The Standells - The Hot Ones (1966/1994)
Artist: The Standells
Title: The Hot Ones
Year Of Release: 1966/1994
Label: Sundazed Music
Genre: Garage Rock, Psychedelic
Quality: Mp3 320 / Flac (image, .cue, log)
Total Time: 51:39
Total Size: 152/246 Mb (scans)
WebSite: Album Preview
Title: The Hot Ones
Year Of Release: 1966/1994
Label: Sundazed Music
Genre: Garage Rock, Psychedelic
Quality: Mp3 320 / Flac (image, .cue, log)
Total Time: 51:39
Total Size: 152/246 Mb (scans)
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:
1. Last Train To Clarksville (T. Boyce, B. Hart) - 2:43
2. Wild Thing (Chip Taylor) - J:5J
3. Sunshine Superman (Donovan Leitch) - 2:41
4. Sunny Afternoon (Ray Davies) - 3:22
5. Lil' Red Riding Hood (R. Blackwell) - 2:43
6. Eleanor Rigby (J. Lennon, P. McCartney) - 2:73
7. Black Is Black (Hayes, Wadey, Grainger) - 233
8. Summer In The City (J. Sebastian, M. Sebastian, S. Boone) -2:J
9. You Were The One (Ed Cobb) - 2:29
10. School Girl (Graham Gouldman) - 2:18
11. Ten O'clock Scholar (Ed Cobb) - 3:00
12. When I Was A Cowboy (H. Ledbetter) - 2:39
13. Don't Tell Me What To Do (T. Valentino) - 2:56
14. Misty Lane (M. Siegel) - 3:10
15. Standells' Love Theme (Ed Cobb, B. McElroy) - 11:18
Dick (Jose Taco) Dodd - Drums, Guitar
Larry Tamblyn - Piano, Organ, Guitar, Vocals
Pave (Super Hick) Burke - Bass, 12-string Guitar
Tony (Mr.Parmesan) Valentino - Lead Guitar
Having the Standells do an album of 1966 Top 40 covers -- in 1966 -- was a boneheaded idea to begin with, and hardly worthy of revisitation. This CD reissue eliminates of a couple of the ten songs (which are available on other Standells reissues on Sundazed), and adds seven rare tracks of mild interest, most of which were previously unissued, or previously unavailable in the U.S. These include the early 1965 cut "You Were the One," and a vaguely Beatleish number; a couple of outtakes from their 1966 Try It album, including a reasonably nifty 11-minute instrumental jam, their unreleased version of "Misty Lane," which was done better by The Chocolate Watch Band; a rendition of the Graham Gouldman song "School Girl," and the awful, vaudevillian-flavored single they issued under the name the Sllednats.