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Bob Stanley & Pete Wiggs Present State Of The Union: American Dream InCrisis 1967-1973 / Various [Import]
- (United Kingdom - Import)
- Format: LP
- Release Date: 02/11/2018
![Bob Stanley & Pete Wiggs Present State Of The Union: American Dream InCrisis 1967-1973 / Various [Import]](http://media.aent-m.com/graphics/items/sdimages/b/300/6/0/7/8/3828706.jpg?ae=3802689150)
Bob Stanley & Pete Wiggs Present State Of The Union: American Dream InCrisis 1967-1973 / Various [Import]
(United Kingdom - Import)
- Label: Ace Records Uk
- Genre: Rock
- Number of Discs: 2
- UPC: 029667008716
Product Notes
Double vinyl LP pressing. UK collection. By mid-1968 there was a growing consensus that something had gone horribly wrong with the American dream. The nation's youth had loudly made their feelings clear, but now the older, pre-Beatles generations began to look at the country - with urban riots, Vietnam, and the assassinations of Martin Luther King and Bobby Kennedy - and wonder what the hell was happening. This album includes rare classics (The Beach Boys' 'Fourth Of July'), lost masterpieces (Roy Orbison's seven-minute 'Southbound Jericho Parkway'), and forgotten gems by some of the biggest names in the business (Elvis Presley's 'Clean Up Your Own Back Yard'). Reactions to America's existential crisis ranged in subject matter from divorce (Frank Sinatra's 'The Train') and the break-up of the nuclear family (The Four Seasons' 'Saturday's Father'), to eulogies for fallen heroes (Dion's 'Abraham Martin and John'), sympathy for Vietnam vets (Johnny Tillotson's 'Welfare Hero'), the church's institutional racism (Eartha Kitt's intense 'Paint Me Black Angels'), and even questioning the ethics of the space programme (Bing Crosby's terrific 'What Do We Do With The World'). Compiled by Bob Stanley and Pete Wiggs, State Of The Union follows on from their highly acclaimed English Weather and Paris In The Spring compilations. With clear parallels between today's fractured country and the USA fifty years ago, this is a fascinating condensation of what Americans were thinking when they turned on the TV, or the radio, or simply walked down Main Street in 1968.