Showing posts with label Marmalade. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Marmalade. Show all posts

Friday, July 8, 2022

Marmalade - BBC Sessions, Volume 4: 1971-1973

Here's a bit of BBC history. Form 1960s until decades later, the best BBC recordings of each week were compiled onto a show for countries outside of Britain (mostly current or former British colonies) called "Top of the Pops." (Note this is not to be confused with a BBC TV show of the same name!) The transcription discs of this show were sent all over world, so great quality versions of all the shows exist when many other radio shows were lost or were only poorly recorded over the radio.

I don't know why, but for some reason, the 1960s "Top of the Pops" recordings have gotten around a fair amount and have often been bootlegged or put on official records, but the early 1970s ones are much, much rarer. However, a musical friend Marley has most of them, and has been sharing them with me. This is allowing me to fill in gaps. For instance, I was able to post all the Bee Gees BBC recordings from 1967 to 1973, when the early 1970s ones are extremely rare. (Unfortunately, after about 1973, "Top of the Pops" mostly played singles instead of having in studio performances, though there were some exceptions.)

Now, Marmalade is getting the same treatment. Previously, I'd only been able to find one albums' worth of their 1970s BBC material. But thanks to Marley, that has turned to three albums, plus the unchanged one from the 1960s. I radically overhauled Volume 2, so if you downloaded that, you should get it again. Volume 3 is a live concert broadcast by the BBC that I hadn't posted before. And everything here is new, all thanks to what Marley was able to find.

Marmalade kept evolving with the times and kept having (British) hits, from 1967 to 1972. Their last big hit is "Radancer," included here, which reached number six on the British charts. The band increasingly switched from pop to an almost hard rocking sound at times to stay relevant. 

In late 1971, one of the band's lead singers and songwriters, Junior Campbell, left for a briefly successful solo career. Three of the songs here are from his solo career, including the hit "Hallelujah Freedom." Also, note that the song "Dinosaur," which was done for the BBC in late 1973, does not seem to have been released by Marmalade in any form. They released an album in 1971 and another one in 1974, and had some significant personnel changes between the two. I'm guessing the song got lost in the shuffle.

Four of the songs have "[Edit]" in their titles, due to the usual problem of BBC DJs talking over the music. As usual, I used the X-Minus audio editing program to fix that. Thankfully, this practice died out, so the latter songs here are free of that.

Marmalade's popularity faded as the 1970s went on. But they had a hit song in 1976, "Falling Apart at the Seams," and then never made the charts again. However, as far as I can tell, the last BBC session they did with unique performances was in late 1973, so that's when this series ends.

This album is 43 minutes long.

01 Lonely Man [Edit] (Marmalade)
02 Sarah [Edit] (Marmalade)
03 Radancer [Edit] (Marmalade)
04 Empty Bottles (Marmalade)
05 Just One Woman (Marmalade)
06 Hallelujah Freedom [Edit] (Junior Campbell)
07 If I Call Your Name (Junior Campbell)
08 Ode to Karen (Junior Campbell)
09 Engine Driver (Marmalade)
10 Our House Is Rockin' (Marmalade)
11 [Your Wish Is In] The Wishing Well (Marmalade)
12 Dinosaur (Marmalade)

https://www.upload.ee/files/15264358/Marmld_1971-1973_BBSessionsVolume4_atse.zip.html

The cover photo is of the band in concert in 1972, but I don't know the details beyond that.

Marmalade - BBC Sessions, Volume 3: Sunday Show, Paris Theatre, London, Britain, 12-14-1971

I thought I was all done with posting material by the British band (the) Marmalade. However, I recently found a lot more of their BBC performances, thanks to musical associate Marley. I had one album for all their BBC material from 1970 and after. Now, that is increased to three albums! 

Marmalade played a short (officially unreleased) concert for BBC radio near the end of 1971. Previously, I had used a few songs from this for that sole late BBC album. Now, I'm presenting the concert in full, including banter between songs by DJ John Peel. The concert was only half an hour long. But one of the songs, "Lady of Catrine," isn't included here because it got cut off halfway through. What remains is just 25 minutes long.

As far as I know, there are no Marmalade concert bootlegs other than this show, plus a half hour long performance they did in 1970 for a British TV show called "Doing Their Thing." I had included a couple of rare cover songs from that show on Volume 2 in this series, and I decided to keep them there. But they did three more songs for "Doing Their Thing" that they didn't do for the John Peel BBC show, so I've added those to the end. With those three songs add, this album is a total of 36 minutes long.

