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The Best of the Chad Mitchell Trio: The Mercury Years

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Download links and information about The Best of the Chad Mitchell Trio: The Mercury Years by The Chad Mitchell Trio. This album was released in 1998 and it belongs to Rock, Folk Rock, World Music, Country, Pop, Songwriter/Lyricist, Contemporary Folk genres. It contains 25 tracks with total duration of 01:08:58 minutes.

Artist: The Chad Mitchell Trio
Release date: 1998
Genre: Rock, Folk Rock, World Music, Country, Pop, Songwriter/Lyricist, Contemporary Folk
Tracks: 25
Duration: 01:08:58
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Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Dubarry Done Gone Again 2:26
2. Marvelous Toy 2:49
3. Alma Mater 3:03
4. Bonny Sisters of Fyre 10 3:10
5. Four Strong Winds 3:33
6. The Tarriers Song 2:03
7. Barry's Boys 3:53
8. The Banks of Sicily 3:21
9. Medley: In the Summer of His Years 2:18
10. I Can't Help but Wonder (Where I'm Bound) 2:56
11. Stewball and Griselda 2:24
12. An African Song (on The Great Civilized Morning) 2:12
13. Drying Business 3:24
14. The Draft Dodger Rag 2:56
15. Waves on the Sea 2:28
16. Cherry Tree Carol 3:19
17. The Natural Girl for Me 2:39
18. That's the Way It's Gonna Be 2:20
19. For Bobbi 2:20
20. Your Friendly, Liberal, Neighborhood Ku-Klux-Klan 3:43
21. Dark Shadows and Empty Hallways 2:50
22. Stay With Me 2:09
23. Like to Deal with the Ladies 1:56
24. She Loves You 2:32
25. What Did You Learn in School Today? 2:14

Details

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The Chad Mitchell Trio signed to Mercury Records in 1963 after achieving initial success on Kapp Records. The group made four charting albums for the label, the second two under the more democratic name of the Mitchell Trio, after which Chad Mitchell quit and was replaced by a young John Denver. Two non-charting albums followed before they left Mercury in 1966. This is a good compilation of that material, featuring songs written by such folk luminaries as Tom Paxton (including "The Marvelous Toy," the trio's biggest hit), Ian Tyson, and Phil Ochs. Those cheery harmonies, often expressing topically satiric sentiments in such songs as "Alma Mater" (about college integration struggles), "Barry's Boys" (about Barry Goldwater), and "The Draft Dodger Rag," still sound fresh and funny, if inevitably dated. The seven tracks featuring Denver have historical interest, especially since three of them are his compositions, including a 1965 version of "For Bobbi." Of course, to be really comprehensive, a compilation would have to contain material from both the Kapp and Mercury catalogs, but this disc tells the second half of the trio's story well.