Preservation Act 1
Preservation Act 1 is a concept album and the twelftth studio album by the English rock group the Kinks, released 16 November 1973 by RCA Records.
Reception
Preservation Act 1 was well received by many critics at the time. A review in Rolling Stone by Ken Barnes was critical of Ray Davies' "tendency toward vaudevillian excess", but overall he rated Preservation as a "highly listenable, enjoyable album". Barnes singled out "Sitting in the Midday Sun" as a "wistfully irresistible" number and labeled "One of the Survivors" the Kinks' "best outright rocker" in years. Gary Lucas, reviewing Preservation Act 1 for Zoo World, also had high praise for the work, stating: "Dare I say it is one of the nicest albums to be released this year ? Of course I will." Focusing on the musical theater aspects of the LP, Barbara Charone ranked the album as one of the "most impressive" of the Kinks' career.However, it did not sell well peaking on the Billboard 200 at No. 177.
Some more recent reviews of Preservation Act 1 have been sympathetic to its theatrical ambitions, such as AllMusic's Stephen Thomas Erlewine, who declared "Sweet Lady Genevieve" to be the "real candidate for Davies' forgotten masterpiece".
Re-release
The 1991 CD reissue on Rhino was a 2-CD set combining Preservation Act 1 with its 1974 follow-up Preservation Act 2 under the title Preservation: A Play in Two Acts. It featured an extended mix of "Money & Corruption/I Am Your Man" with an extra instrumental break and one bonus track, non-album single "Preservation".The 1998 CD reissue of Preservation Act 1 on Velvel included additional bonus track, the single versions of "One of the Survivors".
Cultural references
The chorus from side 2's "Money and Corruption" was used by the hackers group Anonymous when attacking governmental websites during the 2014 World Cup.Personnel
The Kinks- Ray Davies – vocals, guitar, harmonica
- Dave Davies – guitar, vocals
- John Dalton – bass
- Mick Avory – drums
- John Gosling – keyboards
- Alan Holmes – brass
- Laurie Brown – brass
- John Beecham – brass
- Krysia Kocjan, Lee Pavey, Lewis Rich, Pamela Travis, Sue Brown – additional singers
- Dave Davies – engineer
- Roger Beale – engineer
- Pat Doyle – art direction
- Chris Hopper – photography