Kink fanatic, and usually, this double-record was passed among other fans, in a secret society of lovers of this type of music. John Mendelsohn's liner notes describe precisely what made the Kinks a fantastic force in one's life. For those who are not familiar with the magic that is The Kinks, this is a magnificent collection that will wet your hunger for more.
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