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Storyteller: X-Ray
 
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Storyteller: X-Ray

Ray DaviesMP3 Download
4.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (24 customer reviews)


  • Original Release Date: October 10, 2006
  • Format - Music: MP3
  • Compatible with MP3 Players (including with iPod®), iTunes, Windows Media Player
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  Song Title Time Price  
  1. Storyteller 2:57 Not Available
  2. Introduction (Live) 1:10 Not Available
  3. Victoria (Live) 2:14 Not Available
  4. My Name (Dialogue) 1:03 Not Available
  5. 20th Century Man (Live) 3:48 Not Available
  6. London Song (Live) 3:38 Not Available
  7. My Big Sister (Dialogue) 2:04 Not Available
  8. That Old Black Magic (Live) 2:17 Not Available
  9. Tired Of Waiting (Live) 1:27 Not Available
10. Set Me Free(Instrumental) (Live) (Instrumental) 0:45 Not Available
11. Dad And The Green Amp (Dialogue) 3:47 Not Available
12. Set Me Free (Live) 1:02 Not Available
13. The Front Room (Dialogue) 2:08 Not Available
14. See My Friends (Live) 2:38 Not Available
15. Autumn Almanac (Live) 1:44 Not Available
16. Hunchback (Dialogue) 1:51 Not Available
17. X-Ray 4:08 Not Available
18. Art School (Dialogue) 2:25 Not Available
19. Art School Babe (Live) 3:23 Not Available
20. Back In The Front Room (Live) 3:01 Not Available
21. Writing The Song (Dialogue) 1:08 Not Available
22. When Big Bill Speaks/The Man Who Knew A Man (Mick Avory's Audition-Dialogue) 3:09 Not Available
23. It's Alright (Managers-Dialogue) 1:33 Not Available
24. It's Alright (Havana Version The Kinks Name-Dialogue) 2:44 Not Available
25. It's Alright (Up Tempo On The Road-Dialogue) 1:01 Not Available
26. Julie Finkle (Dialogue) 0:45 Not Available
27. The Ballad Of Julie Finkle (Live) 3:49 Not Available
28. The Third Single (Dialogue) 5:02 Not Available
29. You Really Got Me (Live) 2:54 Not Available
30. London Song (Studio Version) 4:12 Not Available
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Customer Reviews

24 Reviews
5 star:
 (19)
4 star:
 (3)
3 star:    (0)
2 star:
 (2)
1 star:    (0)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
4.6 out of 5 stars (24 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

20 of 20 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Kinks Frontman Ray Davies' Musical Autobiography, February 18, 2006
This review is from: Storyteller (Audio CD)
In 1995, Kinks frontman Ray Davies published his "unauthorized autobiography" X-RAY. A few years later he released what amounted to a musical adaptation of that tale with THE STORYTELLER on Capitol Records. Sadly that album has been out of print for several years. Now Koch Records has re-released this wonderful album in its entirety.

Davies was always the most British of his Sixties contemporaries. Classic albums like SOMETHING ELSE, THE VILLAGE GREEN PRESERVATION SOCIETY, and ARTHUR revealed Davies as a songwriter who was concerned with the changes he saw in the British Empire and was nostalgic for a past which no longer existed except in his memory. Many of these songs ("Victoria," "20th Century Man," "Autumn Almanac")are revisited here in live versions in small venues with sparse instrumentation (including original Kinks drummer Mick Avory on a handful of tracks).

The songs and the accompanying dialogue (the latter comprises a bit over thirty minutes total) tell the story of The Kinks from its origins to the release of its first successful single--the classic "You Really Got Me." Many of Davies' stories provide new insight to songs like "See My Friends" (written after the death of his older sister when he was 13) and "You Really Got Me" (which the record company did NOT want to record so the band had to raise their own money to record it, and was supposed to include a session drummer--but Mick was sneaked into the studio and allowed to play tambourine).

