Time Life Music,Warner Special Products
Various - AM Gold - The Late '60s (CD, Comp) (Very Good Plus (VG+))
Various - AM Gold - The Late '60s (CD, Comp) (Very Good Plus (VG+))
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Media Condition: Very Good Plus (VG+)
Sleeve Condition: Very Good Plus (VG+)
Country: US
Released: 1995
Genre: Rock, Funk / Soul, Pop
Style: Soul, Rhythm & Blues, Classic Rock, Rock & Roll, Psychedelic Rock, Bubblegum
Comments:
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Notes:
Time-Life released this disc as [r21567517 (SUD-14) in the [l774983 series in 1992, and as [r4161809 (AM1-14) in the [l328190 series in 1995. ℗ 1992 Warner Special Products © 1995 Time Life Inc. Track durations obtained from software. Publishing: Track 1- PolyGram International Publishing, Inc. ASCAP Track 2- Little Fugitive Music BMI Track 3- Big Seven Music Corp. BMI Track 4- Low-Sal Music Co. BMI Track 5- Delicious Apple Music Corp./Fun City Music Corp./Purple Records Distributing Corp. ASCAP Track 6- Stone Agate Music BMI Track 7, 10- Warner-Tamerlane Publ. Corp. BMI Track 8- Jerry Goldstein Music Inc./Morris Music Inc. BMI Track 9- EMI Unart Catalog Inc. BMI Track 11- Alley Music Corp./Trio Music Co., Inc./Warner-Tamerlane Publ. Corp. BMI Track 12, 15- Jobete Music Co., Inc. ASCAP Track 13- Vogue Music BMI Track 14, 20- MCA Music Publishing ASCAP Track 16- Viva Music, Inc. BMI/WB Music Corp. ASCAP Track 17- Adam R. Levy & Father Enterprises Inc./Doraflo Music Inc./High Concept Music BMI Track 18- Lowery Music Co., Inc. BMI Track 19- Longitude Music Co./Seasons Four Music BMI Track 21- Acuff-Rose Music, Inc./Roschelle Publ. BMI Track 22- Famous Music Corporation ASCAP Complete liner notes: Bubblegum music came to prominence alongside the Meaningful Rock explosion of the late '60s. If the latter-with its socially conscious, semi-poetic lyrics and its music written or at least improvised by the band members-was more accomplished and more relevant to the future of rock, the former certainly maintained that part of the tradition dealing in crassly simple songs and mindless fun. It also gave kids too young for Hendrix and the Airplane something to listen to. Like other genres, bubblegum was so imprecisely defined that it wasn't always clear who fit the description. To their chagrin, the Lemon Pipers and Tommy James and the Shondells made the cut by most definitions. The Lemon Pipers hailed from Ohio, but Green Tambourine came out of what was left of New York's Brill Building scene. Lyricist Shelley Pinz wrote the words after reading a newspaper story about an elderly British street musician who played in front of a bank, setting a tambourine on the sidewalk in front of him to collect money (hence the "green" part). Paul Leka wrote the music, but a dozen publishers turned the song down before it caught the ear of Neil Bogart of Buddah Records, a bubblegum stronghold. Bogart sent Leka to Ohio to play the song for the Lemon Pipers, who were selling poorly and were about to be dropped by the label. Because they were into psychedelic music, the band members rejected Green Tambourine, but Leka then informed them that Bogart would consider them history unless they rethought the offer. When they finally recorded the song, Leka's production turned out so badly that cellos and a new drum track had to be overdubbed back in New York. But it wound up the band's only Top 40 hit. Tommy James was also a Midwesterner, but he moved east from Indiana-the only one of the original Shondells to do so-after Hanky Panky went to No. 1 in 1966. With 1968's Crimson and Clover he began producing himself, and the psychedelic bubblegum of Crystal Blue Persuasion proved an effective summer song the next year. "The title came right out of the Bible," he insisted. "Crystal blue meant truth." But when James temporarily left the business a while later to deal with an amphetamines problem, the song seemed to take on a new