Lou Reed’s songwriting work before Velvet Underground compiled for new album

Lou Reed‘s songwriting work for Pickwick Records in the mid-1960s is being compiled into a single album – find out more below.

Before founding The Velvet Underground, Reed worked as a songwriter for Pickwick Records. Now, the songs that he penned during his stint at the company in the mid-1960s have been compiled for a new album: ‘Why Don’t You Smile Now: Lou Reed at Pickwick Records 1964-65’.

The compilation album is due for release on September 27 via Light in the Attic, in partnership with Laurie Anderson and the Lou Reed Archive. You can now pre-order the album in various packages. 

As suggested by the album’s name, ‘Why Don’t You Smile Now: Lou Reed at Pickwick Records 1964-65′ will comprise of the material that he had worked on between those two years. The album’s opening track is The Primatives’ ‘The Ostrich’ that features Reed on lead vocals.

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You can listen to it below.

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The tracklist for ‘Why Don’t You Smile Now: Lou Reed at Pickwick Records 1964-65’ is:

Side A
1. The Primitives – ‘The Ostrich’
2. The Beachnuts – ‘Cycle Annie’
3. The Hi-Lifes – ‘I’m Gonna Fight’
4. The Hi-Lifes – ‘Soul City’
5. Ronnie Dickerson – ‘Oh No Don’t Do It’
6. Ronnie Dickerson – ‘Love Can Make You Cry’
7. The Hollywoods – ‘Teardrop In The Sand’
8. The Roughnecks – ‘You’re Driving Me Insane’

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Side B
1. The Primitives – ‘Sneaky Pete’
2. Terry Philips – ‘Wild One’
3. Spongy And The Dolls – ‘Really – Really – Really – Really – Really – Really Love’
4. The Foxes – ‘Soul City’
5. The J Brothers – ‘Ya Running, But I’ll Getcha’
6. Beverley Ann – ‘We Got Trouble’
7. The All Night Workers – ‘Why Don’t You Smile’
8. Jeannie Larimore – ‘Johnny Won’t Surf No More’

Side C
1. Robertha Williams – ‘Tell Mamma Not to Cry’
2. Robertha Williams – ‘Maybe Tomorrow’
3. Terry Philips – ‘Flowers For The Lady’
4. Terry Philips – ‘This Rose’

Side D
1. The Surfsiders – ‘Surfin’’
2. The Surfsiders – ‘Little Deuce Coupe’
3. The Beachnuts – ‘Sad, Lonely Orphan Boy’
4. The Beachnuts – ‘I’ve Got a Tiger in My Tank’
5. Ronnie Dickerson – ‘What About Me’

Reed’s last solo album was ‘Hudson River Wind Meditations’, and he later collaborated with Metallica on their 2011 joint full-length, ‘Lulu’. The divisive album garnered such strong reactions from listeners, that Reed once expressed that Metallica fans “have threatened to shoot [him]” because of it.

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Nonetheless, Metallica drummer Lars Ulrich has recently doubled down on the effort, writing in a posthumously released book by Reed: “I can’t quite figure it out, but years later, it’s aged extremely well. It sounds like a motherfucker still. So I can only put the reaction down to ignorance.”

In the past, Ulrich described his band’s experience working with the Velvet Underground legend as positive, maintaining that he “wouldn’t change a thing” about it.