In the late 1960s, Marmalade was known as a pop band that had hit singles written by others. By the time of this concert, they'd transformed into more of a rocking band that still had hit singles, but mostly wrote them themselves. I included two covers from the "Doing Their Thing" show on Volume 2, but this still has one notable cover, "Who Needs Ya," originally by Steppenwolf.

01 talk (Marmalade)
02 Mama Goose Love (Marmalade)
03 talk (Marmalade)
04 Empty Bottles (Marmalade)
05 talk (Marmalade)
06 Sarah (Marmalade)
07 talk (Marmalade)
08 Back on the Road (Marmalade)
09 talk (Marmalade)
10 Jody (Marmalade)
11 talk (Marmalade)
12 Who Needs Ya (Marmalade)
13 Rainbow (Marmalade)
14 talk (Marmalade)
15 Reflections of My Life (Marmalade)
16 talk (Marmalade)
17 Life Is (Marmalade)

https://www.upload.ee/files/15264297/Marmld_1971_BBSessionsVolume3SundayShwPrisTheatre__12-14-1971_atse.zip.html

The cover photo is a screenshot taken from the "Doing Their Thing" show, since I found a video of that on YouTube. It's rather low-res, but at least it shows all the band members.

Monday, May 9, 2022

Marmalade - BBC Sessions, Volume 2: 1970-1971

In May 2022, I first posted this album. But in July 2022, I radically transformed it. Thanks to musical friend Marley, I was given a bunch of Marmalade's BBC performances from the early 1970s. Only a few of the songs are still the same.

For the first of their BBC albums I posted, every single song was officially released, from an album simply called "BBC Sessions." But for this album, absolutely none of the songs are officially released.

The first song comes from a BBC TV show hosted by singer Julie Felix. I've included "Ob-La-Di Ob-La-Da" from that show even though I included a version of that on Volume 1, because this version is done as a duet with Felix. So I figured that was different enough to merit inclusion.

The fourth and fifth songs aren't from the BBC at all. There was a music show called "Doing Their Thing" on a rival British TV station at the time. These two cover songs are from that. You can find the whole half hour performance on YouTube. This is just about the only footage I know of featuring the band playing live.

All the other songs are from BBC studio sessions. These survived in excellent sound quality due to transcription discs made of the radio show "Top of the Pops."

During this time period, the band excelled with their harmony vocals, similar in style to Crosby, Stills and Nash. In fact, this album includes a cover of CSN's classic "Suite: Judy Blue Eyes." This resulted in other folky covers, like "Both Sides Now" by Joni Mitchell and "Fire and Rain" by James Taylor. But they also increasingly employed a more rocking sound, which can be heard on some original songs near the end of this volume, like "I've Been Around Too Long" and "back on the Road."

This album is 41 minutes long.

01 Ob-La-Di, Ob-La-Da (Marmalade & Julie Felix)
02 Dear John [Edit] (Marmalade)
03 Rainbow [Edit] (Marmalade)
04 Suite- Judy Blue Eyes (Marmalade)
05 Scarborough Fair - The Sounds of Silence (Marmalade)
06 Both Sides Now [Edit] (Marmalade)
07 My Little One [Edit] (Marmalade)
08 Fire and Rain [Edit] (Marmalade)
09 I've Been Around Too Long [Edit] (Marmalade)
10 Back on the Road [Edit] (Marmalade)
11 Cousin Norman [Edit] (Marmalade)
12 Lady of Catrine [Edit] (Marmalade)

https://www.upload.ee/files/15264304/Marmld_1970-1971_BBSessionsVolume2_atse.zip.html

The cover photo is a promotional photo related to an appearance the band did on the British TV show "Top of the Pops" in 1971.

Marmalade - BBC Sessions, Volume 1: 1967-1969

Now that I've posted all the Marmalade stray tracks albums I want to post, I'm ready to post a couple of albums of their BBC sessions. 

Note that there are a few songs the band only performed at the BBC and never on record, so I included those with the stray tracks album, not with these BBC albums. More specifically, the first stray tracks album I made, "I see the Rain," contain BBC performances of "(I Know) I'm Losing You" and "Sixty Minutes of Your Love." The second album, "Lovin' Things," contains three BBC performances: "Hush," "Seven Days Too Long," and "Mr. Businessman." But that's it. Other than those five songs, all the remaining BBC performances are here.

