223. ‘All or Nothing’, by The Small Faces

1966 has been a pretty cool year in terms of its chart-toppers. Nancy’s boots, The Walker Brothers, the cynical Stones and Dusty finally making it… Plus a lot of soul: The Spencer Davis Group, Georgie Fame and, most enjoyably of all, Chris Farlowe. To that list you can now add The Small Faces.

SmallFaces1966

All or Nothing, by The Small Faces (their 1st and only #1)

1 week, from 15th – 22nd September 1966

This is another cool record, and it’s cool from the very start – from the fade-in drum roll. We’ve not had one of those before at the top of the charts. Then a trippy riff, and a wistful voice: I thought you’d listen, To my reasoning, But now I see, You don’t hear a thing… Intelligent lyrics, and I do love the bravado required to rhyme ‘reasoning’ with ‘hear a thing’. The singer is trying to make his lover see that he doesn’t share. Things could work out, Just like I want them to, If I could have, The other half of you… And then an ultimatum: All or nothing, For me…

The guitars in the chorus are thick and chunky. Very forward-thinking. Very power-pop. It’s The Undertones come a decade early. I’d rank it along with ‘You Really Got Me’ and ‘Get Off Of My Cloud’ as one of the heaviest #1 singles so far. Although ‘All or Nothing’s heaviness is more subtle, not as in your face.

And it doesn’t last the whole song through. There’s a mellow ba-ba-ba-baba refrain mid-way through, and then a funky breakdown towards the end. And lots of great soul shout-outs from the lead-singer Steve Marriott. It’s amazing to think that he was just nineteen when this was recorded. Aw Yeahs, and Hear my children sing!, and Gotta keep on tryin’! And when he belts out the crucial I ain’t tellin you no lie, So don’t just sit there and cry! line, it’s a real finger-kiss moment. It’s a record that packs a lot in to its three minutes. Funky, heavy, soulful… A song I knew vaguely; but hadn’t realised just how forward facing it sounded. If you were a pop-loving kid in 1966, this is what your cool older brother would have been listening to.

7503405132_3ee2877a47_b.jpg

That’s the best word for this record. Cool. No point searching for a better one. Another cool chart-topper for the year. In pictures from the time, The Small Faces look the part too. Mods, with long hair and sharp suit jackets. And they crammed a lot into their four years together. (It is amazing, isn’t it, how many of these mid-sixties groups fell apart after just a few years – with a couple of obvious exceptions…) Like The Troggs from two posts back, certain other of their hits far outshine their one and only chart-topper. ‘Itchycoo Park’ made #3 the following year, and ‘Lazy Sunday’ – for many a year the only Small Faces song I knew – made the runners-up position in 1968. Neither of those songs sound anything like the heavy, soulful R&B on ‘All or Nothing’, which speaks to the band’s quality and creativity.

I have to admit that I thought I had imagined some link between The Small Faces and The Faces – assuming that it was just a coincidence in naming. But no, I was right: Marriot left, the remaining Faces dropped the ‘Small’ and recruited Rod Stewart. Rod the Mod, as he was back then. The rest is history. Marriot died tragically young, in a house-fire aged just forty-four. He’s kind of forgotten today, in the pantheon of sixties stars, which is a shame, as his legacy helped shape both punk and Britpop. The Jam and Blur certainly owe him a debt, anyway.

The Small Faces, then, with their one and only week atop the British Singles chart. Sit back, and Hear the children sing!

Keep up with this Spotify playlist:

Advertisement

11 thoughts on “223. ‘All or Nothing’, by The Small Faces

  1. We talked about how the Kinks should have been better known before…this group really should have been more well known. If I could start a mythical band I would begin with Steve Marriott as the lead singer…over anyone. He could sing anything and sing it well.
    This band was great both in the studio and live. Great song but yes they had better songs as they went along.
    Marriott’s band Humble Pie wasn’t bad but they weren’t the Small Faces.

    • I have to admit that I knew their hits before writing this, but couldn’t have named the lead singer. But yes, what a voice.

      And for their three biggest songs – I’m thinking Itchycoo Park, Lazy Sunday and this – to sound so different and innovative is a sign of their talents.

      • As you can tell…I’m a huge fan of them. They wrote some great pop songs but their manager Don Arden just totally screwed them. The one living member Kenney Jones is STILL fighting for royalties for the families of the others.

        I think so much of Marriott that I thought…and yes people would shoot me but getting Rod was not a step up…and I love early Rod Stewart.

      • He’s got a voice that I can take or leave. I like rock Rod Stewart – ‘Stay With Me’ and so on. Not so much the ballads. Marriotts seems a bit more soulful, and less grating.

        And some managers are just the worst, aren’t they…

  2. Pingback: Recap: #211 – #240 – The UK Number Ones Blog

  3. Pingback: 243. ‘Everlasting Love’, by The Love Affair – The UK Number Ones Blog

  4. Pingback: 260. ‘With a Little Help From My Friends’, by Joe Cocker – The UK Number Ones Blog

  5. Pingback: 305. ‘Maggie May’ / ‘Reason to Believe’, by Rod Stewart – The UK Number Ones Blog

Leave a Reply

Fill in your details below or click an icon to log in:

WordPress.com Logo

You are commenting using your WordPress.com account. Log Out /  Change )

Twitter picture

You are commenting using your Twitter account. Log Out /  Change )

Facebook photo

You are commenting using your Facebook account. Log Out /  Change )

Connecting to %s