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Sugar and Spice

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Download links and information about Sugar and Spice by Cryan' Shames. This album was released in 1967 and it belongs to Rock, Folk Rock, Pop, Songwriter/Lyricist, Psychedelic, Classical genres. It contains 17 tracks with total duration of 40:24 minutes.

Artist: Cryan' Shames
Release date: 1967
Genre: Rock, Folk Rock, Pop, Songwriter/Lyricist, Psychedelic, Classical
Tracks: 17
Duration: 40:24
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Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Sugar & Spice 2:27
2. We Could Be Happy 2:34
3. Heat Wave 2:07
4. We'll Meet Again 2:05
5. Ben Franklin's Almanac 1:58
6. She Don't Care About Time 2:23
7. Hey Joe (Where You Gonna Go) 2:40
8. If I Needed Someone 2:18
9. July 1:34
10. I Wanna Meet You 2:06
11. We Gotta Get Out of This Place 3:38
12. You're Gonna Lose That Girl 2:13
13. Mr. Unreliable (Single Version) 2:23
14. Georgia 2:16
15. It Don't Matter to Me 2:55
16. Bits and Pieces (Version One) 2:29
17. The Road 2:18

Details

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The Cryan' Shames' debut album was typical of the more thrown-together rock LPs of the era: both sides of their first two singles and a bunch of cover versions. The singles, actually, were pretty good, including their most well-known song, "Sugar & Spice," a cover of a Searchers hit that actually was more memorable and imaginative than the original. Its B-side, "Ben Franklin's Almanac," was a respectable original with shades of the Byrds, the Yardbirds, and California harmonies; the second single, "I Wanna Meet You," was a decent meld of Beatles-Byrds jangle with Beach Boys harmonies; and its flip, "We Could Be Happy," was an OK soft rock number. Throw in the sole original composition not from a single, "July" (one of the better 1966 Byrds sound-alikes), and you have half a decent (though not great) period pop/rock album. The problem is, though, that the cover versions that fill out the record — including songs written and/or popularized by the Beatles, the Byrds, and the Animals, along with "Heat Wave" — are neither too creatively done nor even imaginative selections. "Sugar and Spice" and all four of the originals appear on the Legacy compilation Sugar & Spice, which makes this album superfluous if you already have that anthology. The 2002 CD Sundazed reissue is bolstered by six bonus songs: their 1967 single "Mr. Unreliable" (different from the LP version) and its laid-back B-side "Georgia," a cover of the Beatles' "You're Gonna Lose That Girl," and three previously unreleased 1969 tracks that found them going into a mellow folk/country/soft rock direction.