Don & Dewey - Jungle Hop (1991)
Artist: Don & Dewey
Title: Jungle Hop
Year Of Release: 1991
Label: Ace
Genre: Rock & Roll, Rhythm & Blues
Quality: Mp3 320 / Flac (image, .cue, log)
Total Time: 60:59
Total Size: 154/237 Mb (scans)
WebSite: Album Preview
Title: Jungle Hop
Year Of Release: 1991
Label: Ace
Genre: Rock & Roll, Rhythm & Blues
Quality: Mp3 320 / Flac (image, .cue, log)
Total Time: 60:59
Total Size: 154/237 Mb (scans)
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:
01. Jungle Hop
02. A Little Love
03. Hey Thelma
04. Baby Gotta Party
05. Miss Sue
06. Good Morning (Take 4)
07. Leavin' It All Up To You
08. Jelly Bean
09. Sweet Talk (Take 13)
10. Farmer John (Take 1/Slow Version)
11. Just A Little Lovin'
12. The Letter
13. When The Sun Has Begun To Shine
14. Bim Bam
15. Day By Day (Take 3)
16. Koko Joe
17. Justine
18. Little Sally Walker
19. Kill Me
20. Big Boy Pete
21. Farmer John
22. Pink Champagne
23. Jump Awhile
24. Mammer-Jammer
25. Get Your Hat
Man, is this stuff great! So why don't you already have this in your collection? Perhaps you haven't heard of it yet, or perhaps you've just heard of Don & Dewey -- a pair of high school friends who started performing as a duo after playing in the Squires together -- who recorded many sides for Specialty Records in the late 50s. They never had hits on their own, but they wrote and recorded songs that others brought to the charts, including the Sonny Bono-penned "Koko Joe," and the originals "Big Boy Pete," "Jungle Hop," and the perennial garage rock classic "Farmer John." That alone suggests that they were first-rate songwriters, but their talents run deep; these may be the standouts, but their other singles and the songs not issued until this 1991 collection are uniformly excellent. And that's just one side of the group. Just as importantly, they were dynamite musicians, rocking hard (Dewey Terry played a mean guitar, and Don "Sugarcane" Harris wasn't a slouch himself on the instrument, though his violin talents weren't fully appreciated here.) Supported by the Specialty house band (the same band that played on Little Richard's records) and singing delirious tag-team vocals make this sound insanely alive with life. There isn't a bad track here; and even if they didn't have hits and are still a cult item, they left behind a hell of a legacy, as evidenced by this necessary disc.