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| Artist |
The Newbeats |
| Label Name |
Ace |
| Song List |
1: Run Baby Run (2:59) 2: Hang on Sloopy (3:08) 3: Help (2:17) 4: Little Child (2:23) 5: It's Really Goodbye (3:03) 6: Oh, Girls, Girls (2:39) 7: Oh, Pretty Woman (3:01) 8: (I Can't Get No) Satisfaction (3:24) 9: This Old Heart (2:05) 10: Come See About Me (2:39) 11: Mean Wooly Willie (1:52) 12: Lookin' for Love (2:08) 13: Run Baby Run [Single Mono Version][*] (3:06) 14: Crying My Heart Out [*] (3:16) 15: Short on Love [*] (2:11) 16: Bird Dog [*] (2:31) 17: Evil Eva [*] (2:30) 18: My Yesterday Love [*] (2:50) 19: Top Secret [*] (2:09) 20: Hide the Moon [*] (2:58) 21: Don't Turn Me Loose [*] (2:18) 22: You and Me and Happiness [*] (2:03) 23: Swinger [*] (2:25) 24: Bad Dreams [*] (2:37) 25: Michelle de Ann [*] (3:00) 26: I've Been a Longtime Loving You [*] (2:02) 27: The Girls and the Boys [*] (2:40) |
| Format |
CD |
| Release Date |
2004 11 09 |
| Genre |
Rock |
| Style.Categories |
Frat Rock, Brill Building Pop, Pop/Rock |
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The Newbeats' third album was anchored by their 1965 smash hit "Run Baby Run," which had a sort of Four Seasons-meets-Motown sound. The rest of the record was, unfortunately, rather typical of the hasty way in which many rock LPs of the time were filled out. There were about half-a-dozen extraneous covers of mid-'60s hits by the likes of the Beatles, the Rolling Stones, Roy Orbison, and the Supremes. A handful of other mediocre numbers drew lightly on contemporary influences like Merseybeat, Motown (particularly on "This Old Heart"), Tommy Tucker's "Hi-Heel Sneakers" (whose gait is aped in "Lookin' for Love"), and the Four Seasons, all using one of the shrillest male falsetto voices (Larry Henley's) to grace 1960s rock recordings. [Ace's 2004 CD reissue added 15 bonus tracks, all taken from 1965-1968 singles. For the most part they were mainstream pop/rock efforts in varying styles, from Motown-lite and a near Middle Eastern polka hybrid called "Short on Love" to a cover of the Everly Brothers' "Bird Dog." There was also a mono version of "Run Baby Run" and a number called "Swinger" that sounded like a rejected James Bond theme.] ~ Richie Unterberger, All Music Guide
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