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A Fool to Care: Classic Recordings 1960-1977
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Barnes and Noble
A Fool to Care: Classic Recordings 1960-1977
Current price: $20.99
Barnes and Noble
A Fool to Care: Classic Recordings 1960-1977
Current price: $20.99
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It's missing a few obscure singles from the late 1960s, but otherwise, this two-CD anthology has everything
recorded in the '60s and '70s, including the master take of everything he did for producers
and
. His sole national hit, 1961's "I'm a Fool to Care," couldn't help but recall
in its lazy drawl and New Orleans R&B backing; in the version here that adds a brief spoken intro,
even states, "though I sound like my friend the Fat Man, this is Joe Barry." For better or worse, the
comparisons would dog
throughout his career. And to be fair, those comparisons are pretty valid. True,
was white, and might have had a slightly more pronounced swamp pop bent (and a more country one on some of his later sides). Yet most of this material (the majority dating from the early '60s) sounds a lot like
' sides from the same period -- not even like outtakes or imitations, but
tracks that you might not happen to have heard. If that's a sound you like, however,
certainly does a credible job with the style. He mixes some of his own songs with covers of pre-rock/pop songs (which "I'm a Fool to Care" was in its original incarnation), pre-rock country tunes, and compositions in which notable guys like
,
, and even
(under his real name,
, on the 1963 single "The Loneliest Boy in Town") had a hand. There are also some rarities, like his pre-"I'm a Fool to Care" 1960 single, a 1962 single done under the pseudonym
," a few outtakes and alternates, and a French version of "I'm a Fool to Care," credited to
. The liner notes provide an excellent overview of his career, but take heed that the mid-'70s recordings filling more than half of disc two aren't so hot, with more modern production not as suited to
's voice and material. ~ Richie Unterberger