This band was definitely on the poppy side of British 1960s bands, and you can see that in spades here, because they did many covers of hit songs for the BBC. But this also shows a soulful side, because many of those covers are of soul songs, especially the Motown styled kind, such as "Stop in the Name of Love" and "This Old Heart of Mine." Overall, this album has significantly more cover songs than it does songs the band had their own hits with.

All the songs here are sourced from an official album called "BBC Sessions." I looked for other TV or radio performances to supplement that, but I didn't find any songs that were different than the ones they did for the BBC.

By now, I should probably have a boilerplate paragraph to describe what I have to say next. Yes, there are a bunch of songs where BBC DJs talked over the music. In fact, that happened for 12 out of the 20 songs here (the ones with "[Edit]" in their titles). And yes, I used the audio editing program X-Minus to wipe the talking while keeping the underlying music intact.

This album is 59 minutes long. 

UPDATE: On May 15, 2025, I updated the mp3 download file. I added one song I'd previously missed, "Suite: Judy Blue Eyes."

01 Can't Stop Now [Edit] (Marmalade)
02 I See the Rain (Marmalade)
03 Daddy Rolling Stone [Edit] (Marmalade)
04 Lovin' Things (Marmalade)
05 Stop in the Name of Love (Marmalade)
06 I Can't Explain [Edit] (Marmalade)
07 Wait for Me Marianne [Edit] (Marmalade)
08 Mess Around [Edit] (Marmalade)
09 Ob-La-Di, Ob-La-Da [Edit] (Marmalade)
10 My Back Pages [Edit] (Marmalade)
11 This Old Heart of Mine (Marmalade)
12 Baby Make It Soon (Marmalade)
13 The Boogaloo Party [Edit] (Marmalade)
14 Gimme Gimme Good Lovin' (Marmalade)
15 Suite: Judy Blue Eyes [Edit] (Marmalade)
16 Rollin' My Thing [Edit] (Marmalade)
17 Carolina in My Mind [Edit] (Marmalade)
18 To Love Somebody (Marmalade)
19 Melting Pot [Edit] (Marmalade)
20 Reflections of My Life (Marmalade)

https://pixeldrain.com/u/EfVzunZN

alternate:

https://bestfile.io/en/bTOan54Xj0QK8Pt/file

Supposedly, the cover photo comes from 1969. But I'm pretty sure it's from 1967 or 1968, since that was the short window in which it seemed cool for bands to dress like this instead of ridiculous. ;) Since the colors of their outfits were loud and outrageous, I chose similarly bold colors for the text.

Wednesday, May 4, 2022

Marmalade - Talking in Your Sleep - Non-Album Tracks (1972-1977)

Over the past few months, I've been posting albums of what I consider all the good songs you should hear from the British band Marmalade. At the time, they were considered a pop band only known for their singles, and that's pretty much still true today. However, in my opinion, they had enough good songs for five albums of their studio material, plus two more albums of BBC sessions. This is the last of the compiled albums of studio material.

Although this deals with the years 1972 to 1977, all but the last three songs are from 1972. That was their last year of significant commercial success. Things started to go south for them in late 1971, when Junior Campbell left the band. He and Dean Ford were the band's two lead vocalists, and they cowrote most of their original material. Campbell had some minor hits in 1972 with a solo career before commercially fading away. I've included one of his solo songs, "Hallelujah Freedom," here. "Radancer," The first song here, was also a Top Ten hit in Britain. But after that, they had a string of singles that rarely made the charts at all.

Times were changing in the early 1970s, and their Hollies style of music was falling out of favor. Their record company dropped them in 1972, and band members started to change with increasing frequency. By the end of 1973, Dean Ford was the only remaining original member, and he left in 1975. At that point, the band broke up. However, it turned out it wasn't quite done. Graham Knight and Alan Whitehead had been the bassist and drummer for the band since the beginning, respectively, but both had left by 1973. With the band done, they took the band's name and restarted the band with new members. 

It seemed they were about as uncool and washed up as could be, but they surprised everyone by having one final Top Ten hit in Britain in 1976 with "Falling Apart at the Seams." Then, in 1977, they were the first to release the song "Talking in Your Sleep." It bombed for them. But six months later, Crystal Gayle did a version of it, and had a big hit with it in the US and Britain, including hitting number one on the US country chart. These last two songs don't fit well with the rest of the band's music either in terms of personnel or in terms of musical style, since they're both more slick and generic than their other stuff. But I've included both of them since they're a part of the band's musical history.

