Time Peace: The Rascals' Greatest Hits The Rascals

Album Info

Album Veröffentlichung:
1968

HRA-Veröffentlichung:
31.03.2014

Label: Warner Music Group

Genre: R&B

Subgenre: Funk

Interpret: The Rascals

Das Album enthält Albumcover

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  • 1 I Ain't Gonna Eat Out My Heart Anymore 02:43
  • 2 Good Lovin' 02:31
  • 3 You Better Run 02:28
  • 4 Come On Up 02:46
  • 5 Mustang Sally 04:01
  • 6 Love Is A Beautiful Thing 02:32
  • 7 In The Midnight Hour 04:01
  • 8 I've Been Lonely Too Long 03:01
  • 9 Groovin' 02:30
  • 10 A Girl Like You 02:49
  • 11 How Can I Be Sure 02:54
  • 12 It's Wonderful 02:16
  • 13 Easy Rollin' 02:55
  • 14 A Beautiful Morning 02:32
  • Total Runtime 39:59

Info zu Time Peace: The Rascals' Greatest Hits

All songs written or co-written by Felix Cavaliere and/or Eddie Brigati except 'I Ain't Gonna Eat Out My Heart Anymore' (Pam Sawyer/Laurie Burton), 'Good Lovin'' (Rudy Clark/Arthur Resnick), 'Mustang Sally' (Bonnie Rice) and 'In The Midnight Hour' (Wilson Pickett/Steve Cropper). Arguably the greatest greatest-hits album of the '60s. A White-soul classic.

'The Rascals should probably be considered one of the best white hard rock bands recording in the rhythm and blues idiom...TIME PEACE...offers an opportunity to review in retrospect just exactly what the Rascals have contributed to rock music...' (Rolling Stone)

Eddie Brigati, vocals
Felix Cavaliere, keyboards, vocals
Gene Cornish, guitar
Dino Danelli, drums

Engineered by Adrian Barber, Chris Huston, Roy Cicala, Tom Dowd
Produced by The Rascals

Digitally remastered


The Rascals
formerly known as The Young Rascals, are one of the most influential, and artistically important American bands in Rock and Roll history. In a time dominated by the English rock acts of the British Invasion, The Rascals not only survived but thrived.

The post-twist New York, New Jersey, and Long Island club scenes bred the band, an outfit whose sound grew more sophisticated as time went on but stayed rooted in the blue-eyed soul that was its first reason for being. At first a hard-hitting band reminiscent of the early Animals, the Rascals drew from the same well that fed the then-burgeoning garage rock scene.

They would go on to lead the way for Blue Eyed Soul to Folk Rock to Protest to Civil Rights, blending white Pop melodies with black soul and R&B muscle. Though they never brandished their politics like some bands, the Rascals truly lived theirs, fighting discrimination by demanding that a black act appear on the bill at each of its concerts.

Their music would span the entire decade from the early Go-Go dance parties right through the psychedelic era — and beyond.

The band released numerous top ten singles in the mid– and late-1960s, including “How Can I Be Sure”, “Come On Up”, “You Better Run”, “I’ve Been Lonely Too Long”, “Beautiful Morning”, and the #1 hits “Good Lovin’”, “Groovin’”, and “People Got to Be Free”.

They went their separate ways in the early 70’s, finally reuniting for one night in May of 1997 when Steven Van Zandt inducted them into the prestigious Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.

And now the day music historians never thought would happen, The Rascals’ original lineup — Felix Cavaliere, Gene Cornish, Eddie Brigati and Dino Danelli — have reunited for their first public performances in 40 years with “Once Upon A Dream,” a combination concert/theatrical event produced and directed by Steven Van Zandt and lighting/projection wizard Marc Brickman.

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