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Chuck & Mary Perrin - The Next Of Kin (Korean Remastered) (1970/2011)

Chuck & Mary Perrin - The Next Of Kin (Korean Remastered) (1970/2011)

BAND/ARTIST: Chuck & Mary Perrin

  • Title: The Next Of Kin
  • Year Of Release: 1970/2011
  • Label: Beatball
  • Genre: Psychedelic Pop/Rock, Folk Rock, Folk Pop
  • Quality: Flac (tracks, log)
  • Total Time: 26:06
  • Total Size: 210 Mb (scans)
  • WebSite:
Chuck & Mary Perrin - The Next Of Kin (Korean Remastered) (1970/2011)


Tracklist:

1. The Beginning - 0:40
2. Here Comes The Weekend Again - 2:21
3. Run Away With Me (Mary Perrin) - 0:59
4. Sundance (Mary Perrin) - 3:13
5. Bye Bye Billy - 2:21
6. Fugacity (Pat Garvey, Victoria Garvey) - 2:23
7. Reprise - 1:42
8. Dedication (Mary Perrin) - 3:44
9. This Is Just To Say (William Carlos Williams) - 0:20
10. Dealer - 2:41
11. Flying (Mary Perrin) - 2:27
12. This Is A Happy Song - 1:38
13. Statement - 0:53
14. The Beginning Again - 0:36

Line-up::
Mary Perrin - Vocals, Guitar
Chuck Perrin - Vocals, Guitar
Norm Zeller - Guitar
Andy Wallace - Bass
Dave Porter - Drums

Sunshine pop fans might well prefer Chuck & Mary Perrin's second album, Next of Kin, to their far folkier debut, Brother & Sister, which had barely any rock instrumentation at all. However, this follow-up -- recorded in late 1969, a year after Brother & Sister had been cut, and likewise privately pressed in a run of just 500 copies -- was a letdown after the mild promise of its predecessor. It's a tame, at times drippy early soft rock/singer/songwriter-oriented album, slicking up the introspective, slightly melancholy close-harmony contemporary folk of their first album. Songs like "Sundance" have the escapist sentiments found throughout much sunshine pop, as well as the bordering-on-easy listening vocals and arrangements. It's not all marshmallow stuff, "Bye Bye Billy" reflecting the influence of Californian mellow rockers like Crosby, Stills & Nash (who sounded tough in comparison to the Perrins), and "Flying" affecting jazzier, more aggressive postures that nonetheless sound rather genteel. Both Next of Kin and Brother & Sister were combined onto one single-CD reissue, The Last Word, which also has a couple of songs that appeared on the 1970 various-artists compilation The Peoria Folk Anthology, Vol. 3.


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  • User offline
  • whiskers
  •  wrote in 11:55
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Many Thanks
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  • tommy554
  •  wrote in 00:03
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Many Thanks
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  • mufty77
  •  wrote in 15:48
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Many thanks.