After that, the band kept going, and is still going as I write this in May 2022, but strictly as an oldies act, with even more personnel changes. So my interest in the band ends with the end of this album.

This album is 52 minutes long.

01 Radancer (Marmalade)
02 Just One Woman (Marmalade)
03 Jody (Marmalade)
04 Mr. Heartbreaker (Marmalade)
05 Hallelujah Freedom (Junior Campbell)
06 Stay with Me (Marmalade)
07 Middle of a Night (Marmalade)
08 Out of a Dark Night (Marmalade)
09 Sunset Regret (Marmalade)
10 [Your Wish Is In] The Wishing Well (Marmalade)
11 Falling Apart at the Seams (Marmalade)
12 Talking in Your Sleep (Marmalade)

https://www.upload.ee/files/15264360/Marmld_1972-1977_TalknginYourSleep_atse.zip.html

It's very hard to find good color photos of Marmalade at all, much less from the latter part of their career. I found one that I've used here that's supposed from "circa 1973," but I don't know anything more than that, including which band members are in it.

Friday, February 18, 2022

Marmalade - If I Call Your Name - Non-Album Tracks (1971)

I'm continuing to post a series of stray tracks albums from the band Marmalade. I'm trying to post all the BBC stuff I can, and once I finish posting the stray tracks albums, I'll post their BBC albums. This is the four of five albums in this series.

As I mentioned previously, Marmalade gets a bad reputation for being a light weight pop group known mainly for their cover of "Ob-La-Di, Ob-La-Da" by the Beatles. All the songs here are from 1971, and by that time, the band had changed significantly. The band still had a foot in the pop world, with three top 40 hits in Britain here, "My Little One," "Cousin Norman," and "Back on the Road." But they also started to get heavier and more progressive. For instance, "Can You Help Me" is eight and a half minutes long. 

In my opinion, by this time, the band had hit their stride. All the songs here are originals, and the band had established a style where they could rock but they also could do more acoustic stuff with great harmony vocals. Unfortunately, it wouldn't last. The band had two key members who sang, Dean Ford and Junior Campbell. Near the end of this year, Campbell decided to leave a try for a solo career. He's on most or all of the Marmalade songs here, but I've also included two of his solo songs.

Note that I haven't included all the songs the band did, only the ones I like. Six of the songs come from their 1971 album "Songs." The rest come from singles, except for "Can You Help Me," which was unreleased at the time and came out much later on an archival album.

This album is 47 minutes long.

01 My Little One (Marmalade)
02 Cousin Norman (Marmalade)
03 Can You Help Me (Marmalade)
04 Goodbye Baby Jane (Junior Campbell)
05 If I Call Your Name (Junior Campbell)
06 Back on the Road (Marmalade)
07 Love Is Hard to Rearrange (Marmalade)
08 Sarah (Marmalade)
09 Mama (Marmalade)
10 Empty Bottles (Marmalade)
11 I've Been Around Too Long (Marmalade)
12 She Wrote Me a Letter (Marmalade)
13 Ride Boy Ride (Marmalade)

https://www.upload.ee/files/15264350/Marmld_1971_IfICllYourNme_atse.zip.html

The cover photo is said to be from 1970. But I liked it better than any of the few ones I could find from 1971. For most of the year, the band personnel was the same.

Tuesday, January 4, 2022

Marmalade - Reflections of My Life - Non-Album Tracks (1969-1970)

I'm slowly making my way through the rest of the best of Marmalade's musical output. 

Around the start of this album, the band's fortunes took a turn for the better because they changed record companies. The previous company was short sighted, pushing the band to record singles written by professional songwriters. Under the terms of their new contract, they were freer to write and record their own material. The first two songs are the last from their time with the previous record company, and it still fits that mode. But then they hit it out of the park with their first single for their new record company: "Reflections of My Life." This original song hit number three in Britain and number 10 in the US. More importantly, it has gone on to become a classic, being played millions of times on the radio. 

Encouraged by this success with their own material, they began writing nearly all their own songs. I believe all the others from this album are theirs. They put out an album in late 1970 to capitalize on their "Reflections of My Life" success, called "Reflections of the Marmalade." I've included only six of the ten songs from that album. I thought some of the other songs from that time period were stronger. The rest of the songs here come from the A- and B-sides of singles, as well as two songs that weren't released at the time and only came out on archival releases much later, "Some Fine Day" and "Evenings Shadows."

