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Dobie Gray - Drift Away: A Decade Of Dobie 1969-1979 (2014)

Dobie Gray - Drift Away: A Decade Of Dobie 1969-1979 (2014)

BAND/ARTIST: Dobie Gray

  • Title: Drift Away: A Decade Of Dobie 1969-1979
  • Year Of Release: 2004
  • Label: Hip-O Select
  • Genre: Funk, Soul
  • Quality: FLAC (tracks+.cue)
  • Total Time: 4:30:31
  • Total Size: 1.67 GB
  • WebSite:
Tracklist:

CD 1:

1. Rose Garden
2. Where's The Girl Gone
3. Do You Really Have A Heart
4. What a Way To Go
5. Guess Who
6. Honey, You Can't Take It Back
7. Drift Away
8. The Time I Loved You The Most
9. L.A. Lady
10. We Had It All
11. Now That I'm Without You
12. Rockin' Chair
13. Lay Back
14. City Stars
15. Sweet Lovin' Woman
16. Caddo Queen
17. Eddie's Song

CD 2:

1. Good Old Song
2. You And Me
3. I Never Had It So Good
4. Lovin' The Easy Way
5. Loving Arms
6. Reachin' For The Feeling
7. There's A Honky Tonk Angel (Who'll Take Me Back In)
8. Mississippi Rolling Stone
9. Love Is On The Line
10. Hey Dixie
11. How Can You Live All Alone
12. So High (Rock Me Baby And Roll Me Away)
13. Watch Out For Lucy
14. Old Time Feeling
15. Turning On You
16. Roll On Sweet Mississippi
17. Can You Feel It
18. Performance
19. The Music's Real (Mentor's Song)
20. Watch Out For Lucy

CD 3:

1. Harold And The Swinging Rocks
2. Drive On, Ride On
3. If Love Must Go
4. Lover's Sweat
5. A New Ray Of Sunshine
6. I'll Take You Down To Mexico
7. Easy Loving Lady
8. Comfort And Please You
9. What A Lady
10. Easy Come, Easy Go
11. Let Go
12. Do It
13. Mellow Man
14. Find 'Em, Fool 'Em And Forget 'Em
15. The Best Of My Love
16. Country Love
17. When A Man Loves A Woman
18. But I Do
19. Moonlight Trippin'
20. Can't Stop A Man In Love
21. Find 'Em, Fool 'Em And Forget 'Em
22. The Christmas Song

CD 4:

1. You Can Do It
2. We've Got To Get It On Again
3. Let This Man Take Hold Of Your Life
4. Weekend Friend
5. Miss You Nights
6. I Can See Clearly Now
7. Sharing The Night Together
8. Who's Lovin' You
9. I'll Be Your Hold Me Tight
10. Thank You For Tonight
11. The "In" Crowd
12. Stumblin' Back To You
13. Sunny Day To Rain
14. Spending Time Making Love And Going Crazy
15. You Can't Keep A Good Man Down
16. Fool, Fool
17. All I Wanna Do Is Make Love To You
18. We Had It All
19. Bridge Of Silence
20. The "In" Crowd (Single Version)

Anybody who has cut a standard like "Drift Away" can hardly be called unappreciated, but a hit of that magnitude can tend to overshadow the rest of an artist's career. Such is the case with Dobie Gray, who not only had a huge number five hit with "Drift Away" in 1973, but had a number 11 hit eight years earlier with "The 'In' Crowd." Two big hits, both widely known, which is more than most artists get, and Gray continued to chart throughout the '70s, albeit in the lower reaches of the R&B charts. All of this suggests that Gray was a minor talent, but that's misleading, as Hip-O Select's excellent four-disc box set Drift Away: A Decade of Dobie (1969-1979) proves. Chronicling the music Gray made after "The 'In' Crowd," it illustrates that Gray wasn't just a powerful yet nuanced soul singer, but that he restlessly tried different sounds and styles. The first tracks on this set collect his singles for the L.A. soft pop label White Whale, where he cut versions of Joe South's "Rose Garden" and Paul Williams' "Do You Really Have a Heart" that perfectly fit the label's breezy, lazy style while retaining a soulful edge. After that, it moves to his Drift Away album, recorded for Decca in 1973. It was a wonderful blend of soul, pop, and '70s singer/songwriter, best heard on the title track, which may have been the peak of the record, but is far from the only good cut here. After that hit, Gray started to get even more idiosyncratic on his subsequent albums for MCA (1973's Loving Arms and 1974's Hey Dixie) and Capricorn (1975's New Ray of Sunshine and 1976's Let Go). Using Drift Away as a base, Gray delved into country, developing a tremendous country-soul hybrid that had a loose, funky underpinning. That funkiness started to turn to disco during his Capricorn years -- which is only natural, since it was disco's heyday in the mid-'70s -- but he also flirted with Southern rock and had some imaginative reinterpretations of contemporary hits, like his sweetly funky version of the Eagles' "The Best of My Love." His final two albums of the '70s -- 1978's Midnight Diamond and 1979's Dobie Gray -- were for Infinity, where Gray agreed to fit into the label's smooth urban soul and disco sound; they're not as original as the rest of the music on the set and fall prey to a lot of dated '70s production techniques -- sweeping strings, fuzz guitars, and flutes all fight for space -- but Gray acquits himself with class, making them thoroughly pleasant listens. But the first three discs of this splendid box show that at his best Gray was truly one of the most creative and successful soul singers of the '70s, and that's why any true soul connoisseur should add this to their library. (If only the packaging of the box itself felt worthy of library! A small, book-shaped cardboard set, the discs scrape against cardboard when they're pulled out of their casing, and the whole set feels like it's in imminent danger of destruction. That said, the music is good enough to make this worth the investment, provided that consumers know what they're going to get for their money.)


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  • User offline
  • mufty77
  •  wrote in 16:54
    • Like
    • 1
Many thanks for lossless.
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  • lukrock
  •  wrote in 20:02
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    • 0
I don't know this artist... I need to listen to him!
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  • qwes2020
  •  wrote in 03:02
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    • 0
Thanks4 $haring M8!!