Little Richard - Get Rich Quick

Little Richard - Get Rich Quick
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Album Details

Title: Get Rich Quick
Artist: Little Richard
Release Date: 12/6/2005
Re-Released On: 10/10/2005
Label: Rev-Ola Records
Album Type(s): Greatest Hits
UPC: 5013929443020
Genre: Rock
Styles: Early R&B, Rock & Roll, New Orleans R&B
Moods: Boisterous, Confident, Exuberant, Party/Celebratory, Reckless, Rousing, Urgent, Brash, Exciting, Giddy, Joyous, Outrageous, Passionate, Playful, Rambunctious, Rebellious, Rollicking, Swaggering, Energetic, Fiery, Freewheeling, Manic, Raucous, Rowdy, Visceral, Fun, Theatrical
Total Copies: 0
Members Wishing: 0
Number of Discs/SwapaCD Credits: 1

Track Listings

  1. Little Richard Boogie
  2. I Love My Baby
  3. Every Hour
  4. Directly from My Heart
  5. Get Rich Quick
  6. Thinkin' 'Bout My Mother
  7. I Brought It All on Myself
  8. Please Have Mercy on Me
  9. Always
  10. Ain't That Good News
  11. Fool at the Wheel
  12. Why Did You Leave Me?
  13. Ain't Nothin' Happenin'
  14. Maybe I'm Right
  15. Rice, Red Beans and Turnip Greens
  16. Taxi Blues
  17. I Love My Baby [Alternate Take]
  18. Get Rich Quick [Alternate Take]
  19. I Brought It All on Myself [Alternate Take]
  20. Directly from My Heart [Alternate Take]
  21. Thinkin' 'Bout My Mother [Alternate Take]
  22. Please Have Mercy on Me [Alternate Take]
  23. Call His Name [*]
  24. Sittin' Here Drinkin' Again [*]
  25. Lord Have Mercy [*]

Additional Releases

YearTypeLabelCatalog #
2005CDRev-Ola Records130

Other Editions

  • No other editions were found for this album.

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Album Review

Little Richard made some of the most frantic and thrilling singles of the first rock & roll era of the 1950s, but he'd been cutting records for several years before he rolled into Cosimo Matassa's New Orleans recording studio and threw his career into high gear with the epochal "Tutti Frutti." Get Rich Quick: The Birth of a Legend, 1951-1954 is a compilation which pulls together Richard's early sides for RCA's Peacock label and documents his formative years while he was still getting his trademark style in order. Richard's voice is in fine shape on the 16 Peacock cuts included here (as well as six alternate takes which also appear), but he had yet to unleash the trademark scream that so memorably punctuated his Specialty recordings, and his flailing piano style (supposedly modeled after his mentor, Esquerita) had similarly yet to manifest itself in the studio. As a result, Richard sounds less like a manic rocker and more like an old-school r&b act in the manner of Wynonie Harris or the Treniers, but without the intensity of either. One gets the sense that while Richard sounds fine here, this isn't quite what he was cut out to do, and in retrospect it's not surprising that these sessions didn't click with listeners the way his later New Orleans sessions did. But there's still some fine sounds here, including the mouth-watering "Rice, Red Beans and Turnip Greens," "Fool at the Wheel," and the rollicking title cut, and if this isn't Little Richard at his best, it shows that even heading in the wrong direction the man had something worthwhile to offer. Also included are three sides by Christine Kittrell with Little Richard on piano, and sounding livelier than he does on much of his own material here. ~ Mark Deming, All Music Guide

Credits

NameCredits
Andy MortenArtwork, Design
Christine KittrellPerformer
Dave PennyPhoto Research, Liner Notes, Producer
Joe FosterSynthesizer, Producer
Nick RobbinsSynthesizer