In my opinion, Marmalade isn't appreciated as much as they should be. I think one big reason for that is because their musical identity kept shifting. At first they were psychedelic, then poppy, then they switched to more of a Crosby, Stills and Nash sound, meaning more acoustic based with lust harmonies. But then they switched again to more of a hard rock sound. But looking back on it decades later, these things don't matter as much, since it's all quality stuff.

This album is 45 minutes long.

01 Baby Make It Soon (Marmalade)
02 Time Is on My Side (Marmalade)
03 Reflections of My Life (Marmalade)
04 Rollin' My Thing (Marmalade)
05 Some Fine Day (Marmalade)
06 Butterfly (Marmalade)
07 Kaleidoscope (Marmalade)
08 Fight Say the Mighty (Marmalade)
09 Super Clean Jean (Marmalade)
10 Life Is (Marmalade)
11 Evenings Shadows (Marmalade)
12 Rainbow (Marmalade)
13 Ballad of Cherry Flavar (Marmalade)

https://www.upload.ee/files/16696641/MARMLDE1969-1970_RflctionsoMyLife_atse.zip.html

I've had a hard time finding good photos of the band from these years. I found a cover of the "Reflections of My Life" single, but I didn't like the photo there. So I took the text for the band name and song title, and used those up top, as well as the record company logo. Then I brought in a different photo that appears to be from roughly that time, based on the band members in it and the clothes. All of that was in black and white though, so I jazzed things up with various shades of blue.

Sunday, December 19, 2021

Marmalade - Lovin' Things - Non-Album Tracks (1968)

In my opinion, the band Marmalade has been underrated. So I'm posting a few albums of what I consider their best stuff, from both studio tracks and unique BBC tracks. Here's the next one.

In 1968, Marmalade had a huge hit with a cover of the Beatles song "Ob-La-Di, Ob-La-Da" off the "White Album." It didn't chart at all in the US, but it went to number one in Britain. This was more a matter of luck than skill, since that song was a natural big hit and the Beatles didn't release it as a single, so it was just a matter of which other band acted quickly to have the hit instead. (They got an unreleased acetate of the song and immediately rushed to the studio literally in the middle of the night to record and release it.)

Unfortunately, the hit helped stereotype them as a pop band that did singles of cover songs. In fact, they were quite talented with their own material. But their record company was only interested in hit singles, and reinforced the stereotype by pushing them to cover other songs by reliable hit songwriters. 

"Ob-La-Di, Ob-La-Da" was such a big hit that the band was finally allowed to record and release their first album in late 1968. However, that album, "There's a Lot of It About," was a hastily thrown in cash grab. It mostly consisted of A- and B-sides dating back to 1966, plus some covers of big hits that they band knew well from their concerts. Most the cover songs were already overdone by others, or done better by others, such as "A Piece of My Heart," which of course was definitely done by Janis Joplin already. Other covers woefully out of date, for instance, "Mr. Tambourine Man," a Byrds hit back in 1965. So while I included some covers that also were overdone or out of date, like "Hey Joe" and "Summer in the City," I skipped those two.

A better 1968 album could have been made, and this is my attempt at that. Of course I included their three hit singles ("Ob-La-Di, Ob-La-Da," "Lovin' Things," and "Wait for Me Mary-Anne") and their B-sides. Another five songs are the better ones from "There's a Lot of It About." Finally, I included three songs only done for BBC sessions. I think "Mr. Businessman" is an original they only did for the BBC.

This album is 40 minutes long.

01 Lovin' Things (Marmalade)
02 I Shall Be Released (Marmalade)
03 Mess Around (Marmalade)
04 Chains (Marmalade)
05 Hey Joe (Marmalade)
06 Station on Third Avenue (Marmalade)
07 Summer in the City (Marmalade)
08 Mr. Lion (Marmalade)
09 Wait for Me Mary-Anne (Marmalade)
10 Hush [Edit] (Marmalade)
11 Seven Days Too Long (Marmalade)
12 Ob-La-Di, Ob-La-Da (Marmalade)
13 Mr. Businessman [Edit] (Marmalade)

https://www.upload.ee/files/15264303/Marmld_1968_LovinThngs_atse.zip.html

The photo for the cover was taken some time in 1968. I also found an album or single cover called "Livin' Things," and used the top and bottom text from that, as well as the background pattern.

