Customer Rating:      Summary: Good CD Comment: I found a lot of songs that I have been looking for for some time now
Customer Rating:      Summary: A trip down memory lane.. AWESOME at a terrific price. Comment: this was an outstanding buy on Amazon. Shipping was confirmed and arrived as promised. Thank you!
Customer Rating:      Summary: Another Great Three Dog Night Collection But Not For Collectors Comment: Ok. I bought this CD believing all the tracks were monophonic. Of course, I didn't bother to sample the music and just went ahead and bought the thing. Mind you, this is an excellent collection (as if any Three Dog Night collection could possibly not be?) but from a collector's stand point, it wasn't what I expected. Sure. There are mono mixes spread throughout the collection but they were all previously available on the 2-CD set "Celebrate". The mono mixes are as follows:
1. Try A Little Tenderness
2. Joy To The World
3. Liar
4. The Family Of Man (which seems to be panned a bit too much to the left channel)
5. Pieces Of April
6. Shambala (same panning as "The Family Of Man")
Everything else is stereo. Though some of the mixes are really close to being mono, they are in fact, stereo. I really don't know much about the original Three Dog Night 45's or if any of the earlier ones were simple stereo to mono fold downs. With that in mind, I can't really make any judgements. I seem to recall my original Dunhill 45 of "One" being quite monophonic. I am wondering if this set is an abridged replacement for "Celebrate"? It is on a different label- Universal Music. Perhaps that company bought up MCA? I have no clue but whichever 45's were mixed for mono- fold downs or not- they should've been released that way on this package. Oh well. Either way, the set is awesome (as usual) and deserves the five stars I have given.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Three Dog Night The Complete Hit Singles Comment: You get it all on one CD with this one. I can't stop playing these tracks. All night and all day I have Three Dog Night blasting from my speakers until I hear "Aren't you ever going to turn that off?" This is one GREAT CD and the guys don't leave anyathing out. The vocals are together (as with all TDN songs) and you can just sit back and enjoy!
Customer Rating:      Summary: Jeremiah Was A Bullfrog! Well Now You Can Hear Him Croak Properly On This Stunning Remaster! Comment: On a very cold evening in the Australian outback, an Aborigine hunter would dig a furrow in the ground and bring his dog into the hole with him for bodily warmth. Two dogs were needed for a really bitter night, but the worst night of all was called a THREE DOG NIGHT. Not sure anyone needed to know that, but anyway that's how they got their name!
The band were:
DANNY HUTTON, CHUCK NEGRON and CORY WELLS - Lead Vocals
MICHAEL ALLSUP - Guitars
SKIP KONTE (1974-1976) and JIMMY GREENSPOON - Keyboards
JOE SCHERMIE (1969-1971) and JACK RYLAND (1971-1975) - Bass
FLOYD SNEED - Drums and Percussion
As a rock group with worldwide record sales of over 50 million, THREE DOG NIGHT were a genuine chart phenomenon - especially in the States where they released 23 singles on the Dunhill/ABC label between 1968 and 1976. No less than 21 of them charted in the Top 200 (they were handled by Stateside and Probe in the UK and Europe) and it's they that are represented here - in truly fantastic sound quality - on this superb 2004 CD. Most tracks are specific 7" single mixes recorded precisely for that purpose, many are cover versions and then you had the alternate lead vocalists or combinations of all three. Here's a detailed breakdown of what's what:
(74:32 minutes)
