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Get Together: The Essential Youngbloods
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Get Together: The Essential Youngbloods
Current price: $7.99
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Barnes and Noble
Get Together: The Essential Youngbloods
Current price: $7.99
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Not quite as comprehensive a compilation of
the Youngbloods
' early years as
Raven
's
Euphoria 1965-1969
, which starts a few years earlier and has four more tracks, this 2002 release is still the best American collection from the seminal '60s
folk
/
rock
jug band
group's formative and most artistically vibrant period. It follows the quartet through their nascent days of the dated, whimsical
psychedelic pop
of
"Merry-Go-Round"
and the
Jefferson Airplane
"Four in the Morning"
(complete with a guitar solo that's a ringer for
Jorma Kaukonen
's style) to their final, mellower period as original member
Jerry Corbitt
's exit transferred the creative reins to
Jesse Colin Young
. Seven tracks are selected from each of their three
RCA
albums, with the only rarity being the previously mentioned
"Merry-Go-Round,"
the B-side to
"Foolin' Around (The Waltz)."
Even with
Corbitt
in the band, it was
Young
's tender, yearning voice, exemplified best on
"Get Together,"
that gave them their identity. Without that song and his singing, they would have likely faded into the mists of history as another '60s combo trying their hands at a moderately successful combination of
,
jazz
, and
; a wannabe
Lovin' Spoonful
without a songwriter as memorable as
John Sebastian
.
The Youngbloods
' sound never really gelled until their third release,
Elephant Mountain
, not coincidentally the first album without
. Here,
's songs like the ominous
"Darkness, Darkness"
-- arguably the band's finest moment -- the lovely
"Sunlight,"
"Quicksand,"
and the beautiful
"Ride the Wind"
showed the melodic promise only hinted at on their first few discs. The group moved on to
Warner Brothers
, where they never fulfilled the promise
hinted at, and they disbanded for good in 1972. ~ Hal Horowitz
the Youngbloods
' early years as
Raven
's
Euphoria 1965-1969
, which starts a few years earlier and has four more tracks, this 2002 release is still the best American collection from the seminal '60s
folk
/
rock
jug band
group's formative and most artistically vibrant period. It follows the quartet through their nascent days of the dated, whimsical
psychedelic pop
of
"Merry-Go-Round"
and the
Jefferson Airplane
"Four in the Morning"
(complete with a guitar solo that's a ringer for
Jorma Kaukonen
's style) to their final, mellower period as original member
Jerry Corbitt
's exit transferred the creative reins to
Jesse Colin Young
. Seven tracks are selected from each of their three
RCA
albums, with the only rarity being the previously mentioned
"Merry-Go-Round,"
the B-side to
"Foolin' Around (The Waltz)."
Even with
Corbitt
in the band, it was
Young
's tender, yearning voice, exemplified best on
"Get Together,"
that gave them their identity. Without that song and his singing, they would have likely faded into the mists of history as another '60s combo trying their hands at a moderately successful combination of
,
jazz
, and
; a wannabe
Lovin' Spoonful
without a songwriter as memorable as
John Sebastian
.
The Youngbloods
' sound never really gelled until their third release,
Elephant Mountain
, not coincidentally the first album without
. Here,
's songs like the ominous
"Darkness, Darkness"
-- arguably the band's finest moment -- the lovely
"Sunlight,"
"Quicksand,"
and the beautiful
"Ride the Wind"
showed the melodic promise only hinted at on their first few discs. The group moved on to
Warner Brothers
, where they never fulfilled the promise
hinted at, and they disbanded for good in 1972. ~ Hal Horowitz