Tuesday, November 23, 2021

Marmalade - I See the Rain - Non-Album Tracks (1965-1967)

I must be a weird dude, because I'm often more interested in music from the 1960s than that of today. And I'm not just talking about the likes of the Beatles and the Rolling Stones. In my opinion, the quality of music in the late 1960s in particular was so high that often even the "bad" music was pretty darn good.

Marmalade is a case in point. They had a lot of hits in the late '60's and early '70s, but they were largely dismissed as a lightweight pop band, similar to the Herman's Hermits or the Hollies. In the decades since, it seems they've been dismissed even more, with their songs rarely played on the radio. 

I think they're getting a bad rap. I find the situation somewhat similar to the Yardbirds. The Yardbirds were a talented band with musical chops and songwriting talent. But for their last couple of years, they were unfortunately paired with producer Mickie Most, who completely misunderstood the band and saddled them with songs like "Ha Ha Said the Clown" and "Goodnight Sweet Josephine" in an attempt to get more hits that didn't fit with who they were musically at all. 

In the same way, the Marmalade's record company seemingly was only interested in hits, and wouldn't even let them put out an album for their first two years (1966 and 1967). But one of the songs foisted on them, a cover of "Ob-La-Di, Ob-La-Da" by the Beatles, was a huge hit, going to number one in Britain almost entirely due to the fact that the song was a can't-miss hit, but the Beatles didn't release it as a single. This stereotyped them as a poppy singles band who mainly relied on covers. 

But in fact, they actually were very talented in writing their own music. My favorite song of theirs is the title song for this stray tracks album, "I See the Rain." At the end of 1967, a year filled with many all-time classics, Jimi Hendrix called that song "the best cut of 1967." But it must have been badly promoted, because while it was a number one hit in the Netherlands, it didn't make the charts at all in the US or Britain. It has slowly gained status over the years, appearing in movies and commercials, but it still isn't as well known as it should be, in my opinion.

This album gathers up pretty much all the band's A- and B-sides from 1966 and 1967.  There aren't that many of those, but I've also added three songs at the start from 1965 and 1966, when the band was known as "Dean Ford and the Gaylords." That was the exact same line-up. It's just that in mid-1966 the band's management decided their name wasn't the best and demanded a change.

I've also added a couple of cover songs the band performed for the BBC, "(I Know) I'm Losing You" and "Sixty Minutes of Your Love." Unfortunately, no good concert recordings of the band are publicly available, as bootleg or official release. But we do have a fair number of BBC recordings. I've taken the songs the band never otherwise recorded and included them on stray tracks compilations like this one. Then I've taken the rest and will post those as a separate BBC sessions album.

Admittedly, the Marmalade were never a top-tier band. But I'd argue that if you compare this album with other second-tier British bands from that time period, it holds up very well. And the vast majority of the songs here were still originals. One could imagine an alternate universe where the band signed with a different record company that appreciated their original music and properly promoted it, instead of trying to turn them into a poppy hits band. They probably would have a much higher reputation today, and written and recorded a lot more quality music.

By the way, I gather this is one of those bands where sometimes there's a "the" in front of their name, and sometimes there wasn't. According to Wikipedia, technically, they were known as "The Marmalade" until 1972. Since then, everything that gets released just uses "Marmalade." That's also what Wikipedia calls them, so that's what I'm calling them too. 

This album is 35 minutes long.

01 That Lonely Feeling (Dean Ford & the Gaylords [Marmalade])
02 He's a Good Face [But He's Down and Out] (Dean Ford & the Gaylords [Marmalade])
03 You Know It Too (Dean Ford & the Gaylords [Marmalade])
04 It's All Leading Up to Saturday Night (Marmalade)
05 Wait a Minute Baby (Marmalade)
06 [I Know] I'm Losing You (Marmalade)
07 Can't Stop Now (Marmalade)
08 There Ain't No Use in Hanging On (Marmalade)
09 I See the Rain (Marmalade)
10 Laughing Man (Marmalade)
11 Man in a Shop (Marmalade)
12 Otherwise It's Been a Perfect Day (Marmalade)
13 Sixty Minutes of Your Love (Marmalade)

https://www.upload.ee/files/15157777/Marmld_1965-1967_ISeetheRin_atse.zip.html

For the album cover, I used the cover of the "I See the Rain" single. But I made some changes that I think improved the look. I lightened some colors and darkened others to provide more contrast. I also added stereo and record company logos that appeared on other releases by the band around that time.