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RATINGS:
Material ***
Presentation and Audio **** to *****
"…Love Is Kinda Crazy…"
Formed as far back as 1965 and hailing out of Jacksonville, Florida – the all-American Pop & Beat Band CLASSICS IV hit career pay-dirt with their re-arrangement of a 1966 song called "Spooky" and its release on 45 in late September 1967. Imperial 66259 caught the sensual cool of the Summer of Love perfectly and would soon race up to No.3 on the US Billboard charts in early 1968. It even made inroads in good old Blighty who liked it - but were less excited – so "Spooky" made a reasonable but slightly underwhelming No.46 there when released February 1968 on Liberty Records LBF 15051 (none of their four LP platters got an album release in the UK).
The US Imperial Records album of the same name inevitably followed in March 1968 - as did a slew of hipster cover versions stretching forward at least two years – not least of all by our own chanteuse of the airwaves Dusty Springfield. Her September 1970 45-Single on Philips 6006 045 (although relegated to a B-side of "How Can I Be Sure") almost matched the shimmering silk vibe of the original. A double-whammy combo of sides if there was one.
And that is where our intrepid but spooked reissue heroes over at Beat Goes On Records in Ing-ger-land come a shimmying in. Here are the kinda crazy details…
UK released Friday, 9 November 2018 (December 2018 in the USA) - "Spooky/Mamas And Papas-Soul Train/Traces/Song" by CLASSICS IV on Beat Goes On BGOCD1367 (Barcode 5017261213679) is a Compilation that offers Four Albums Remastered onto 2CDs and plays out as follows:
CD1 (52:49 minutes):
1. Daydream Believer [Side 1]
2. You Are My Sunshine
3. The Letter
4. By The Time I Get To Phoenix
5. Goin' Out Of My Mind
6. Mary, Mary Row Your Boat [side 2]
7. Bus Stop
8. Just Between You And Me
9. Poor People
10. Book A Trip
11. Spooky
Tracks 1 to 11 are their debut album "Spooky" – released March 1968 in the USA on Imperial LP-12371 (Stereo) – no UK release
12. Soul Train [Side 1]
13. Bed Of Roses
14. Strange Changes
15. Ladies Man
16. Waves
17. Stormy [Side 2]
18. Mama's And Papa's
19. Pity The Fool
20. It Ain't Necessarily So
21. 24 Hours Of Loneliness
22. The Girl From Ipanema (Garota De Ipanema)
Tracks 12 to 22 are their second studio album "Mamas And Papas/Soul Train" – released December 1968 in the USA on Imperial LP-12407 (Stereo) – no UK release
CD2 (61:36 minutes):
1. Everyday With You Girl [Side 1]
2. Mr. Blue
3. Sunny
4. Free
5. Traces
6. Something I'll Remember
7. Our Day Will Come [Side 2]
8. Rainy Day
9. Traffic Jam
10. Sentimental Lady
11. Nobody Loves You But Me
Tracks 1 to 11 are their third studio album "Song" – released April 1969 in the USA on Imperial LP-12429 (Stereo) – no UK release
1. Everyday With You Girl [Side 1]
2. Mr. Blue
3. Sunny
4. Free
5. Traces
6. Something I'll Remember
7. Our Day Will Come [Side 2]
8. Rainy Day
9. Traffic Jam
10. Sentimental Lady
11. Nobody Loves You But Me
Tracks 1 to 11 are their third studio album "Song" – released April 1969 in the USA on Imperial LP-12429 (Stereo) – no UK release
12. Where Did All The Good Times Go [Side 1]
13. The Comic
14. Cherryhill Park
15. Pick Up The Pieces
16. We Miss You
17. God Knows I Loved Her
18. Midnight [Side 2]
19. Most Of All
20. Ain't It The Truth
21. The Funniest Thing
22. Nobody Loves You But Me
Tracks 12 to 22 are their fourth studio album "Song" (credited to Dennis Yost & The Classics IV) – released August 1970 in the USA on Imperial LST-11033 (Stereo) – no UK release
13. The Comic
14. Cherryhill Park
15. Pick Up The Pieces
16. We Miss You
17. God Knows I Loved Her
18. Midnight [Side 2]
19. Most Of All
20. Ain't It The Truth
21. The Funniest Thing
22. Nobody Loves You But Me
Tracks 12 to 22 are their fourth studio album "Song" (credited to Dennis Yost & The Classics IV) – released August 1970 in the USA on Imperial LST-11033 (Stereo) – no UK release
The 22-page booklet within the outer card slipcase offers all front and rear artwork repro'd across the first eleven pages – that memory-fest followed by in-depth CHARLES WARING liner notes (contributor for Mojo) where he valiantly tries to get us to believe that their music was good – most if it was not. But it also involves interviews – internet references – and great ANDREW THOMPSON Remasters that really make these well-produced albums shine. To the tunes…
Their "Spooky" debut album opens on a weedy moment - a cover of the popular Monkees hit "Daydream Believer" but is soon redeemed by a Funky Groove meets Garage Swagger & Lip remodel of an old 1930s standard "You Are My Sunshine" - Dennis Yost channelling his inner James Brown in stage-exiting pain (yow!). Next up is another well produced cover - "The Letter" by The Box Tops. And for sure by now, you have noticed that there are too many covers and therein lies the danger. This is compounded by an awful deep-voiced stab at the Jimmy Webb classic made famous by Glen Campbell "By The Time I Get To Phoenix" - but they slightly redeem themselves with a Frankie Valli type vocal on the Little Anthony & The Imperials soft-Soul gem "Goin' Out Of My Head". At last we get an original song - "Mary, Mary Row Your Boat" closing out Side 1. Written by J.R. Cobb it sounds similar to the "Spooky" groove but with a more upbeat feel.
