Artist: The McCoys
Title Of Album Hang On Sloopy/You Make Me Feel So Good
Year Of Release: 1965-67/1992
Label (Catalog#) : Repertoire [REP 4294-WY]
Country: USA
Genre: Pop Rock, Beat, Garage Rock
Quality: FLAC (*tracks + .cue,scans)
Bitrate: Lossless
Total Time: 01:16:34
Total Size: 437mb(+3%)
The McCoys' first two albums, Hang on Sloopy and You Make Me Feel So Good, were combined on one CD by Immediate in the early '90s. Both records are pretty uneven -- any casual fan will be satisfied with a hits collection -- but they have their moments. However, they will only be of interest to hardcore fans, since there's too much filler for anyone who's not a devoted fan to wade through.
This Indiana group was still in high school when they were tapped by the Strangeloves production team of Feldman-Goldstein-Gottehrer as a vehicle for their material in 1965. Their first effort, "Hang on Sloopy," was a monster number one smash, built around a riff and chorus that ranks with "Louie Louie" and "La Bamba" as a garage band perennial with its compelling, elemental simplicity. Featuring the lead vocals and lead guitar of a young Rick Derringer, they went on to cut a lot of similar chunky, innocuous pop/rock over the next couple years with fair success. The "Hang on Sloopy" sound-alike "Fever" was their only other Top Ten entry, and the Ritchie Valens cover "C'Mon Let's Go" their only other Top 40 hit.
Pin UpsThe McCoys recorded very little original material during their early years at Bang Records; most of it was supplied by the Feldman-Goldstein-Gottehrer production team, much of which consisted of unexceptional derivations of the "Hang on Sloopy" prototype. Notable exceptions were the folky "Sorrow," covered for a Top Ten hit by the Merseys in Great Britain (and covered by David Bowie on Pin Ups a decade later), and the adventurous Middle Eastern-tinged garage psychedelia of "Don't Worry Mother," their best cut besides "Hang on Sloopy." The McCoys proved unusually durable after their career as a teen pop band; in the late '60s, they broke from their Bang producers to record psychedelic and progressive rock for Mercury. Most of the group joined Johnny Winter's backup band in the early '70s, and in 1973 Rick Derringer joined the Edgar Winter group as lead guitarist and vocalist, after which he had a successful hard rock solo career.
Tracklist
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01. Meet the McCoys 2:00
02. Hang on Sloopy 2:57
03. Fever 2:47
04. Sorrow 2:02
05. If You Tell a Lie 1:58
06. I Don't Mind 2:37
07. Stubborn Kind of Fellow 2:15
08. I Can't Help Falling in Love 2:05
09. All I Really Want to Do 1:59
10. Papa's Got a Brand New Bag 1:57
11. I Can't Explain It 2:35
12. mHigh Heel Sneakers 3:08
13. Stormy Monday Blues 4:00
14. Say Those Magic Words 2:50
15. Everyday I Have to Cry 2:22
16. (You Make Me Feel) So Good 2:38
17. The Dynamite 2:09
18. Drive My Car 2:26
19. Mr. Summer 2:44
20. Stagger Lee 2:31
21. Sweets for My Sweet 2:43
22. Smokey Joe's Cafe 2:17
23. Little People 2:16
24. Runaway 2:58
25. C'mon Let's Go 2:38
Bonus Tracks:
26. Up and Down 2:38
27. Don't Worry Mother Your Son's Heart Is Pure 3:17
28. Ko-Ko 2:18
29. I Got to Go Back 2:44
30. C'mon Let's Go (7" Mix) 2:38
Personnel:
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Rick Derringer (vocals, guitar)
Randy Zehringer (drums)
Ronnie Brandon (keyboards)
Randy Hobbs (bass, 1963-69)
Bobby Peterson (keyboards)
All thanks to original releaser
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Изменил: sirk по причине: RE-UP