Rock/Pop
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Oooh-Eee-the Complete Rick Cartey Featuring the Jive A Tones

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フォーマット CDアルバム
発売日 2017年10月20日
国内/輸入 輸入
レーベルBear Family (Germany)
構成数 1
パッケージ仕様 -
規格品番 BCD17556
SKU 5397102175565

構成数 : 1枚
合計収録時間 : 01:14:08
Liner Note Author: Bill Dahl. Illustrators: R.A. Andreas; Charlie Broome; Duane Blalock. Photographers: R.A. Andreas; Charlie Broome; Duane Blalock. Ric Cartey wrote "Young Love," a song Sonny James brought to the top of Billboard's pop and country charts in 1956 -- an impressive feat made all the more impressive because Tab Hunter had a competing version chasing its heels, one that also went into the upper regions of the charts in 1957. "Young Love" may have turned into a standard -- Donny Osmond brought it back to the charts in a bubbegum version in 1973 -- but Cartey never charted on a national basis, so his career as a recording artist in the late '50s and early '60s languished until Bear Family released Oooh-Eee! The Complete Ric Cartey Featuring the Jiv-A-Tones...Plus in 2017. Take the Plus in the title seriously: in addition to the solo sides by Cartey, there are singles he recorded under the pseudonyms Feelin' Joyous and Rex, recordings made by the Jiv-A-Tones without Cartey, the hit versions of "Young Love" by James & Hunter, along with other recordings in Cartey's orbit. Taken together, they offer strong evidence that Cartey didn't easily fit into any existing rock & roll scene. Part of this may be due to how he was based in Atlanta, which wasn't a hotbed of rock & roll in the late '50s. Nevertheless, Cartey had a lean, sinewy, echoey take on rockabilly, while also having a facility with teen ballads. These two gifts reached a head on "Young Love," but Cartey's original is so spare, it nearly feels like outsider art in comparison to the hits. Which isn't to say Cartey didn't have showbiz instincts: his soda-pop ballads were designed with sock-hops in mind, and when he took an alias, it was the intent of selling a sound that he didn't want to put his name to, such as the hopping, jiving rock & roll from Feelin' Joyous and the dirty blues grind of Rex. Cartey also took a stab at silly, orchestrated pop in 1963 with a single carrying two sides written by Joe South ("Poor Me" is a sight better than "Something in My Eye"), but by that point his recording career had faded. Still, this single -- which derives from a different era than the rest, one that is more produced and goofier -- winds up being a fitting capper to this wild, rangy compilation: Cartey worked hard during his decade, coming up with a certified classic and a bunch of interesting artifacts, all of which can be heard here. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine

  1. 1.[CDアルバム]
    1. 1.
      Oooh-Eee

      アーティスト: Ric Cartey

    2. 2.
      Young Love

      アーティスト: Ric Cartey

    3. 3.
      Heart Throb

      アーティスト: Ric Cartey

    4. 4.
      I Wancha To Know

      アーティスト: Ric Cartey

    5. 5.
      Gotta Be Love (prev unissued)

      アーティスト: Ric Cartey

    6. 6.
      Let Me Tell You About Love

      アーティスト: Ric Cartey

    7. 7.
      Born To Love One Woman

      アーティスト: Ric Cartey

    8. 8.
      Crying Good Bye (prev unissued)

      アーティスト: Ric Cartey

    9. 9.
      Mellow Down Easy

      アーティスト: Ric Cartey

    10. 10.
      Crying Good Bye

      アーティスト: Ric Cartey

    11. 11.
      My Babe

      アーティスト: Ric Cartey

    12. 12.
      Scratching On My Screen

      アーティスト: Ric Cartey

    13. 13.
      My Heart Belongs To You

      アーティスト: Ric Cartey

    14. 14.
      To Love

      アーティスト: Ric Cartey

    15. 15.
      You're My Happiness

      アーティスト: Ric Cartey

    16. 16.
      Scratchin' On My Screen

      アーティスト: Ric Cartey

    17. 17.
      Go On Fool

      アーティスト: Ric Cartey

    18. 18.
      Something In My Eye

      アーティスト: Ric Cartey

    19. 19.
      Poor Me

      アーティスト: Ric Cartey

    20. 20.
      Mellow Down Easy

      アーティスト: Ric Cartey

    21. 21.
      Leave Me Loose

      アーティスト: Ric Cartey

    22. 22.
      Flirty Gertie

      アーティスト: Ric Cartey

    23. 23.
      Fire Engine Baby

      アーティスト: Ric Cartey

    24. 24.
      And Then It Happened

      アーティスト: Ric Cartey

    25. 25.
      The Wild Bird (instrumental)

      アーティスト: Ric Cartey

    26. 26.
      Sandy

      アーティスト: Ric Cartey

    27. 27.
      Let Your Arms Speak

      アーティスト: Ric Cartey

    28. 28.
      Ooh-Eee (What You Do To Me)

      アーティスト: Ric Cartey

    29. 29.
      Young Love

      アーティスト: Ric Cartey

    30. 30.
      Young Love

      アーティスト: Ric Cartey

    31. 31.
      Born To Love One Woman

      アーティスト: Ric Cartey

    32. 32.
      Heart Throb

      アーティスト: Ric Cartey

作品の情報

メイン
アーティスト: Ric Cartey

商品の紹介

Ric Cartey wrote "Young Love," a song Sonny James brought to the top of Billboard's pop and country charts in 1956 -- an impressive feat made all the more impressive because Tab Hunter had a competing version chasing its heels, one that also went into the upper regions of the charts in 1957. "Young Love" may have turned into a standard -- Donny Osmond brought it back to the charts in a bubbegum version in 1973 -- but Cartey never charted on a national basis, so his career as a recording artist in the late '50s and early '60s languished until Bear Family released Oooh-Eee! The Complete Ric Cartey Featuring the Jiv-A-Tones...Plus in 2017. Take the Plus in the title seriously: in addition to the solo sides by Cartey, there are singles he recorded under the pseudonyms Feelin' Joyous and Rex, recordings made by the Jiv-A-Tones without Cartey, the hit versions of "Young Love" by James & Hunter, along with other recordings in Cartey's orbit. Taken together, they offer strong evidence that Cartey didn't easily fit into any existing rock & roll scene. Part of this may be due to how he was based in Atlanta, which wasn't a hotbed of rock & roll in the late '50s. Nevertheless, Cartey had a lean, sinewy, echoey take on rockabilly, while also having a facility with teen ballads. These two gifts reached a head on "Young Love," but Cartey's original is so spare, it nearly feels like outsider art in comparison to the hits. Which isn't to say Cartey didn't have showbiz instincts: his soda-pop ballads were designed with sock-hops in mind, and when he took an alias, it was the intent of selling a sound that he didn't want to put his name to, such as the hopping, jiving rock & roll from Feelin' Joyous and the dirty blues grind of Rex. Cartey also took a stab at silly, orchestrated pop in 1963 with a single carrying two sides written by Joe South ("Poor Me" is a sight better than "Something in My Eye"), but by that point his recording career had faded. Still, this single -- which derives from a different era than the rest, one that is more produced and goofier -- winds up being a fitting capper to this wild, rangy compilation: Cartey worked hard during his decade, coming up with a certified classic and a bunch of interesting artifacts, all of which can be heard here. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine
Rovi

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