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Complete Hearts & Flowers
Hearts & Flowers
Complete Hearts & Flowers
Genres: Country, Pop, Rock, Classic Rock
 
  •  Track Listings (22) - Disc #1
  •  Track Listings (13) - Disc #2

Here is another crucial folk/country-rock release to go with our Dillards, Beau Brummels and Fred Neil releases. Hearts and Flowers were a self-described "Georgia country folk meets Hawaiian ukelele folk-rock group" (actua...  more »

     
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CD Details

All Artists: Hearts & Flowers
Title: Complete Hearts & Flowers
Members Wishing: 7
Total Copies: 0
Label: Collector's Choice
Release Date: 1/21/2003
Genres: Country, Pop, Rock, Classic Rock
Styles: Folk Rock, Country Rock, Psychedelic Rock
Number of Discs: 2
SwapaCD Credits: 2
UPCs: 617742032123, 0617742032123

Synopsis

Album Description
Here is another crucial folk/country-rock release to go with our Dillards, Beau Brummels and Fred Neil releases. Hearts and Flowers were a self-described "Georgia country folk meets Hawaiian ukelele folk-rock group" (actually, they used a lot of autoharp) whose two releases for Capitol are highly prized by ?60s rock aficionados, here compiled together and out on CD for the first time. But that?s only HALF the story?we?ve also managed to dig up 13 unreleased tracks from the Capitol vaults, including very groovy (sitar!) versions of the Fred Neil tunes "Everybody?s Talking" and "Other Side of This Life" as well as some fine originals. The glorious sum: 35 tracks of late-?60s SoCal folk rock (and you know that can?t be bad!) on two CDs, annotated by folk-rock authority Richie Unterberger. Collector?s note: future Eagle Bernie Leadon joins the band for their second album. A Collectors? Choice Music exclusive! Includes from "Now Is the Time"?"Now Is the Time," "Save ! Some Time," "Try for the Sun," "Rain, Rain," "The View from Ward Three," "Rock and Roll Gypsies," "Reason to Believe," "Please," "1-2-3 Rhyme in Carnivour Time," "I?m a Lonesome Fugitive," "Road to Nowhere," and "10,000 Sunsets." From "Of Horses"?"Now Is the Time for Hearts and Flowers," "Highway in the Wind," "Second Hand Sundown Queen," "She Sang Hymns Out of Tune," "Ode to a Tin Angel," "When I Was a Cowboy," "Legend of Ol? Tenbrookes," "Colour Your Daytime," "Two Little Boys," and "Extra Extra/Rock and Roll Gypsies/Extra Extra."
 

CD Reviews

Little known and long forgotten country-tinged folk-rock gem
hyperbolium | Earth, USA | 09/22/2005
(5 out of 5 stars)

"This Los Angeles based trio is among a handful of '60s groups to turn out stellar major-label releases to little or no acclaim, and only faint memory among the few who heard them at the time. Their two Capitol albums of West Coast country-inflected folk-rock predated or paralleled many which found fame, such as efforts from The Beau Brummels, Byrds, Dillards and Flying Burrito Brothers, and matched them in quality and innovation. This is a perfect storm of folk and rock, with country touches, sunshine-pop production and age-of-Aquarius sensibilities that lends both albums the magic glow of 1960's social awareness and utopian hope.



The band's debut, 1967's "Now is the Time For... Hearts and Flowers," combines light-psychedelic touches with Nik Venet's crystal-clear production across a combination of originals and songs selected from the pens of Donovan ("Try for the Sun"), Tim Hardin ("Reason to Believe," popularly recorded by Rod Stewart), Hoyt Axton ("10,000 Sunsets"), Goffin & King ("Road to Nowhere" - the B-side of their first single), and a fine cover of the Merle Haggard hit "I'm a Lonesome Fugitive." The entire album balances folk and country influences similarly to Brewer & Shipley's best work. Sadly, despite prominent opening slots on tours by The Doors and Simon & Garfunkel, the album went nowhere commercially.



Before recording their second album, 1968's "Of Horses, Kids and Forgotten Women," guitarist/vocalist Rick Cunha departed and was replaced by future Eagle, Bernie Leadon. This sophomore LP includes a more generous helping of originals (including a reprise of the title track from the debut!), along covers of Arlo Guthrie's "Highway in the Wind" and James Lee Kincaid's "She Sang Hymns Out of Tune." The band's original "Two Little Boys" would become a hit for Rolf Harris a couple of years later. Nik Venet added more orchestration to the second release, resulting in heavier psychedelic influence on cuts like "Ode to a Tin Angel." Though more in line with popular LPs of '68, the band still found little commercial success, and were drifting apart by the time the album hit the stands. One could argue that they left the stage set and the amplifiers warmed up for The Byrds' "Sweetheart of the Rodeo" and Gram Parson's post-Byrds recordings.



Edsel's 1995 and Rev-Ola's 2002 CD issues collect all twenty-two tracks from the original pair of albums. Collectors' Choice 2003 CD issue adds a second disc with thirteen previously unreleased tracks that are well worth having. [©2005 hyperbolium dot com]"
It's been a while.
hyperbolium | 12/13/2003
(4 out of 5 stars)

"I last heard this album, the first part anyway, sometime back in the late 60s. For 30 plus years I could remember "Reason To Believe" and bits and pieces of a few others. I knew the name of the group but had little hope of finding a copy of their work. They came and went in a flash. Now I see a reissue of a group that 99.999% of the world never even knew existed. Besides a great version of "Reason To Believe", a song that Rod Steward later made famous, they did the only apparent copy of "10,000 Sunsets", a Hoyt Axon song, and "Highway In The Wind", a beautiful song by Arlo Gunthrie. "Try For The Sun" was taken from Donovan, the original fairy like spaced out singer of the 60s. I don't know about the rest of the material. Most of the first set of songs is quite good while the second half is pretty much filler. The sound is sometimes twangy, other times folksy. They were not really rock although they certainly weren't C&W. This was a style of music that was pretty much on the outskirts of mainstream and has never really left that space in the years since. Unlike much of what was produced during that era, you can listen to this music and not feel like you are in some sort of a time warp. It is easy, mellow, pretty, harmonious, etc. You get the picture.Should you rush out and buy the CD? It depends on the price and/or how much extra cash you have laying around. I wouldn't pay list price of the greedy recording labels. If you can pick it up on the cheap then make the deal and enjoy some sounds of a group that wasn't so much forgotten but never really discovered. You won't regret buying this CD unlike so many others."
Overlooked group
Paul Peterson | Richland , WA USA | 09/27/2008
(5 out of 5 stars)

"Ran across their '68 release while working in a college radio station. Forty years later, this still remains one of my all time favorite albums. What a neat deal to find it combined with their first album and some unreleased material. Great stuff!"