The Seekers - The Very Best of the Seekers (1997)
FLAC (tracks), Lossless | 1:03:24 | 389 Mb
Genre: Rock Folk
FLAC (tracks), Lossless | 1:03:24 | 389 Mb
Genre: Rock Folk
Although it's difficult for those who weren't there to believe, for a short time during late 1965 and early 1966 the popularity of the singing quartet from Australia was sufficient to rival the Beatles and the Rolling Stones. The Seekers were at the head of the British Invasion's acoustic folk-rock division, right there with Peter & Gordon and Chad & Jeremy, but without the personal Beatles connection of the former, and more successful than either – they scored a string of number one hits in England and Top Ten successes in the U.S. that lasted into 1967, two years later than most of the rest of the British exports to America. They played acoustic instruments (even the upright bass), and they were closer in image and inspiration to the likes of the Rooftop Singers ("Walk Right In"), the New Christy Minstrels ("Green Green," etc.), or Peter, Paul and Mary than to the Beatles or even the Searchers, yet they managed to hang onto young listeners, as well as older teenagers and their parents, with songs like "I'll Never Find Another You," "A World of Our Own," "Come the Day," and "Georgy Girl."