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The Limeliters Look at Love in Depth
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The Limeliters Look at Love in Depth
Current price: $14.99
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Barnes and Noble
The Limeliters Look at Love in Depth
Current price: $14.99
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With this album,
the Limeliters
ceased to be a folk music act, at least for the time being. RCA Victor, seeing folk disappear from the charts in favor of
Bob Dylan's
electricification, was getting impatient, and decided to augment
the Limeliters'
relatively spare recordings with fuller elements. Enter
Perry Botkin, Jr
., arranger and conductor of pop/smarm/pseudo-rock.
Botkin
proceeded to "spruce up" the thin tunes (all written by the team of
Bud Freeman
and
Leon Pober
) with a female vocal accompaniment and a rock & roll combo rhythm section. The theme for this album, ostensibly, was a humorous look at love songs. The zany cover, featuring smock-clad
Limeliters
measuring a
Mary Travers
lookalike, is easily their silliest.
Lou Gottlieb
, always the professional iconoclast, lurched into this project with his usual eclectic abandon, but it didn't work. The only thing that could have saved the departure of
Glenn Yarbrough
(by now flying high on the success of "Baby the Rain Must Fall") was either another tenor or superior material. Neither had surfaced by now. This would be the last release of new material by
for three years. ~ Cary Ginell
the Limeliters
ceased to be a folk music act, at least for the time being. RCA Victor, seeing folk disappear from the charts in favor of
Bob Dylan's
electricification, was getting impatient, and decided to augment
the Limeliters'
relatively spare recordings with fuller elements. Enter
Perry Botkin, Jr
., arranger and conductor of pop/smarm/pseudo-rock.
Botkin
proceeded to "spruce up" the thin tunes (all written by the team of
Bud Freeman
and
Leon Pober
) with a female vocal accompaniment and a rock & roll combo rhythm section. The theme for this album, ostensibly, was a humorous look at love songs. The zany cover, featuring smock-clad
Limeliters
measuring a
Mary Travers
lookalike, is easily their silliest.
Lou Gottlieb
, always the professional iconoclast, lurched into this project with his usual eclectic abandon, but it didn't work. The only thing that could have saved the departure of
Glenn Yarbrough
(by now flying high on the success of "Baby the Rain Must Fall") was either another tenor or superior material. Neither had surfaced by now. This would be the last release of new material by
for three years. ~ Cary Ginell