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The Mojo Men - Not Too Old To Start Cryin' (2008)

The Mojo Men - Not Too Old To Start Cryin' (2008)

BAND/ARTIST: The Mojo Men

The Mojo Men - Not Too Old To Start Cryin' (2008)


Tracklist:

01. Not Too Old To Start Cryin' (Second Version)
02. 'Til I Find You
03. Is Our Love Gone (Second Version)
04. Sure Of Your Love
05. Don't Leave Me Crying Like Before
06. You Didn't Even Say Goodbye
07. What Kind Of Man
08. Happiness Is You
09. Look Into My Eyes
10. What's The Answer
11. Free Ride
12. Times Like These
13. Another World
14. Give Me One More Chance
15. Don't Let It Happen To Me
16. Remember Me
17. Oh Lonesome Me
18. Not For Me
19. They May Be Right
20. She Cried
21. I've Had It
22. Is Our Love Gone (First Version)
23. Not Too Old To Start Cryin' (First Version)
24. There Goes My Mind

For a minor mid-'60s San Francisco garage/folk-rock/psych group with very limited national success, the Mojo Men certainly recorded a hell of a lot of material. This compilation contains no less than two dozen previously unreleased 1966 recordings, cut in the uneasy period between when their original label, Autumn, had bit the dust, and they had yet to release tracks with their next company, Reprise. It's no less than the fourth CD of material from the group that's been issued, with no duplication between the discs. For that reason, even some enthusiastic '60s/San Francisco collectors might wonder whether it's only of peripheral, completist-only interest. It's definitely not, however; a little surprisingly, it has much of the best stuff they ever did, with only a few of the songs that would be re-recorded at Reprise. Far more than their earlier, more garage/British Invasion-inclined recordings prior to the entrance of drummer/singer Jan Errico into the lineup, it has a folk-rock/slightly psychedelic feel somewhat akin to the pre-Grace Slick work of Jefferson Airplane. Too, it's nonetheless less precious and slick than their more polished (if occasionally fine), baroque rock-influenced Reprise material. Bittersweet, wistful folk-rock with mild garage and psychedelic tinges (and more than a touch of the Beau Brummels) is the main vibe on this strong set of mostly original material, highlighted by the ones on which Errico's stirring, yearning vocals -- the best qualities she brought into the band from her former outfit, the Vejtables -- are prominent. While some of the tunes are rather run of the mill, the best of them are really good, including the Beau Brummels-style "Is Our Love Gone"; "Not Too Old to Start Cryin'," represented by two versions (and later redone for Reprise); and, above all, "You Didn't Even Say Goodbye," where Errico's singing is a match for Signe Anderson at her best. Even the oddball cover arrangements of "She Cried" (formerly a hit for Jay & the Americans) and the late-'50s Bell Notes rocker "I've Had It" are cool. You could even make an argument for this as the best Mojo Men CD, despite the absence of their only two songs to make appreciable national noise, "Dance with Me" and "Sit Down, I Think I Love You."


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  • User offline
  • tommy554
  •  wrote in 10:09
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thanks for lossless
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  • mufty77
  •  wrote in 02:17
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Many thanks for lossless.