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Jay & The Americans - 32 Greatest Hits (2017)

Jay & The Americans - 32 Greatest Hits (2017)

BAND/ARTIST: Jay & The Americans

  • Title: 32 Greatest Hits
  • Year Of Release: 2017
  • Label: Rew Records
  • Genre: Pop, Rock
  • Quality: FLAC (tracks) / MP3 320 Kbps
  • Total Time: 01:20:08
  • Total Size: 447 mb / 207 mb
  • WebSite:
Tracklist:

1. A Certain Smile (Live)
2. Cara Mia
3. Come A Little Bit Closer
4. Come Dance With Me
5. Dawning
6. Drums
7. For All We Know (Live)
8. Girls, Girls, Girls (Live)
9. Good Lovin´
10. Goodbye Boys Goodbye
11. Hang Around
12. It´S My Turn To Cry
13. Kansas City (live)
14. Let´S Lock The Door (And Throw Away The Key)
15. Moon River
16. My Claire De Lune
17. Only In America
18. Please Let Me Dream
19. She Cried
20. She Doesn´T Know It
21. Silly Girl, Silly Bo
22. Some Enchanted Evening
23. Spanish Harlem
24. Stand By Me
25. Strangers Tomorrow
26. Sunday And Me
27. The Other Girls
28. This Is It For Me
29. Tomorrow
30. Tonight
31. What´S The Use
32. Yes

Though they had a bunch of hits across the 1960s, Jay & the Americans were a throwback to a previous era in their doo wop-influenced vocals, neatly groomed, short-haired appearance, and mix of pop/rock with operatic schmaltz. Built around the neck-bulging upper-register vocals of David Blatt aka Jay Black, their biggest hits -- "She Cried," "Cara Mia" (which you could, in the second half of the 1970s, just imagine Eddie Mekka's Carmine Ragusa, aka "The Big Ragu," singing on Laverne & Shirley), "Come a Little Bit Closer," and "Let's Lock the Door (And Throw Away the Key)" -- came off as sort of hit parade versions of West Side Story. The group also relied on outside songwriters for its material, drifting into MOR covers of oldies by the end of the '60s, and was generally a sort of textbook of unhipness during a time when self-contained rock bands were becoming the norm.
In a sense, Jay & the Americans were the original "oldies" act -- organized at the transition of the 1950s into the 1960s, the group sounded like a throwback to that earlier decade, at a time when harmony vocal groups -- at least those without some guitar wattage accompanying them -- were already becoming old hat. Yet, somehow, they competed with the likes of the Beach Boys, Jan & Dean, and the Four Seasons, among homegrown rivals, and remained a major presence on radio even during the British Invasion, and lasted long enough to meet up -- like a glider catching a brisk, sustaining wind -- with the oldies boom at the tail end of the decade. They seemed out of place for most of the 1960s with their short hair, neat clothes, and dedication to schmaltzy pop, but by the end of the decade were perfectly positioned for the so-called rock & roll revival.





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  • nilesh65
  •  wrote in 10:19
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Thank you so much!!!!!
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  • whiskers
  •  wrote in 19:27
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Many Thanks
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  • mufty77
  •  wrote in 02:08
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Many thanks for lossless.