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  • Happy Together: The Very Best of White Whale Records

    08/10/1999


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    All Music Guide Review

    White Whale was one of the better independent Los Angeles rock labels of the mid-to-late '60s. Its only consistent hitmakers were the Turtles, and most of its releases were also in a good-time rock vein, although some got a little weirder, and some delved into bubblegum. This is a pretty fair 21-song compilation of hit and flop White Whale singles from 1965-70, less interesting for the three Turtle smashes included than for the rarities. The Matthew Moore Plus Four's 1965 single "Codyne" [sic], for instance, is probably the first rock version of Buffy St. Marie's oft-covered "Codeine." Warren Zevon was in the male-female folk-rock duo Lyme & Cybelle, represented not just by the small hit "Follow Me," but also the much rarer cover of Bob Dylan's "If You Gotta Go, Go Now." To the left of these folk-rockers were the off-the-wall mod-psychedelia of John's Children's "Smashed! Blocked!," and the 1968 single by the Rockets, who would soon become Crazy Horse. Efforts by the Clique, the Committee, and others are far more lightweight; the Latino easy listening of Rene & Rene's "Lo Mucho Que Te Quiero," though a big hit, is a pretty ill fit on this disc. The easygoing pop of Liz Damon's Orient Express' 1970 Top 40 single "1900 Yesterday" and Nino Tempo & April Stevens' Phil Spector-soundalike hit "All Strung Out" are more stylistic variations to round out the compilation. Interesting stuff more often than not, but because of its emphasis on singles exclusively, this misses the most interesting White Whale rarity of all: J.K. & Co.'s mysterious album Suddenly One Summer, a cross between All Things Must Pass-era George Harrison and Donovan. ~ Richie Unterberger, All Music Guide

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