The Two Things In One - Together Forever: The Music City Sessions (2011)
Artist: The Two Things In One
Title: Together Forever: The Music City Sessions
Year Of Release: 2011
Label: Ace Records
Genre: R&B, Soul
Quality: flac lossless
Total Time: 01:10:23
Total Size: 464 mb
WebSite: Album Preview
TracklistTitle: Together Forever: The Music City Sessions
Year Of Release: 2011
Label: Ace Records
Genre: R&B, Soul
Quality: flac lossless
Total Time: 01:10:23
Total Size: 464 mb
WebSite: Album Preview
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01. Let's Get It Together
02. Over Dose (Of Your Love)
03. Together Forever
04. Snag Nasty
05. You're No Good
06. Dreams
07. Stop Telling Me
08. Teardrops
09. Walk On By
10. Silly Song
11. Thangs
12. Confusion (early version)
13. Ohio
14. I Was Made To Love Her
15. Canteloupe Island
16. Close The Door
As a self-contained African-American soul-rock band from the Bay Area that began releasing records when they were high schoolers still in their mid-teens, the Two Things in One were a remarkable story. This CD combines both sides of three rare 1971-1973 singles on the Music City label with ten previously unissued tracks from the same era, essentially adding up to the lost album they never got to issue while they were active. Their tale - explained at great colorful length via extended quotes from group members in the 24-page booklet, which also has fine vintage photos and memorabilia - is more compelling than their music, which is longer on promise than top-rank originality. It's still interesting and unusual stuff apart from the novel circumstances, in part because it's not as heavily influenced by soul stars like Sly Stone as many such bands were, though those ingredients are there. Instead, it's a lively stew of soul, funk, and rock that can at times sound more like soul-influenced rock than rock-influenced soul. Indeed, sometimes it's quite a bit like Traffic (particularly courtesy of the heavy organ, which made the Allman Brothers' "Dreams" a natural to cover) or even Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young (whose "Ohio" is also covered) at their hardest-rocking. Quite a bit of early-'70s Stevie Wonder comes through as well in the singing and sophisticated arrangements. Sometimes it's like hearing a mixture of varying doses of all those names at once, though more pronounced R&B leanings are heard in cuts like "Snag Nasty," an instrumental in the Meters vein. What they didn't have were songs on the level of the material by these reference points - an understandable shortfall given their tender ages, but one that's present nonetheless. Too, the hook in one of their singles, "Together Forever," was highly reminiscent of the theme to the movie Midnight Cowboy, which one of the members acknowledges in the liners. The level of musicianship is such, however, that it's regretful the group didn't get to record more and get developed by a more sympathetic label, as detailed in the notes.