Baker's Dozen

Artists discuss the 13 records that shaped their lives

12. The KinksFace To Face

For me it could be every Kinks A-side from 1964 to 1969. Just an amazing run of the most fantastic pop songs. Village Green Preservation Society is obviously a great record, but Face To Face has some fabulous songs on it. It’s almost a concept record. I don’t think there’s any lyrical theme to it, but it’s very complete, which a lot of their records weren’t before. What a writer, I can’t say how much influence [Ray Davies] has had on me. The artistry of condensing all those ideas into a little three-minute song is just fantastic. I’m always still knocked out by that. When I was a kid and I first went to America, in the record shops you could buy all these old Kinks records, stuff I’d never seen or even heard of. So I came back with shitloads of Kinks records and that had a definite influence on [third Jam album] All Mod Cons. Those little story songs, vignettes of English life and English characters. That was a massive influence on me.

Selected in other Baker’s Dozens: Julian Cope
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