Pebbles, Volume 26
Encyclopedia
Pebbles, Volume 26 is a compilation album
Compilation album
A compilation album is an album featuring tracks from one or more performers, often culled from a variety of sources The tracks are usually collected according to a common characteristic, such as popularity, genre, source or subject matter...

 in the Pebbles series
Pebbles series
Pebbles is an extensive series of compilation albums in both LP and CD formats that have been issued on several record labels, though mostly by AIP...

. It is one of the ten albums in the sub-series The Continent Lashes Back and is sub-titled Sweden, Part 2. Pebbles, Volume 20
Pebbles, Volume 20
Pebbles, Volume 20 is a compilation album among the LPs in the Pebbles series. It is one of the 10 albums in the sub-series The Continent Lashes Back and is sub-titled European Garage Rock, Part 4: Sweden...

and Pebbles, Volume 28
Pebbles, Volume 28
Pebbles, Volume 28 is a compilation album among the LPs in the Pebbles series. It is one of the 10 albums in the sub-series The Continent Lashes Back and is sub-titled Sweden, Part 3...

also have music by Swedish
Sweden
Sweden , officially the Kingdom of Sweden , is a Nordic country on the Scandinavian Peninsula in Northern Europe. Sweden borders with Norway and Finland and is connected to Denmark by a bridge-tunnel across the Öresund....

 bands.

Release data

This album was released circa 1988 as an LP by AIP Records
AIP Records
AIP Records is a record label that was started by Greg Shaw's Bomp! Records, being launched in 1983 to continue the Pebbles series. The abbreviation AIP stands for "Archive International Productions". The first 10 volumes in the Pebbles series had been released by BFD Records of Kookaburra,...

 (as #AIP-10044) and was kept in print for many years.

Track listing

Side 1:
  1. The Stringtones: "Ode to Rhythm & Blues"
  2. Sooner or Later: "This Hammer
    Take This Hammer
    "Take This Hammer" is a prison work song. It was collected by John and Alan Lomax. The song "Nine Pound Hammer" has a few phrases in common with this song, and the same Roud number. "Swannanoa Tunnel" is similar, and this group of songs are referred to as 'hammer songs' or 'roll songs'...

    "
  3. Sooner or Later: "Night Time"
  4. The Merrymen: "Walking down Lonesome Road"
  5. The Melvins: "The Man Down There
    One Way Out (song)
    "One Way Out" is a blues song first recorded and released in the early-mid 1960s by Sonny Boy Williamson II and Elmore James, an R&B hit under a different name for G.L. Crockett in the mid-1960s, and then popularized to rock audiences in the early 1970s and onward by The Allman Brothers Band.-Song...

    "
  6. Manufacture: "All Your Love" – Rel. 1965
  7. Manufacture: "Teenage Love" – Rel. 1965
  8. The Trappers: "Too Much Monkey Business
    Too Much Monkey Business
    "Too Much Monkey Business" is a song written and performed by rock and roll pioneer Chuck Berry. It was released as Chuck's fifth single in September 1956 for Chess Records, and appeared as the third track on Chuck's first solo LP, After School Session in May 1957, as well as the EP of the same name...

    " – Rel. 1965


Side 2:
  1. The Moonlighters: "I Can't Stand It" – Rel. 1965
  2. The T-Boones: "I Want You" – Rel. 1967
  3. The Outsiders: "Inside of Me" – Rel. 1967
  4. The Outsiders: "From Four until Late" – Rel. 1967
  5. Steampacket: "I Don't Care"
  6. The Shakers: "Tracks Remain"
  7. The Fabulous Four: "438 S. Michigan Ave."
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