Tracklisting below is from Volume 3 of the Decktician Logs. Many thanks to Decktician, Ken Garner for copying and additional information, and Rocker for acting as central HQ.
Two 1967 tracks; the Velvet Underground's "I'm Waiting For The Man", played on the Perfumed Garden as an LP track but newly released as a single; the show closes with the single by Dantalian's Chariot, the short-lived psychedelic band led by Zoot Money, preceded by a track from Money's current band, Ellis.
A session by Cymande, a London soul-funk band of musicians with Caribbean background. They made three albums in the 1970s and had some success in the USA (as Peel mentions) before breaking up, but reformed in 2012 after their music had been sampled and used in films and video games. In 2022 a documentary film on their career, Getting It Back: The Story of Cymande, was released in the UK[1]
A mention for Ronnie Ronalde, decades before JP ever played anything by him on the radio. Few, if any, of his early 1970s listeners would have known the name.
Happy Daze Crew: Waiting At The Station (LP – Happy Days) United Artists
Back Door: Livin’ Track (session) (JP: "My goodness yes, how I remember those afternoons when I was a young boy..."He sounds as if he's parodying his Perfumed Garden style, but the link cuts off)
Christie Hennessey: High In The Trees (LP – Christie Hennessey) Westwood
Legendary Masked Surfers (featuring Dean Torrence): Gonna Hustle You (single) United Artists (JP: "one of these records that's been written about for years....and God bless them whoever they are")
Mott The Hoople: Rose (single – Honaloochie Boogie b-side) CBS JP: "I reckon a band who can do things as good as that will last for a long time...the sad and beautiful "Rose"")
Ollie Nightingale: I’ll Take Care Of You (LP – Sweet Surrender) Pride
Mick Softley: Gypsy (session) (Softley whistles as the track ends. JP, in fake cockney accent; "I've always said that that Mick Softley was influenced by Ronnie Ronalde")
Mentions seeing Blue at a club in Birmingham last night, after he'd done a gig in the city at Bogart's - "they were excellent" - and he says he'll see them again tomorrow
Jimmy Reed: You Can’t Hide (LP – Just Jimmy Reed) Vee Jay Played by JP for "four schoolgirls in Hatfield, Hertfordshire" who'd written to him. He also says he was disappointed by a new Jimmy Reed LP on which the singer had changed his style, or had been told to, in order to appeal to a 1970s audience.)