meaning. The Union Gap began in San Diego as the Outcasts, but they renamed themselves after Union Gap, Washington, near where their leader, Gary Puckett, grew up. To capitalize on their name, the band members dressed in Civil War uniforms, but the success of Young Girt is probably due more to the fact that it was crafted by Jerry Fuller, one of Ricky Nelson's chief writers. Bubblegum soul was the province of Classics IV and R. B. Greaves. The former was a Jacksonville, Florida, band that moved up to Atlanta to work sessions for producer Bill Lowery (who also worked with Joe South and Billy Joe Royal) before cutting a short string of hits like Stormy. R. B. Greaves, born in British Guyana and related to Sam Cooke, was raised on a Seminole reservation in California; a further distinction was his authorship of the undeniably catchy Take a Letter Marla. After this, bubblegum distinctions get murkier. Frankie Valli first went solo from the 4 Seasons in 1966, but 1967's Can't Take My Eyes off You was the single that established him, and could be argued into the bubblegum camp. So could Midnight Confessions by the Grass Roots. The name of this band originally belonged to a studio group formed by writer-producers Steve Barri and P. F. Sloan as a vehicle for their songs. Once the studio band achieved a local hit, Barri and Sloan recruited a Los Angeles bar band called the Thirteenth Floor to assume the name and play live. Even a folk-rock band like the Turtles, with their buoyant melodies and sing-along lyrics and harmonies, had at least a little in common with bubblegum. The mocking Elenore comes from a concept album late in their career in which they "played" several different types of groups and simulated a Battle of the Bands. Creeque Alley was, of course, leader-writer John Phillips' capsule history of the genesis of the Mamas and the Papas. But it was also about the roots of the Lovin' Spoonful, because before either group formed, key members of both had worked together in various folkie outfits. The Spoonful's Darling Be Home Soon came from You're a Big Boy Now, a charming but often overlooked early movie from Francis Ford Coppola. Every Mothers' Son grew out of the Greenwich Village folk duo of brothers Dennis and Lary Lorden. After growing to five members, the group hooked up with bubblegum producer-writer Wes Farrell, who had them cover a group called Rare Breed on his song Come On Down to My Boat. Friend and Lover consisted of Jim Post and Cathy Conn, who met at an Edmonton, Alberta, fair where he was singing and she was dancing. They soon married and began working as a vocal duet. Post's Reach out of the Darkness was inspired by hippies throwing flowers at a New York love-in. Neither Every Mothers' Son nor Friend and Lover saw the Top 40 again. Never My Love, a pop harmony ballad, was the Association's second straight megahit after Warner Brothers bought up Valiant Records in order to get the group's contract. Petula Clark had been a star in England since she was a child but didn't conquer America until 1965, at the ripe old age of 33. This Is My Song was written by movie pioneer Charlie Chaplin (at the ripe old age of 77) for his comedy A Countess from Hong Kong, starring Sophia Loren and Marlon Brando. Pet saturated Europe with French, Italian and German versions of the song before recording it in English. Engelbert Humperdinck was one of the British males working a middle-of-the-road pop vein roughly analogous to Clark's. His career was stalled until he cut Release Me (And Let Me Love Again), a 1954 country smash for Ray Price that had become a standard. (Cowriter Eddie Miller got the inspiration for it after overhearing a couple arguing at the club where he was working in San Francisco; the woman kept telling her spouse to "release me," and Miller liked this euphemism for "divorce," then still taboo in a song.) On the heels of By the Time I Get to Phoenix and Wichita Lineman, Galveston