| Computers | Cameras | Electronics | Movies | More.. | Merchant Ratings | Your Account | |||
Album Description: The Raspberries: Eric Carmen, Scott McCarl (vocals, guitar); Wally Bryson (guitar); Dave Smalley (bass); Jim Bonfanti, Michael McBride (drums).Compilation producer: Ron Furmanek.Recorded at The Record Plant, New York, New York between 1971 and 1974. Originally releas... read more The Raspberries: Eric Carmen, Scott McCarl (vocals, guitar); Wally Bryson (guitar); Dave Smalley (bass); Jim Bonfanti, Michael McBride (drums). Compilation producer: Ron Furmanek. Recorded at The Record Plant, New York, New York between 1971 and 1974. Originally released on Capitol. Includes liner notes by Greg Russo and Steve Kolanjian. Digitally remastered by Kevin Reeves (October 1990, Capitol Recording Studios). Intermixing singles with the band's best accompanying album tracks, this 20-song retrospective gives a good overall impression of the Raspberries' strengths across their two years of recording, as well as hints of some weaknesses in the way they were represented on record. As expected, Eric Carmen is the dominant songwriter, but Wally Bryson and David Smalley also show up with "Last Dance" and "Hard to Get Over a Heartbreak," respectively, along with Scott McCarl ("Rose Coloured Glasses"), to give a hint of the range of composing talent in the band in its different phases. It's astonishing how many of their LP cuts would have made superb singles in their own right. It's clear listening to this collection that, between the record company's apparent inability to market their material to its fullest potential and the group's fear of sounding too English, that some killer tracks, like "Nobody Knows" with appealing hooks, a great beat, and overflowing with melodic teen angst, and "Hard to Get Over a Heartbreak," were overlooked as potential singles. Of course, the disputes over songwriting and the matter of who was represented on their singles (and where, the A- or B-side) were among the factors that helped kill the Raspberries after only a couple of years. This collection delineates a lot of the problems in the course of presenting the group's triumphs. An unusual amount of care has been taken in assembling the songs -- they all sound better than the original records, and the hotter single mix of "Overnight Sensation" graces this disc. A serious fan may well want to own CDs of the group's complete albums (available on RPM Records on two CDs), but this is one time that Capitol Records did right by one of its own acts. ~ Bruce Eder minimize Track ListingAlbum Information
©2009 About.com, a part of The New York Times Company. All rights reserved. |
|||||||||||||||