The Doodletown Pipers - Sing-Along' 67 (Expanded Edition) (1967)
Artist: The Doodletown Pipers
Title: Sing-Along' 67 (Expanded Edition)
Year Of Release: 1967
Label: Epic/Legacy
Genre: Pop, Vocal, Easy Listening
Quality: 320 kbps | FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 00:53:40
Total Size: 125 mb | 308 mb
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:Title: Sing-Along' 67 (Expanded Edition)
Year Of Release: 1967
Label: Epic/Legacy
Genre: Pop, Vocal, Easy Listening
Quality: 320 kbps | FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 00:53:40
Total Size: 125 mb | 308 mb
WebSite: Album Preview
01. The Doodletown Pipers - Music to Watch Girls By (Mono Version)
02. The Doodletown Pipers - Born Free (Mono Version)
03. The Doodletown Pipers - Sweet Maria (Mono Version)
04. The Doodletown Pipers - Somethin' Stupid (Mono Version)
05. The Doodletown Pipers - Young at Heart (Mono Version)
06. The Doodletown Pipers - Winchester Catherdral (Mono Version)
07. The Doodletown Pipers - Almost Persuaded (Mono Version)
08. The Doodletown Pipers - Spanish Flea (Mono Version)
09. The Doodletown Pipers - Somewhere My Love (Mono Version)
10. The Doodletown Pipers - Let's Fall In Love (Mono Version)
11. The Doodletown Pipers - Music to Watch Girls By (Stereo Version)
12. The Doodletown Pipers - Born Free (Stereo Version)
13. The Doodletown Pipers - Sweet Maria (Stereo Version)
14. The Doodletown Pipers - Somethin' Stupid (Stereo Version)
15. The Doodletown Pipers - Young at Heart (Stereo Version)
16. The Doodletown Pipers - Winchester Catherdral (Stereo Version)
17. The Doodletown Pipers - Almost Persuaded (Stereo Version)
18. The Doodletown Pipers - Spanish Flea (Stereo Version)
19. The Doodletown Pipers - Somewhere My Love (Stereo Version)
20. The Doodletown Pipers - Let's Fall In Love (Stereo Version)
There's an old cliché that suggests if you remember the '60s, you weren't actually there the Doodletown Pipers' Sing-Along 67 proves the hypothesis true, and while the title alone dates the album to the Summer of Love, there's absolutely no trace of sex, drugs, or revolution in the group's squeaky-clean harmonies and Jimmy Bryant's whiter-than-rice arrangements. Stu Phillips' production is all 90-degree angles, and the material is dandelion fluff that spans from "Somethin' Stupid" to "Spanish Flea" to "Winchester Cathedral" it's an interpretation of rock & roll summoned from an alternate reality where JFK still lives, the Vietnam War never happened, and a generation merely got high on life. A potent reminder that Doodletown isn't a place, baby it's a frame of mind.