was Glen Campbell's third straight "countrypolitan" hit supplied by Jimmy Webb with a city name in the title. Over at Motown, Marvin Gaye and Tammi Terrell had a series of best-selling duets, but few were as deeply felt as Your Precious Love, a slow dance with a doo-wop/make-out feel. The Temptations' You're My Everything showed off lead singer Eddie Kendricks' gliding falsetto. Van Morrison's Brown Eyed Girl-his first solo hit after leaving Them and the closest thing to a conventional pop single he ever did-was produced by Bert Berns. Impressed with Morrison's lead on the Irish group's remake of Here Comes the Night (which Berns wrote), the veteran R&B writer-producer brought the singer to New York. Berns died later in 1967, but Morrison stayed in the States to continue his solo career. Few records caught the mood of the late '60s better than the Young Rascals' Groovin'. The New York group was known for its blue-eyed soul covers but became inspired by the Beatles to write originals. Felix Cavaliere conceived Groovin' when he found that because of his work schedule he could see his new girlfriend only on Sunday afternoons; Eddie Brigati developed the lyrics from Cavaliere's idea. Their label, which was accustomed to Young Rascals rockers, wasn't even planning to record Groovin' until influential disc Jockey Murray the K, who loved the tune, intervened. With Groovin' the Young Rascals had their second No. 1 hit, and bubblegum had to take a back seat to the new hippie anthem. -John Morthland
1. Van Morrison - Brown Eyed Girl 3:06
2. The Grass Roots - Midnight Confessions 2:46
3. Tommy James & The Shondells - Crystal Blue Persuasion 4:01
4. The Classics IV - Stormy 2:46
5. The Young Rascals - Groovin' 2:32
6. The Temptations - You're My Everything 3:00
7. Gary Puckett & The Union Gap - Young Girl 3:07
8. Every Mothers' Son - Come On Down To My Boat 2:36
9. The Lemon Pipers - Green Tambourine 2:26
10. The Association (2) - Never My Love 3:09
11. The Lovin' Spoonful - Darling Be Home Soon 3:36
12. Glen Campbell - Galveston 2:40
13. R.B. Greaves - Take A Letter Maria 2:43
14. The Mamas & The Papas - Creeque Alley 3:49
15. Marvin Gaye, Tammi Terrell - Your Precious Love 3:03
16. The Vogues - My Special Angel 3:01
17. The Turtles - Elenore 2:32
18. Friend And Lover - Reach Out Of The Darkness 3:08
19. Frankie Valli - Can't Take My Eyes Off You 3:22
20. Petula Clark - This Is My Song 3:17
21. Engelbert Humperdinck - Release Me (And Let Me Love Again) 3:20
22. Dionne Warwick - Alfie 2:44
Barcode and Other Identifiers:
Matrix / Runout 10 OPCD 2663-2 04
Matrix / Runout 10 OOCD 2663-2 03 M1S1
Mould SID Code IFPI 2U3L
Rights Society ASCAP
Rights Society BMI
Remastered At Hit And Run Studios
Phonographic Copyright (p) Warner Special Products
Copyright (c) Time Life Inc.
Published By PolyGram International Publishing, Inc.
Published By Little Fugitive Music
Published By Big Seven Music Corp.
Published By Low-Sal Music, Inc.
Published By Delicious Apple Music Corp.
Published By Fun City Music Corp.
Published By Purple Records Dist. Corp
Published By Stone Agate Music
Published By Warner-Tamerlane Publishing Corp.
Published By Jerry Goldstein Music, Inc.
Published By Morris Music, Inc.
Published By EMI Unart Catalog Inc.
Published By Alley Music Corp.
Published By Trio Music Co., Inc.
Published By Jobete Music Co., Inc.
Published By Vogue Music
Published By MCA Music Publishing
Published By Viva Music, Inc.
Published By WB Music Corp.
Published By Adam R. Levy & Father Enterprises Inc.
Published By Doraflo Music, Inc.
Published By High Concept Music
Published By Lowery Music Co. Inc.
Published By Longitude Music Co.
Published By Seasons Four Music
Published By Acuff-Rose Music, Inc.
Published By Roschelle Publishing Co.
Published By Famous Music Corporation
Manufactured For Time Life Music
Manufactured By Warner Special Products
JH100
Data provided by Discogs
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