1. "One", 1969 on Dunhill/ABC 4191, a HARRY NILSSON cover [Chuck Negron Lead Vocal]
2. "Try A Little Tenderness", 1969 on Dunhill/ABC 4177, made famous by OTIS REDDING [Cory Wells Lead Vocal]
3. "Easy To Be Hard", 1969 on Dunhill/ABC 4203 [Chuck Negron Lead Vocal]
4. "Eli's Coming", 1969 on Dunhill/ABC 4215, a LAURA NYRO cover [Cory Wells Lead Vocal]
5. "Celebrate", 1969 on Dunhill/ABC 4227 [Hutton, Negron & Wells Shared Lead Vocals]
6. "Mama Told Me (Not To Come)", 1970 on Dunhill/ABC 4239, a RANDY NEWMAN cover [Cory Wells Lead Vocal]
7. "Out In The Country", 1970 on Dunhill/ABC 4250, a PAUL WILLIAMS/ROGER NICHOLLS cover [Hutton, Negron & Wells Shared Vocals]
8. "One Man Band", 1970 on Dunhill/ABC 4262 [Negron & Hutton Shared Vocals]
9. "Joy To the World", 1971 on Dunhill/ABC 4272, a HOYT AXTON cover [Chuck Negron Lead Vocal]
10. "Liar", 1971 on Dunhill/ABC 4282, a RUSS BALLARD cover [Danny Hutton Lead Vocal]
11. "An Old fashioned Love Song", 1971 on Dunhill/ABC 4294, a PAUL WILLIAMS cover [Chuck Negron Lead Vocal]
12. "Never Been To Spain", 1972 on Dunhill/ABC 4299, a HOYT AXTON cover [Cory Wells Lead Vocal]
13. "The Family Of Man", 1972 on Dunhill/ABC 4306, a PAUL WILLIAMS/JACK CONRAD cover [Hutton, Negron & Wells Shared Vocals]
14. "Black & White", 1972 on Dunhill/ABC 4317 [Danny Hutton Lead Vocal]
15. "Pieces Of April", 1972 on Dunhill/ABC 4331 [Chuck Negron Lead Vocal]
16. "Shambala", 1973 on Dunhill/ABC 4352, a DANIEL MOORE cover [Cory Wells Lead Vocal]
17. "Let Me Serenade You", 1973 on Dunhill/ABC 4370, a JOHN FINLEY of RHINOCERUS cover [Cory Wells Lead Vocal]
18. "The Show Must Go On", 1974 on Dunhill/ABC 4382, a LEO SAYER/DAVID COURTNEY cover [Cory Wells Lead Vocal]
19. "Sure As I'm Sittin' Here", 1974 on Dunhill/ABC 15001, a JOHN HIATT cover [Cory Wells Lead Vocal]
20. "Play Something Sweet (Brickyard Blues)", 1974 on Dunhill/ABC 15013, an ALLEN TOUSSAINT cover [Cory Wells Lead Vocal]
21. "Til The World Ends", 1975 on ABC 12114, a DAVID LOGGINS cover [Chuck Negron Lead Vocal]
The two singles missing from the set that didn't chart are their 1st, "Nobody", 1968 on Dunhill/ABC 4168 and their last, "Everybody Is A Masterpiece", 1976 on ABC 12192.
Album versions of most of the songs are to be found on the following US LPs:
"Three Dog Night", 1969 (1 and 2)
"Suitable For Framing", 1969 (3, 4 and 5)
"It Ain't Easy", 1970 (6 and 7)
"Naturally", 1970 (8, 9 and 10)
"Harmony", 1971 (11, 12 and 13)
"Seven Separate Fools", 1972 (14 and 15)
"Cyan", 1973 (16 and 17)
"Hard Labor", 1974 (18, 19 and 20)
"Coming Down Your Way", 1975 (21)
96K/24-Bit Remastered by ERICK LABSON of Universal from the original tapes, the sound quality is BEAUTIFUL if such a word can be applied. I've waited years to hear non-hissy clean CD versions of "Mama Told Me (Not To Come)", "Out In The Country" and "Joy To The World" - and this set delivers them in spades. The CLEAR SOUND is startling and makes you reassess each song.
It's not all peaches and cream of course - some of the songs like "Black & White" and "Til The World Ends" have dated badly, while the truly cringing Leo Sayer song "The Show Must Go On" is beyond liking and the screeching vocal butchery of Laura Nyro's "Eli's Coming" is hard to bear. But then there's the slightly psych feel to "One Man Band" and the lovely David Cassidy-sounding "Pieces Of April" - both forgotten oldies worth rediscovering. "Shambala" and "Let Me Serenade You" are not that commonly known on this side of the pond either - and again - deserve rehearing. And then there's that SOUND on all the tracks - JUST GORGEOUS!
A must have for fans then - and a great sounding CD addition for lovers of the 60's/70's sound.
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