The Merry-Go-Round - The Merry-Go-Round (1967)
Artist: The Merry-Go-Round
Title: The Merry-Go-Round
Year Of Release: 1967
Label: A&M Records
Genre: Folk Rock, Pop Rock, Garage Rock
Quality: 320 kbps | FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 00:30:53
Total Size: 72 mb | 190 mb
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:Title: The Merry-Go-Round
Year Of Release: 1967
Label: A&M Records
Genre: Folk Rock, Pop Rock, Garage Rock
Quality: 320 kbps | FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 00:30:53
Total Size: 72 mb | 190 mb
WebSite: Album Preview
01. The Merry-Go-Round - Live
02. The Merry-Go-Round - Time Will Show The Wiser
03. The Merry-Go-Round - On Your Way Out
04. The Merry-Go-Round - Gonna Fight The War
05. The Merry-Go-Round - Had To Run Around
06. The Merry-Go-Round - We're In Love
07. The Merry-Go-Round - You're A Very Lovely Woman
08. The Merry-Go-Round - Where Have You Been All Of My Life
09. The Merry-Go-Round - Early In The Morning
10. The Merry-Go-Round - Low Down
11. The Merry-Go-Round - A Clown's No Good
12. The Merry-Go-Round - Gonna Leave You Alone
The Merry-Go-Round's self-titled 1967 album is a breathtaking blend of chiming folk-rock guitars, British Invasion harmony vocals, baroque pop arrangements, and pure pop songcraft that sounds daisy fresh in 2005. The Beatles are a huge influence, and there is plenty of McCartney in Emitt Rhodes' sweet vocals and their vocal harmonies. You can hear the Byrds a bit, some Left Banke (especially on the sweeping orchestral pop gem "You're a Very Lovely Woman"), some L.A. garage on rockers like "Where Have You Been All My Life" and "Lowdown"; the group definitely didn't exist in a vacuum. But there are some songs that are quite unique and original like "Time Will Show the Wiser" with its otherworldly sped up and backward guitars and enchanting melody, the bouncy and warm hit single "Live," and "Had to Run Around," an exquisite ballad whose tender beauty foreshadows Rhodes' classic 1970 Emitt Rhodes album. These songs, and the overall quality of the songs and the group's loose and earthy playing, help lift the album above the pack and should lead to it being mentioned in the same breath as Love's first album or Buffalo Springfield's first when talking about classic American debut albums of the '60s.