The Turtles - Happy Together: The Very Best of the Turtles

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Album Details

Title: Happy Together: The Very Best of the Turtles
Artist: The Turtles
Release Date: 9/28/2004
Re-Released On: 6/13/2005
Label: Sony Music Distribution, Shout! Factory
Album Type(s): Greatest Hits
UPCs: 5099751913429, 826663748826
Genre: Rock
Styles: Psychedelic, Folk-Rock, Sunshine Pop, AM Pop
Moods: Earnest, Reflective, Carefree, Cheerful, Lush, Soothing, Sugary, Summery, Happy, Humorous, Plaintive, Playful, Poignant, Springlike, Witty
Total Copies: 0
Members Wishing: 2
Number of Discs/SwapaCD Credits: 1

Track Listings

  1. Happy Together
  2. She'd Rather Be With Me
  3. Let Me Be
  4. You Know What I Mean
  5. You Baby
  6. Elenore
  7. It Ain't Me Babe
  8. She's My Girl
  9. Eve of Destruction
  10. You Showed Me
  11. Outside Chance
  12. Can I Get to Know You Better
  13. You Don't Have to Walk in the Rain
  14. Grim Reaper of Love

Additional Releases

YearTypeLabelCatalog #
2005CDSony Music Distribution5191342
2004CDShout! Factory37488

Other Editions

  • No other editions were found for this album.

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Album Review

Happy Together: The Very Best of the Turtles is a very fine single-disc collection of songs by one of the best pop bands of the '60s. It hits the highlights of their folk-rock era with "It Ain't Me Babe," "Let Me Be," and "Eve of Destruction"; charts the peak of their popularity with the omnipresent "Happy Together" and lesser (but still big) hits "She'd Rather Be With Me," "You Showed Me," "Elenore," "She's My Girl," and "You Know What I Mean"; and picks up a few strong cuts like the rocking, Warren Zevon-penned "Outside Chance" and the brilliant blue-eyed soul of "Can I Get to Know You Better." The Turtles' melodies, brains, and musical imagination shine through this collection like the first rays of summer; you could easily put the best four or five songs on this collection up against almost any pop band and have at the very least a close fight. That being said, the collection is a bit of a botch job if only because it omits one of the band's most impressive songs: the symphonic sunshine pop masterpiece "Me About You." They could have easily bumped "Eve of Destruction," which Turtle member Mark Volman rightly says "wasn't quite us" in the insightful and funny liner notes, to make room. Other omissions are less shocking, with strong songs like "The Story of Rock and Roll" and "Love in the City" nowhere to be found. Shout Factory probably had to keep the number of tracks down to keep the disc in the mid-priced range. Fans of the band who want all their best work on one disc should probably opt for a copy of Rhino's superior 20 Greatest Hits, which includes the aforementioned omitted tracks plus three more. ~ Tim Sendra, All Music Guide

Credits

NameCredits
Al NicholPiano, Sitar (Electric), Vocals, Guitar, 6-String Bass, Harpsichord, Organ
Bob EmmerExecutive Producer
Chip DouglasBass, Horn Arrangements
Chuck PortzBass
Derek DresslerArtist Coordination
Don MurrayDrums
Dorothy StefanskiProject Assistant
Garson FoosExecutive Producer
Howard KaylanVocals, Keyboards
Jeff PaloPackage Supervision
Jim PonsGuitar, Vocals, Bass
Jim TuckerGuitar (Rhythm)
John BarbataDrums, Vocals, Percussion
John RobertsArtwork
John SeiterDrums, Vocals
Keith BlakeRemastering
Mark VolmanTambourine, Guitar, Special Effects, Percussion, Vocals
Richard FoosExecutive Producer
Sandy TanakaPackage Design
Shawn AmosCompilation Producer
Ted MyersDiscographical Annotation
The TurtlesCompilation Producer