Last updated: 7 hours ago
One of the most anonymous-sounding acts of the British Invasion, Twice as Much was the duo of Dave Skinner and Andrew Rose, harmony singers who also wrote much of their own material. Signed to the Immediate label (run by <a href="spotify:artist:22bE4uQ6baNwSHPVcDxLCe">Rolling Stones</a> manager <a href="spotify:artist:7osQlIEugmCDo8AXAyzlqq">Andrew Loog Oldham</a>), the pair recorded several singles and a couple of albums between 1966 and 1968. Most of these recordings were innocuous, pleasantly forgettable pop affairs in the <a href="spotify:artist:6lHC2EQMEMZiEmSfFloarn">Peter & Gordon</a>/<a href="spotify:artist:2UQwwYBLBvtpGHTMYzTgHi">Chad & Jeremy</a> mold, with light orchestral pop/rock arrangements that sometimes employed a touch of the Baroque. They had their only British Top 40 success with a cover of the Stones' "Sitting on a Fence"; although the Stones' version was one of their best cuts from the Between the Buttons era, the Twice as Much interpretation seems to miss the point completely, transforming it into a chipper, quasi-vaudevillian tune without a hint of ambiguity or sullenness. ~ Richie Unterberger, Rovi
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