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The Clovers - The Clovers [Sequel] (1956)

Track listing:
  1. Love Love Love 2:05
  2. Lovey Dovey 2:44
  3. Yes, It's You 2:46
  4. Ting-A-Ling 3:06
  5. I Played The Fool 2:53
  6. Hey Miss Fannie 2:26
  7. Don't You Know It's You 3:06
  8. Middle Of The Night 3:03
  9. Blue Velvet 2:37
  10. Little Mama 2:56
  11. Crawlin 2:35
  12. Here Goes A Fool 2:53
  13. I've Got My Eyes On You 2:29
  14. Devil Or Angel 2:26
  15. Skylark 2:50
  16. Needless 3:17
  17. Comin On 2:48
  18. One Mint Julep 2:29
  19. Wonder Where My Baby's Gone 3:00
  20. Good Lovin' 3:00
  21. I Confess 2:39
  22. The Feeling Is So Good 2:45
  23. Down In The Alley 2:22
  24. Your Cash Ain't Nothin' But Trash 3:18

Notes


The Clovers' 1956 debut album has been remastered and augmented by ten additional cuts, including overlooked B-sides, early singles that were bypassed for the original LP, and a surprisingly jazzy outtake of "Your Cash Ain't Nothin' But Trash." Those forgotten sides have been well-preserved, and are as worthy of a hearing as any of the songs that did make it onto the original long-player. "Skylark," the slow ballad side of their first Atlantic single (and their first hit), was a reworking of the Earl Hines/Billy Eckstine version from a decade earlier, and sounds almost like a lost Ink spots track. "Needless" is the kind of soaring ballad that the Clovers did beautifully, but which was overshadowed on the radio and on jukeboxes by their up-tempo numbers. "Comin' On" is a slow blues with a sax solo that skirts effectively between hot and languid. "One Mint Julep" (possibly the best-selling record in the group's output), "Good Lovin'," "I Confess," "The Feeling Is So Good," and "Down in the Alley" are out and out rockers, the latter featuring a hot, brittle guitar solo that should have made it a rock & roll standard in its own time (yet, somehow, the song never charted). "Your Cash Ain't Nothin' But Trash" is a more swinging version of the released song and well worth hearing in this rendition. The production on the CD is very good, and the notes are thorough, although they do have some spelling and editing errors.