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Very Best of Chad & Jeremy (CD - 2000)

Very Best of Chad & Jeremy (CD - 2000)

UPC: 00030206609820

As low as $13.46 from Alibris

Artist: Chad & Jeremy

Label: Varese (Japan)

Genre: Oldies - British Invasion

Album Description: Chad & Jeremy: Chad Stuart, Jeremy Clyde.Producers include: Van McCoy, Shel Talmy, John Barry, Jimmy Haskell, Larry Marks.Compilation producer: Cary E. Mansfield.Recorded in 1964-1966. Includes liner notes by Dawn Eden.Digitally remastered by Ron Furmanek (Januar... read more

Chad & Jeremy: Chad Stuart, Jeremy Clyde.

Producers include: Van McCoy, Shel Talmy, John Barry, Jimmy Haskell, Larry Marks.

Compilation producer: Cary E. Mansfield.

Recorded in 1964-1966. Includes liner notes by Dawn Eden.

Digitally remastered by Ron Furmanek (January 2000, Polygram Studio).

Liner Note Author: Dawn Eden.

Recording information: EMI Abbey Road Studios, London, England.

Although this 18-song best-of duplicates much of what was on the best previous Chad & Jeremy CD compilation (One Way's The Best of Chad & Jeremy), this release is definitely the superior option. Its most crucial edge is the inclusion of four songs from 1965-1966 Columbia singles, as the One Way disc was limited to the material they released on World Artists. In addition, the Varese Sarabande anthology has comprehensive liner notes, songwriting credits, and original release date info, whereas the One Way disc had none of those things at all. This CD still concentrates on the World Artists sides from 1964-1965, including all of the hit singles. Some of the inessential covers of hits and standards from the One Way compilation are axed, but decent original tunes like "My How the Time Goes By" are retained. The four Columbia sides include the three Top 40 hits "Before and After" and "I Don't Wanna Lose You Baby" (both written by Van McCoy), and "Distant Shores" (by future Chicago and Blood, Sweat & Tears producer James Guercio). Oddest of all, though, is the 1966 single "Teenage Failure," a satirical folk-rocker in which writer Jeremy Clyde does a middling parody of protest singers in the sub-Bob Dylan mold. As British Invasion duos performing folk music with a folk-rock tinge go, Peter & Gordon definitely still have the edge; nonetheless, Chad & Jeremy make for pleasant if undemanding listening. Speaking of which, a photo of the somewhat similar-looking Peter & Gordon was apparently mistaken for Chad & Jeremy and snuck past quality control into page three of these liner notes (with no accompanying label to indicate that it was not Chad & Jeremy), unless this was an inside joke on someone's part. ~ Richie Unterberger

Alone among their British Invasion cohorts, Chad Stuart and Jeremy Clyde came directly out of the folk clubs of London. The duo specialized in folk-tinged acoustic guitar-based soft pop, like Simon and Garfunkel crossed with a dash of Petula Clark.

Because Chad And Jeremy only released a few albums and didn't have much US chart success beyond the lilting "A Summer Song" and the sprightly "Yesterday's Gone," the several available anthologies all contain pretty much the same material, such as their superior cover of Billy J. Kramer and the Dakotas' Lennon-McCartney-penned hit "From a Window." While THE VERY BEST OF CHAD AND JEREMY covers most of this same material, it adds a few tracks not available on other compilations, including "Before and After," the wistful "Distant Shores," and the surprisingly rocking "Teenage Failure." minimize

 
 

Album Description

  • Chad & Jeremy: Chad Stuart, Jeremy Clyde.

    Producers include: Van McCoy, Shel Talmy, John Barry, Jimmy Haskell, Larry Marks.

    Compilation producer: Cary E. Mansfield.

    Recorded in 1964-1966. Includes liner notes by Dawn Eden.

    Digitally remastered by Ron Furmanek (January 2000, Polygram Studio).

    Liner Note Author: Dawn Eden.

    Recording information: EMI Abbey Road Studios, London, England.

    Although this 18-song best-of duplicates much of what was on the best previous Chad & Jeremy CD compilation (One Way's The Best of Chad & Jeremy), this release is definitely the superior option. Its most crucial edge is the inclusion of four songs from 1965-1966 Columbia singles, as the One Way disc was limited to the material they released on World Artists. In addition, the Varese Sarabande anthology has comprehensive liner notes, songwriting credits, and original release date info, whereas the One Way disc had none of those things at all. This CD still concentrates on the World Artists sides from 1964-1965, including all of the hit singles. Some of the inessential covers of hits and standards from the One Way compilation are axed, but decent original tunes like "My How the Time Goes By" are retained. The four Columbia sides include the three Top 40 hits "Before and After" and "I Don't Wanna Lose You Baby" (both written by Van McCoy), and "Distant Shores" (by future Chicago and Blood, Sweat & Tears producer James Guercio). Oddest of all, though, is the 1966 single "Teenage Failure," a satirical folk-rocker in which writer Jeremy Clyde does a middling parody of protest singers in the sub-Bob Dylan mold. As British Invasion duos performing folk music with a folk-rock tinge go, Peter & Gordon definitely still have the edge; nonetheless, Chad & Jeremy make for pleasant if undemanding listening. Speaking of which, a photo of the somewhat similar-looking Peter & Gordon was apparently mistaken for Chad & Jeremy and snuck past quality control into page three of these liner notes (with no accompanying label to indicate that it was not Chad & Jeremy), unless this was an inside joke on someone's part. ~ Richie Unterberger

    Alone among their British Invasion cohorts, Chad Stuart and Jeremy Clyde came directly out of the folk clubs of London. The duo specialized in folk-tinged acoustic guitar-based soft pop, like Simon and Garfunkel crossed with a dash of Petula Clark.

    Because Chad And Jeremy only released a few albums and didn't have much US chart success beyond the lilting "A Summer Song" and the sprightly "Yesterday's Gone," the several available anthologies all contain pretty much the same material, such as their superior cover of Billy J. Kramer and the Dakotas' Lennon-McCartney-penned hit "From a Window." While THE VERY BEST OF CHAD AND JEREMY covers most of this same material, it adds a few tracks not available on other compilations, including "Before and After," the wistful "Distant Shores," and the surprisingly rocking "Teenage Failure."



Album Information

  • UPC:
    00030206609820
  • Release Date:
    Mar 07, 2000
  • Type:
    Performer
  • Genre:
    Oldies - British Invasion
  • Label:
    Varese (Japan)
  • Distrbutor:
    Universal Di
  • Engineer:
    Kevin Reeves; Mike Jarratt
  • Country of Origin:
    USA
  • Original Release Year:
    2000
  • # of Discs:
    1
  • Studio / Live:
    Studio
  • Mono / Stereo:
    Stereo

 
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