Nuggets II: Kicks and Chicks by The Zipps

The success of Rhino’s 1998 Nuggets boxset justified a follow-up. The sequel covers the rest of the world since the first volume only chronicled the USA.

Nuggets II: Original Artyfacts from the British Empire and Beyond, 1964–1969 emerged in 2001. It features music from countries such as Iceland, Uruguay, and Japan. I’m profiling and rating each of the 109 tracks, working backwards.

Track 99 – Kicks and Chicks by The Zipps

From: Dordrecht, The Netherlands

7

Credits

4/19. KICKS & CHICKS – The Zipps (NL)
(Peter Nuyten/Ben Katerberg)

PERSONNEL/PHILIP ELZERMAN: vocals, guitar * PETER NUYTEN: lead guitar * THEO VERSCHOOR: bass * JOHNNY NOCE SANTORO: drums
Producer(s) unknown
Recorded in Amsterdam, Holland
Relax single #45105 (1966) [Netherlands]

The Zipps

The Zipps formed in 1965 in Dordrecht, a Dutch city known for a folktale where a sheep was disguised as a person.

Import of meat or cattle was taxed in the 17th century. To avoid having to pay, two men dressed up a sheep they had bought outside the city walls, attempting to disguise it as a man. The sheep was discovered because it bleated as the three men (two men and one sheep) passed through the city wall gate. There is a special monument of a man and his son trying to hold a sheep disguised as a man between them, that refers to this legend. 

Wikipedia

The Zipps were notable for their promotion of drug use and for their hallucinatory light shows. Leader Philip Elzerman promoted drug use in interviews, and the band promoted stickers reading “Be Stoned! Dig: Zipps Psychedelic Sound”. 

Dordrecht’s Zipps epitomized the bohemian extremes of the Dutch beat movement. Their 1966 publicity stickers laid down their manifesto–“Be Stoned: Dig Zipps: Psychedelic Sound”–while their second single, “Kicks & Chicks,” documented their lifestyle with lines like “I don’t care for money/I’m beat as hell/Paris or Rome are the places I dwell” and “I read only books of Jack Kerouac/He’s the only priest in my life . . .”20

The Zipps began in 1965 as an alliance of members of The Beattown Skifflers and The Moving Strings. They quickly built a devoted following among beat fans, Provo types, and early hippies, solidifying their uncompromising stance by performing a song called “LSD-25” on national television, exhorting the joys of marijuana and Benzedrine in their songs, and providing background music for readings by Dutch beat poets.

Mike Stax, Nuggets II liner notes

Kicks and chicks

‘Kicks and Chicks’ is an interesting song. With a jazzy, druggy feel and references to Jack Kerouac, it’s similar territory to what The Doors would explore a year later.

It’s notable for the awkward lyrics and pronunciation, the product of a band where English isn’t their first language.

Well I’m a bloody guy with a knack,
I read all the books of Jack Kerouac
He’s the only priest in my life,
He’s my resort, he and my knife

Kicks and Chicks

The Aftermath

The Zipps didn’t last much longer, only releasing a few singles. They recorded ‘When You Tell It, Tell It Well’ in 1969 as the theme song for the Dutch Advertising Association’s 29th congress. The invited guest of honour at the congress, his royal highness Prince Bernhard, left halfway through the song, appalled.

The band never recorded again after the 1960s, but have sometimes reconvened as a live act.

Read More

7 Comments

  1. You won’t be shocked I had never heard of The Zipps. I agree with you “Kicks and Chicks” is not a bad song. To me, it sounds a bit like a blend between The Doors and (psychedelic) Byrds (as in “Eight Miles High”), especially the guitar solo.

    • I hadn’t heard of one of the NZ bands on Nuggets II – the people who compiled it had an encyclopedic knowledge of obscure 1960s gems.

  2. I like their spirit! The songs are not bad either. – Kicks And Chicks…just flows all over the place…I like it. Is that a recorder or whistling? Either way it takes the song in another place. Thumbs up on both of these. The Zipps…I like that.

Leave a Reply

Read about the discographies of musical acts from the 1960s to the present day. Browse this site's review archives or enjoy these random selections:

More review pages

Suzanne Vega Album Reviews

Suzanne Vega was born in Santa Monica, California. At the...

Tirzah Album Reviews

As a teenager, Tirzah Mastin was on the path to...

Arooj Aftab Album Reviews

Arooj Aftab was born in Saudi Arabia to Pakistani parents...

Townes Van Zandt Album Reviews

Born into a high-profile Texas oil family, Townes Van Zandt...
Townes Van Zandt Live at the Old Quarter

James Taylor Album Reviews

With his warm voice, pretty guitar-picking, and introspective songwriting, James Vernon...

The Clash Album Reviews

Perhaps the most celebrated band to emerge from the 1970s...
The Clash London Calling

I add new blog posts to this website every week. Browse the archives or enjoy these random selections:

More blog posts

Dire Straits Albums: Ranked from Worst to Best

One glance at Mark Knopfler’s bandana will tell you that...
Dire Straits Money for Nothing

Sugar Mountain by Neil Young: Great B-Sides

Neil Young first rose to prominence in 1960s folk-rock group...
Neil Young Decade

Carry Me Home by AC/DC: Great B-Sides

It’s a long way to the top (if you wanna...
AC/DC Let There Be Rock

Richard and Linda Thompson Albums: Ranked from Worst to Best

English folk-rock duo Richard and Linda Thompson’s career resembled a...
Hokey Pokey Richard and Linda Thompson

10 Best Counting Crows Songs

Counting Crows bridged the gap between alternative and classic rock...

Total Eclipse by Iron Maiden: Great B-Sides

Iron Maiden’s third album, The Number of the Beast, was...

Subscribe

Subscribe to receive new posts from Aphoristic Album Reviews.