There are a handful of new songs. "Storyteller" would not have been at all out of place on MUSWELL HILLBILLIES. "X-Ray" is about a sports injury when Davies was young and was told by a doctor that if he didn't quit sports he would end up like the hunchback that frequented the neighborhood. "Art School Babe" is about an unrequited love. "Julie Finkle" is an ode to groupies. "London Song" is the only track to appear on the album twice--the first is a lovely acoustic version, the second is an electric studio version with a full band. [The only other studio recording is "X-Ray."]

Overall, this is a low-key, utterly charming collection of songs. In the introduction to one of the songs, Davies says that despite going to a church school, the closest he felt to religion was not when he was singing in the school choir or going to Sunday School, but "it was more when I rehearsed with (my brother) Dave in the front room." Over the course of 74 minutes, Davies shows us how much these songs mean to him. And in doing so, they give new meaning to his fans. I missed out on this album when it was first released, I'm glad Koch Records gave me a second chance. VERY HIGHLY RECOMMENDED
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14 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The Storyteller, February 27, 2006
By 
This review is from: Storyteller (Audio CD)
It's great for all Kinks fans that The Storyteller has been made available again. As if experiencing the eclectic observations of Ray Davies by way of the Kinks Kanon isn't enough of a gratification, here he turns both inward and outward to present an affecting, if all too brief, live account of his formative years as a musical artist. Assuming the actual show was lengthier and more comprehensive, this CD is still a wonderful teaser for the pseudo-autobiography X-Ray. Is it all true? Who cares!

Ray's telling of his sister's passing at the age of thirty is especially moving as it gives meaning to the otherwise arcane tune "See My Friends", always one of my favorites. Equally moving is the story of the hunchback and it's musical incarnation in the song "X-Ray", as well as the romantic yearnings of "The Ballad of Julie Finkle".

Humor abounds in the story of the little green amp, the self-deflating account of the "... tease" at art school, the audition for a drummer, and the "perfect" first managers; not to mention the fly-fart hint of Dave yelling "... off!" during the initial recording of "You Really Got Me", which had me cracking up!

The album is also notable for a harrowing acoustic rendition of "20th Century Man"; another favorite which is a case of a song being equally great, but different, in all versions I've heard--this one, the original on Muswell Hillbillies, and the bonus track on One For the Road. I can say unequivocally that this is the version to which I return again and again.

"London Song", apparently an original on this album as it's performed acoustically live and concludes the album in a stirring studio version, is another in a long list of Ray's paeans to his hometown. The song itself is quite fine--again, equally great but different in the two performances here. Though I must admit I had to do a Google search on a few of the names Ray drops, e.g. the Kray twins. It didn't seem the joke was lost on the obviously British audience. Mention also must be made of Ray's beautifully dulcet tones in the classic pop standard "That Old Black Magic". Could he sing this well in his twenties?

This album, listened to uninterrupted, has become one of those experiences that I savor. At 74 minutes it's much too short. If it doesn't give ample evidence that Ray Davies is one of the world's great entertainers, then I'm thoroughly out of touch with the tastes of the world. I only wish I could have seen the show live...or perhaps it's best that it remain "wished" for.
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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Liking sitting in your living room, April 15, 2006
By 
Katherine McCarthy "kath e. miller" (Forest Hills, NY United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Storyteller (Audio CD)
I am lucky enough to have seen Ray Davies perform solo at the Westbeth Theater in NYC a few years ago. Like always, he's a captivating storyteller. All that's missing from this CD is "David Watts" and a few more Klassic Kinks bits he performed live. Ray Davies, and the Kinks, will always be consummate storytellers. Nothing comapares to hearing him sing his songs, with wistful and witty asides. Unless it's with his brother and band by his side. Buy this CD. Laze away a sunny afternoon, or morning, or evening. See Ray live. See the Kinks, if they come around again. He truly is this generation's poet laureate of England (according to Pete Townshend, who ought to know, as I would've nominated him next.)
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