Side 2 opens with a stab at The Hollies' 1966 pop hit "Bus Stop" - Classics IV going all Jam 'Start' with their jerky-rhythm interpretation. More originals with "Just Between You And me" and "Poor People" but they are both average - the first plodding - the second la-la-la dippy silly. Love with a pill is their destination in "Book A Trip" - a good tune - and of course the album finishes with the spectacular "Spooky" - here in glorious Stereo and shimmering in all the right kinda-groovy places (let's go to a movie with a spooky little girl like you).
The second album from 1968 goes a little more Rhythm 'n' Blues - the boys trying to ride that Train to Groovesville. Both "Bed Of Roses" and the opener "Soul Train" try hard to make their brass and strings-charts mark but the Dwayne Eddy guitar twang of "Strange Changes" is better. "Ladies Man" goes on about cheaters and again the Buie/Cobb written "Waves" sounds too much like poor-man's 5th Dimension. The ever-so-slightly-soundalike "Stormy" to "Spooky" was a successful 'you are the sunshine baby' 45. Imperial 63328 paired it with "24 Hours Of Loneliness" from Side 2 of the album. But the rest of the LP - beautifully produced or no - feels like Lounge Music - and not in a good way.
Come 1969 and album number three "Traces" the love-you-more-and-more-and-more saccharine is poured on with regrettable tunes like "Everyday With You Girl" and "Mr. Blue" and an elevator-ready "Our Day Will Come". They go back to that-winning 'Spooky' feel by going at "Sunny" - that saxophone solo giving it some serious muscle. Two of the third's albums better tracks follow - the out-of-jail "Free" (chains and sorrow, a thing of the past) and the acoustic-driven title track "Traces" - a soft-soap faded-photographs ballad - the sort of ribbons-from-her-hair gloop that might have ended the credits of a movie that's trying to hard to be sincere. And on it goes - a weedy and avoidable LP.
By the time we get to album number four - they are now credited as Dennis Yost & The Classic IV and the Production values are full-on professional. Guitarist James R. Cobb and Producer/Arranger Buddy Buie penned most of the "Song" LP - but again it's too many overcooked Donny Osmond 'Puppy Love' type tunes with syrupy lyrics and walls of violins. By the time you get to "God Knows I Loved Her" - you've had enough of the second-rate Frankie Valli soundalikes.
They of the one-word hit-song wonders ("Spooky", "Stormy" and "Traces") were an American chart phenomenon and yet these albums are available for under a pound on well-known auction sites. Unfortunately when you have to wade through them - you can so understand why. Dennis Host would go on to form and nail more Radio-Friendly success with Atlanta Rhythm Section (no less than seven BGO releases of their catalogue are featured on the rear inlay advert insert - see photos).
"Spooky/Mamas And Papas-Soul Train/Traces/Song" by CLASSICS IV isn't genius for damn sure - and for my palette - too much of this admittedly beautifully recorded stuff is ordinary and dismissible (very three-star stuff). But fans will need to own it and you must give the nod to BGO who have once again fed our Transatlantic fixation with another quality presentation. Just go easy on that 'they'll all be like the cool and sassy Spooky' thought process...