| | Association Renaissance CD Association Discography of CDs
Renaissance was a difficult album for the Association to record. Coming in the wake of a serious hit album (And Then...Along Comes the Association) and two huge hit singles ("Along Comes Mary," "Cherish") and at a time when the group was experiencing more bookings than its members had ever dreamed possible, Renaissance was rushed out under pressure from the band's label. Alas, Renaissance bore little resemblance to its predecessor. For starters, the Association had lost the services of producer Curt Boettcher, who was the architect of the earlier album's extraordinary sound. Additionally, Renaissance was comprised entirely of original material, much of which had been written while the group was touring. These songs were competent and showed some flashes of inspiration but, apart from "Come to Me," nothing here offered anything even remotely as catchy as either of the band's two previous singles. With Association rhythm guitarist Jim Yester's brother Jerry Yester producing, Renaissance has a more stripped-down, conventional folk-rock feel. Apart from lead guitarist Gary Alexander and wind player Terry Kirkman, none of the other members played on this album, but Alexander is a delight, mixing melodic folk-rock picking and strumming, throwing in a few high-energy licks on one or two numbers, and even using a koto for the album's single, "Pandora's Golden Heebie Jeebies." The latter, despite having a grotesque title when following up a single like "Cherish," is a prize piece of pop psychedelia, all gorgeous harmonies and spaced-out sensibilities backed by a bracing beat. Renaissance wasn't a bad album, but was a more routine, predictable recording than its predecessor and, without a hit single to help push sales, it never reached audiences in remotely the same numbers. ~ Bruce Eder
Jim Yester's brother Jerry (of Modern Folk Quartet fame) took over the production reigns from Curt Boettcher for this November 1966 release, and the result was one of the group's most varied albums-oddly enough, the single chosen from the album, 'Pandora's Golden Heebie Jeebies', was the strangest, most psychedelic song on the record! The rest of the record veered from the folk-rock-pop harmony sound for which the band was already well-known to jazz to bubblegum-ish pop without a hitch...a fine record in a year full of 'em. Collectors' Choice. 2003.
Includes liner notes by Richie Unterberger. Association Renaissance Songs Renaissance Review
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Purchase Renaissance CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Association CD (1969)
Renaissance album
$11.39
| | Association Live CD (1970)
Renaissance CD music
$13.59 This 75-minute album, originally a double-LP (recorded live at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City on April 3, 1970) is a valiant attempt at capturing the Association's concert sound on record. Unfortunately, it fails for several reasons, beginning with the fact that the instrumental mix is very bass-heavy -- even with adjustments to compensate, this overwhelms much of the rest of the band on several key numbers. Additionally, the group's singing, though more than adequate, lacks the presence needed to give their harmonies the necessary radiance to make the music fully attractive, coming off instead as anemic. The real problem is that cutting a live album was a thankless task for this group ...
| | Association Stop Your Motor CD (1971)
Renaissance music CDs
$11.79 Originally released on Warner Brothers Records. Includes liner notes by Richie Unterberger.
Although their chart hits had long since dried up, Stop Your Motor (1971) became the Association's penultimate long-player and second to last attempt at garnering any degree of hipness. Sadly, the sextet could not have been more out of step with the concurrent popular music trends, which must have been doubly frustrating as this effort actually includes a fair share of decent tunes that would have fit nicely into the burgeoning singer/songwriter genre. When Stop Your Motor was issued in the summer of 1971, it heralded the end of a two-year absence of new material. ...
| | Association Birthday CD (1968)
Renaissance songs
$11.25 Birthday is a strong record. Vocally, the intricate harmonies shine, and there is a lyrical depth on some songs that challenge ...
| | Association Insight Out CD (1967)
Renaissance album
$11.59 The Association's third album is not in a league with its debut, but Insight Out is an enjoyable folk-rock album with a few digressions into garage punk, novelty tunes, and psychedelia, all displaying much of what the group did best. The harmonies and choruses are among the most beautifully textured singing in a rock outfit this side of the Beach Boys, while the playing is engaging. Insight Out was done somewhat in the shadow of Harpers Bizarre's experimental "Feelin' Groovy" single -- the opening number, "Wasn't It a Bit Like Now," was an exercise in nostalgia similar to the later successful songs of Harpers Bizarre. "On a Quiet Night" and "We Love Us" are folk-rock ballads on which the group's harmonies are the highlight, while "When Love ...
| | Jan & Dean Popsicle/The Little Old Lady From Pasadena/Drag City CD (1998) (Import) Australia
Renaissance CD music
$19.99 This CD contains the 3 LPs, POPSICLE, THE LITTLE OLD LADY FROM PASADENA and DRAG CITY.
Albums really were shorter back in the mid-'60s, which means that this Australian compilation is not just a two-fer but a three-fer -- three whole Jan & Dean albums on one 75-minute disc. There was a little overlap among the three original LPs contained here, Drag City (1963), The Little Old Lady from Pasadena (1964), and ...
| | Novo Animo Gente Mia CD (1998)
Renaissance music CDs
$14.69
| | Dixon R Doll, Jr In The Dark CD (1992)
Renaissance songs
$18.99
| | Falling From The Burnside Bridge CD
Renaissance album
$9.19
| | Deadline Back For More CD (2003)
Renaissance CD music
$9.79
| | Lower Class Brats New Seditionaries CD (2006)
Renaissance music CDs
$10.95 OK, the Lower Class Brats aren't even trying to be original ...
| | Luv Machine Turns You On CD (2006) (Import)
Renaissance songs
$18.09 Formed in the tropical climates of Barbados 1967, The Luv Machine were a big attraction in the West Indies, where they'd had a string of hit singles and reached the number 1 spot with their psyched out rendition of the Foundation's 'Build Me Up Buttercup'! Influenced mainly by Hendrix and The Cream/Blind Faith, they also found inspiration from the likes of Vanilla Fudge, Pink Floyd, King Crimson & early Black Sabbath. Luv Machine managed to combine elements of psychedelic rock with a contemporary progressive attitude. Added to this was the bands natural capability of fusing elements of soul with an infectious funky groove into their completely unique sound.
The Luv Machine were something of a cross-cultural anomaly in Great Britain at the turn of the '70s. An interracial band from Barbados that played heavy psych influenced by the Hendrix/Clapton axis of British rock, the Luv Machine had been in the U.K. since 1967, slowly mutating from the West Indies' answer to Vanilla Fudge into a somewhat funk-influenced version of ...
| | Howard Carpendale Danke Ti Amo CD (Import)
Renaissance album
$30.19
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