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The Rascals
Release Date: 08/28/2007
Original Release:  1971
# of Discs:   1
J&R Item # 988742_CD
UPC # 617742080629
Label: Collectors' Choice Music
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Track Details Credits Artist Related Shipping
Disc: 1
1. Right On sound samples  real  |  windows media
2. I Believe sound samples  real  |  windows media
3. Thank You Baby sound samples  real  |  windows media
4. You Don't Know sound samples  real  |  windows media
5. Nama sound samples  real  |  windows media
6. Almost Home sound samples  real  |  windows media
7. Letter, The sound samples  real  |  windows media
8. Ready for Love sound samples  real  |  windows media
9. Fortunes sound samples  real  |  windows media
10. Glory, Glory sound samples  real  |  windows media

To listen to sound clips, you'll need the most current version of the real player real or windows media windows media players, click to download the FREE software.
Performer: The Rascals
Engineer: Chuck Kirkpatrick; Jack Adams; Jimmy Douglass; Ron Albert; Don Casale
Producer: Arif Mardin
Distributor: Infinity Entertainment Gr

Notes: The Rascals: Dino Danelli, Felix Cavaliere, Gene Cornish. Personnel: Felix Cavaliere (vocals, keyboards); Eddie Brigati (vocals); Gene Cornish (guitar); Seldon Powell (saxophone, trumpet); Joe Farrell (saxophone); Joe Newman (trumpet); Dino Danelli (drums); David Brigati, The Sweet Inspirations (background vocals). Additional personnel: Eddie Brigati. Liner Note Author: Richie Unterberger. The final album the Rascals released on Atlantic in 1970 is perhaps a bittersweet memory for the band's members, and indeed certainly is for their die-hard fans. Its pluses included some of the best (if under-recognized) songs Felix Cavaliere had ever written, including the brilliant, rocking gospel number "I Believe," with vocal backing by the Sweet Inspirations. It also included the gutbucket gospel-ized funk of "Right On," with a smoking horn chart by Arif Mardin. Gene Cornish wrote one of his better songs, a the straight up rocker "You Don't Know." And Eddie Brigati turned in a stellar vocal performance on a cover of the Box Tops hit "The Letter." And "Ready for Love" is one of the most consistently jazzed-up soul groovers (with a smoking Hubert Laws flute break) that the band had turned in since "Groovin." But there was sadness too: for starters, Brigati left the group before the album was released and is not pictured on the back cover. And then there were the sales or, more accurately, the lack of them: the album barely scraped the bottom of the Top 200, and the singles, "Glory Glory" (with the Sweet Inspirations as well as a beautiful vocal solo by Cissy Houston), never got into the Top 40, but it was a positive note upon which to close the Rascals' relationship with the label. There are some really uneven moments here, but there are some stellar ones as well, and no serious fan of the Rascals should be without at least half the cuts here. In fact, in many ways, this is a stronger effort than See had been. The Rascals issued just two more records after this for Columbia. Gene Cornish left the group before the release of 1971's Peaceful World, and Cavaliere and Dino Danelli finally parted company after Island of Real appeared in 1972. ~ Thom Jurek
The kings of blue-eyed New Yawk soul, The Rascals (n� The Young Rascals) were veterans of local bar bands when they got signed by Atlantic in 1965 and scored the raucous #1 shouter "Good Lovin'." They eventually moved beyond their R&B roots to a more produced pop sound, and scored six Top Ten hits ranging from the dreamy "Groovin'" to the funky message song "People Got to Be Free," to the sublime elegance of "How Can I Be Sure," before disbanding in 1971.
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Contemp. Gospel  
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PID # 4188776


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