| Computers | Cameras | Electronics | Movies | More.. | Merchant Ratings | Your Account | |||
Album Description: Compilation producers: Jeff Seckler, Andy McKaie.Digitally remastered by Doug Schwartz (Audio Mechanics, Los Angeles, California).Audio Remasterer: Doug Schwartz.Liner Note Author: Peter Grendysa.As one of the first interracial vocal groups of the rock & roll... read more Compilation producers: Jeff Seckler, Andy McKaie. Digitally remastered by Doug Schwartz (Audio Mechanics, Los Angeles, California). Audio Remasterer: Doug Schwartz. Liner Note Author: Peter Grendysa. As one of the first interracial vocal groups of the rock & roll era -- and the first to score a Top Ten million-selling record on their very first try -- the Del-Vikings seemed poised for very big things indeed. But when "Come Go With Me" became a national hit, the greed caused the Del-Vikings to split into two separate groups. Recording at various times with almost the same name, sometimes utilizing interchangeable group members as the two groups released follow-up singles on both Dot and Mercury simultaneously (with errant tracks showing up a couple of years later on a third label, Luniverse), this put the brakes on the group's success in a most confusing manner, raising the ire of disc jockeys and radio station programmers alike. This 16-track compilation from the Hip-O subsidiary is subtitled The Dot-ABC Recordings and does a better than average job of cherry picking through their sides for that label. Their big hit, "Come Go With Me," kicks things off, followed by the A- and B-sides of five early Fee-Bee, Dot, and ABC-Paramount singles. Filling out the compilation are the top sides of four more ABC singles. Oddly enough, the follow-up to "Come Go With Me," a two-sided rocker ("What Made Maggie Run" and "Little Billy Boy"), isn't here, making this collection somewhat incomplete. But as a basic hits primer, this tells the story of the "original Del-Vikings" in a thoroughly digestible way. ~ Cub Koda minimize Track ListingAlbum Information
©2009 About.com, a part of The New York Times Company. All rights reserved. |
|||||||||||||||