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Hits & Rarities 1961-1968
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Hits & Rarities 1961-1968
Current price: $33.99
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Barnes and Noble
Hits & Rarities 1961-1968
Current price: $33.99
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The March 3, 1962, issue of Billboard marked the Hot 100 debuts of two teenage actors from the same TV series, The Donna Reed Show, 18-year-old
Shelley Fabares
with "Johnny Angel" and 16-year-old
Paul Petersen
with "She Can't Find Her Keys," both on
Colpix Records
.
Petersen
's novelty tune only made the Top 20, while "Johnny Angel" topped the charts, but he managed five more chart entries, including the Top Ten "My Dad," before the hits stopped coming in 1964. This comprehensive collection includes the successful discs and some interesting obscurities in a musical career that was always something of a side project for
. His main gig, of course, was the TV show, in which he appeared from 1958 to 1966, but since he could carry a tune it was a natural for him to try a pop singing career in the tradition of
Rick Nelson
. Most of the music was forgettable, of course, although he did get a chance to essay a
Gerry Goffin
/
Carole King
composition, "Keep Your Love Locked (Deep in Your Heart)," and
Brian Wilson
gave him a suitably surf-oriented production on "She Rides with Me." By 1965, with "You Don't Need Money," he was introducing a vocal growl that made his singing a bit more distinctive, but that was his last
Colpix
single. Among the rarities are two singles he cut for
Motown Records
in 1967-1968 that find him fronting the
Funk Brothers
session band on some decent material, particularly "Don't Let It Happen to Us," and a trio of songs from the Broadway musical Bye Bye Birdie, including a rewrite of "Kids" called "Folks" on which he's joined by
Fabares
survived his teen idol phase to become a novelist, but along the way he made some representative light pop music of the period, the highlights of which are heard here. ~ William Ruhlmann
Shelley Fabares
with "Johnny Angel" and 16-year-old
Paul Petersen
with "She Can't Find Her Keys," both on
Colpix Records
.
Petersen
's novelty tune only made the Top 20, while "Johnny Angel" topped the charts, but he managed five more chart entries, including the Top Ten "My Dad," before the hits stopped coming in 1964. This comprehensive collection includes the successful discs and some interesting obscurities in a musical career that was always something of a side project for
. His main gig, of course, was the TV show, in which he appeared from 1958 to 1966, but since he could carry a tune it was a natural for him to try a pop singing career in the tradition of
Rick Nelson
. Most of the music was forgettable, of course, although he did get a chance to essay a
Gerry Goffin
/
Carole King
composition, "Keep Your Love Locked (Deep in Your Heart)," and
Brian Wilson
gave him a suitably surf-oriented production on "She Rides with Me." By 1965, with "You Don't Need Money," he was introducing a vocal growl that made his singing a bit more distinctive, but that was his last
Colpix
single. Among the rarities are two singles he cut for
Motown Records
in 1967-1968 that find him fronting the
Funk Brothers
session band on some decent material, particularly "Don't Let It Happen to Us," and a trio of songs from the Broadway musical Bye Bye Birdie, including a rewrite of "Kids" called "Folks" on which he's joined by
Fabares
survived his teen idol phase to become a novelist, but along the way he made some representative light pop music of the period, the highlights of which are heard here. ~ William Ruhlmann