Spanky & Our Gang - Like To Get To Know You (1968)

  • 26 Oct, 17:44
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Artist:
Title: Like To Get To Know You
Year Of Release: 1968
Label: Mercury Records
Genre: Folk Rock, Psychedelic Rock, Pop Rock
Quality: 320 kbps | FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 00:32:18
Total Size: 75 mb | 209 mb
WebSite:

Tracklist:

01. Spanky & Our Gang - The Swingin' Gate
02. Spanky & Our Gang - Prescription For The Blues
03. Spanky & Our Gang - Three Ways From Tomorrow
04. Spanky & Our Gang - My Bill
05. Spanky & Our Gang - Sunday Mornin'
06. Spanky & Our Gang - Echoes (Everybody's Talkin')
07. Spanky & Our Gang - Suzanne
08. Spanky & Our Gang - Stuperflabbergasted
09. Spanky & Our Gang - Like To Get To Know You
10. Spanky & Our Gang - Chick-A-Ding-Ding
11. Spanky & Our Gang - Stardust
12. Spanky & Our Gang - Coda (Like To Get To Know You)

Spanky & Our Gang had been unhappy with various aspects of their self-titled debut album, and as a result they recruited two new producers, Stuart Scharf and Bob Dorough, who were more in sympathy with how the group actually sounded. Recorded somewhat on the fly, Like to Get to Know You was the first album to reflect what the group considered their own sound, and was harder-rocking, bluesier, and more inventive in its folk stylings than anything on their debut album. The mix of sounds was actually quite startling in its own time and is engaging even 30 some years later, with various top New York and Los Angeles-based session musicians and a cadre of Chicago bluesmen adding their talents to the band's core instrumentalists. Elaine "Spanky" McFarlane gives convincing and honest performances, and Lefty Baker acquits himself well as a singer. The group opens new vocal territory on the six-part harmony "Sunday Morning," and they do arguably the best cover ever of Leonard Cohen's "Suzanne," which dazzles with its tempo changes and the sheer variety of timbres employed. Side two of the original album was actually a prelude to their next LP, containing elements of conceptual rock and made up of songs that segue thematically from one to another. As an album, Like to Get to Know You was of its time, a conceptual record that was finely executed and fascinating to hear; it was perhaps taken a little less seriously, given the image of Spanky & Our Gang for light pop/rock.


  • mufty77
  •  01:32
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Many thanks for lossless.
  • GalacticKat
  •  06:51
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Many thanks for lossless.
  • mldekker
  •  08:46
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Met Veel Dank !!
  • pyxlax
  •  23:35
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Much Obliged!!