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Big Boy Pete

Can anyone tell me which of the many BBP collections is the best place to start
Thanx

Re: Big Boy Pete

PSYCHO RELICS but a tad pricey id check his tracks out on youtube or spotify before you part with your hard earned dosh
found this on allmusic
Although the name may not be familiar to many, Big Boy Pete (aka Pete Miller) has been flogging around the music scene for nearly five decades. He first played in a rock & roll band called the Offbeats, who recorded an EP in 1958, and in 1961, he joined the beat group Peter Jay & the Jaywalkers. With the Jaywalkers, he recorded a number of singles, which were produced by Joe Meek, from whom Pete learned many new and innovative recording techniques. In 1965, he quit the band to concentrate on recording solo projects, and turned to session work to support his recording career. During this period, he became a part-time member of the legendary underground freakbeat band the News, while continuing to write songs for Britain's major publishing houses. Many these songs would eventually end up being recorded by some of the U.K.'s most popular bands. In the mid-'60s, Miller, now sporting the solo name Big Boy Pete, returned to his native Norwich to continue working on his solo projects. His influences during this period came from a wide variety of sources, including the Beatles' Sgt. Pepper's, the Stones' Their Satanic Majesties Request, Pink Floyd, and Jimi Hendrix. He recorded a number of demo songs that were seeped in East Indian influences, psychedelic guitar, and experimental production, but they were all rejected by the record companies for being too far off the mainstream sound of the day. In 1969, Big Boy Pete relocated to the United States, where he opened his own recording studio and formed his own record label. Many of his songs that were recorded between 1966 and 1969 lay around in boxes at his studio until the mid-'90s, when suddenly, long-lost psychedelic recordings became sought after by collectors around the world. Tenth Planet Records, a European-based collectors label, contacted Miller and resurrected a number of these recordings, some of which were compiled on the 14-track Homage to Catatonia retrospective. Return to Catatonia contains 14 more long-lost tracks, all recorded between 1966 and 1969. While a bit self-indulgent in places, these songs contain all of the influences that make British psychedelic music what it is. For fans of such artists as early Pink Floyd, Syd Barrett, or the Beatles, Return to Catatonia is a must.

Re: Big Boy Pete

This topic came up a couple of years ago here as it seems Big Boy Pete was passing off contemporary recordings as "long-lost, unearthed" 60s originals he'd done back in the day. Having said that, I'd recommend "Return to Catatonia" as the most consistently good listen.

Re: Big Boy Pete

Thank you gentlemen. Return to Catatonia it is then

Re: Big Boy Pete

Well that was a nice surprise...
The only BBP I'd heard before was Cold Turkey, My Love is like a Spaceship & Baby I got News for You from comps. There's a few on the tube, but not much. Dunno what I was expecting but this is a treat!
I'll say first off, just to get it out of the way, that there's a couple of really silly tunes on here with speeded up vocals a la Joe Meek 'I hear A New World' that grate a bit and 'Nasty Nazi' is what it is...snarling, industrial & futuristic...but not my cuppa...as for the rest, there's some real top pop psych on here, the first track, 'Twas not so short ago' is instantly appealing and 'Summerland' sounds like Nirvana to me...was really not expecting anything quite so lush and melodic...harmonies and sitars abound and the tracks are quite finished sounding for demos.
I've concluded I love this guy as long as he's not being TOO weird, you know..
I guess a lot of you on here know all this already...I think I must've been living under a rock to have not known this one before now. Just ordered 'Homage' now...