1973 single by the Kinks
"Sweet Lady Genevieve" is the third track from the Kinks` 1973 rock opera Preservation Act 1. It was written by Ray Davies.
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1
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Sweet Lady Genevieve
The Kinks •
The Kinks •
1973 .9
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3:27 |
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2
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Sitting In My Hotel
The Kinks •
The Kinks •
1973 .9
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3:22 |
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1
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Preservation (Single)
THE KINKS •
• 1973
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3:38 |
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2
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Morning Song
THE KINKS •
• 1973
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1:59 |
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3
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Daylight
THE KINKS •
• 1973
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3:19 |
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4
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Sweet Lady Genevieve
THE KINKS •
• 1973
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3:26 |
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5
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There`s A Change In The Weather
THE KINKS •
• 1973
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3:00 |
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6
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Where Are They Now ?
THE KINKS •
• 1973
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3:28 |
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7
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One Of The Survivors
THE KINKS •
• 1973
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4:31 |
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8
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Cricket
THE KINKS •
• 1973
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2:56 |
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9
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Money & Corruption
THE KINKS •
• 1973
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6:01 |
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10
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Here Comes Flash
THE KINKS •
• 1973
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2:41 |
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11
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Sitting In The Midday Sun
THE KINKS •
• 1973
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3:47 |
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12
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Demolition
THE KINKS •
• 1973
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4:07 |
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13
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One Of The Survivors (Single Edit)
THE KINKS •
• 1973
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4:06 |
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"Sweet Lady Genevieve" | ||||
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Single by the Kinks | ||||
from the album Preservation Act 1 | ||||
B-side | "Sitting in My Hotel" | |||
Released | 21 September 1973 (UK) | |||
Recorded | June 1973 | |||
Studio | Konk Studios, Hornsey, North London | |||
Genre | Folk rock | |||
Length | 3:26 | |||
Label | RCA 2418 | |||
Songwriter(s) | Ray Davies | |||
Producer(s) | Ray Davies | |||
The Kinks singles chronology | ||||
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1973 single by the Kinks
"Sweet Lady Genevieve" is the third track from the Kinks` 1973 rock opera Preservation Act 1. It was written by Ray Davies.
Leer más"Sweet Lady Genevieve" is part of the rock opera, Preservation Act 1, with the lyrics sung by Davies as the "Tramp"—one of the principal figures in the story line. In the track, the Tramp is begging for the forgiveness of his former lover, Genevieve, saying that "this time I`ll give you some security and I won’t make promises I can’t keep". Author Andrew Hickey said in his book, Preservation: The Kinks` Music 1964-1974, that the track was "Ray Davies` attempt to reach out to his estranged wife Rasa."[1] The Tramp returns later in the album on "Sitting in the Midday Sun".[2]
The track was released as a single in the U.K. with "Sitting in My Hotel" as the B-side, taken from an earlier album. The single failed to dent the charts.[3] In America, the song was used as the B-side to "Sitting in the Midday Sun".
Although "Sweet Lady Genevieve" was not successful commercially, it has since been praised by music critics. Hickey claimed it "may be the last truly great Kinks song" and said that he "can think of few braver artistic works."[1] AllMusic`s Stephen Thomas Erlewine called the track "absolutely gorgeous" and labelled it the "real candidate for Davies` forgotten masterpiece".[4] Jason Josephes of Pitchfork Media said that "Sweet Lady Genevieve "is one of the Kinks` greatest singles, a simple porchy folk rock number you`ll be humming for days."[2] The track has since appeared on the compilation album Picture Book.
1973 single by the Kinks
"Sweet Lady Genevieve" is the third track from the Kinks` 1973 rock opera Preservation Act 1. It was written by Ray Davies.
"Sweet Lady Genevieve" is part of the rock opera, Preservation Act 1, with the lyrics sung by Davies as the "Tramp"—one of the principal figures in the story line. In the track, the Tramp is begging for the forgiveness of his former lover, Genevieve, saying that "this time I`ll give you some security and I won’t make promises I can’t keep". Author Andrew Hickey said in his book, Preservation: The Kinks` Music 1964-1974, that the track was "Ray Davies` attempt to reach out to his estranged wife Rasa."[1] The Tramp returns later in the album on "Sitting in the Midday Sun".[2]
The track was released as a single in the U.K. with "Sitting in My Hotel" as the B-side, taken from an earlier album. The single failed to dent the charts.[3] In America, the song was used as the B-side to "Sitting in the Midday Sun".
Although "Sweet Lady Genevieve" was not successful commercially, it has since been praised by music critics. Hickey claimed it "may be the last truly great Kinks song" and said that he "can think of few braver artistic works."[1] AllMusic`s Stephen Thomas Erlewine called the track "absolutely gorgeous" and labelled it the "real candidate for Davies` forgotten masterpiece".[4] Jason Josephes of Pitchfork Media said that "Sweet Lady Genevieve "is one of the Kinks` greatest singles, a simple porchy folk rock number you`ll be humming for days."[2] The track has since appeared on the compilation album Picture Book.