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The Very Best of Frankie Valli & the Four Seasons [Rhino 2002]
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The Very Best of Frankie Valli & the Four Seasons [Rhino 2002]
Current price: $15.99
Barnes and Noble
The Very Best of Frankie Valli & the Four Seasons [Rhino 2002]
Current price: $15.99
Size: OS
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The Four Seasons
are often overlooked when lists of important bands of the 1960s are made. That really shouldn't be the case. With
Frankie Valli
's amazing bray of a voice backed by the solid harmonies of the other Three Seasons singing simple, powerful songs with great hooks and lots of musical surprises, they were really quite special. And
Bob Crewe
knew how to produce records that sounded great on car radios: the drums snap, the guitars crunch, and the voices jump out of the mix.
had a lot of really big hit songs:
"Sherry,"
"Big Girls Don't Cry,"
"Dawn (Go Away),"
and
"Working My Way Back to You."
This compilation rounds up all their chart smashes from their original incarnation in the 1960s plus two tracks (
"Who Loves You"
and the
disco
-fied
"December, 1963 [Oh, What a Night]"
) from the mid-'70s. One could question the inclusion of solo tracks by
on a
Four Seasons
compilation.
"Can't Take My Eyes Off You,"
"My Eyes Adored You,"
"Swearin' to God,"
"Grease"
are all fine songs and hits as well, but sound out of place, as his solo style is nothing like the classic
sound. It seems like a disservice to the group. Surely
Rhino
could have found a few more
tunes to round out the disc -- maybe a song from their weird concept album,
The Genuine Imitation Life Gazette
, or the should-have-been-a-smash
"Silence Is Golden."
Ignoring all that, this is still the best single-disc
Frankie Valli & the Four Seasons
compilation on the market (since
has deleted their superior
Anthology
, which had more tracks and only one
solo number) and could easily be recommended to the casual fan. ~ Tim Sendra
are often overlooked when lists of important bands of the 1960s are made. That really shouldn't be the case. With
Frankie Valli
's amazing bray of a voice backed by the solid harmonies of the other Three Seasons singing simple, powerful songs with great hooks and lots of musical surprises, they were really quite special. And
Bob Crewe
knew how to produce records that sounded great on car radios: the drums snap, the guitars crunch, and the voices jump out of the mix.
had a lot of really big hit songs:
"Sherry,"
"Big Girls Don't Cry,"
"Dawn (Go Away),"
and
"Working My Way Back to You."
This compilation rounds up all their chart smashes from their original incarnation in the 1960s plus two tracks (
"Who Loves You"
and the
disco
-fied
"December, 1963 [Oh, What a Night]"
) from the mid-'70s. One could question the inclusion of solo tracks by
on a
Four Seasons
compilation.
"Can't Take My Eyes Off You,"
"My Eyes Adored You,"
"Swearin' to God,"
"Grease"
are all fine songs and hits as well, but sound out of place, as his solo style is nothing like the classic
sound. It seems like a disservice to the group. Surely
Rhino
could have found a few more
tunes to round out the disc -- maybe a song from their weird concept album,
The Genuine Imitation Life Gazette
, or the should-have-been-a-smash
"Silence Is Golden."
Ignoring all that, this is still the best single-disc
Frankie Valli & the Four Seasons
compilation on the market (since
has deleted their superior
Anthology
, which had more tracks and only one
solo number) and could easily be recommended to the casual fan. ~ Tim Sendra