And the "hits" just keep on coming (to me) from Mr. Reichardt. It's been a joy over the last several months discovering all of the gems Anthony provides. As an aside Anthony, would you be related to Rick Reichardt, the U. of Wisconsin star and baseball "bonus baby" signed by the L. A. Angels in 1964?
To me, this record showcases the beauty and warmth of Goldstar itself - the studio's sound sparkles as does the echo, and this is also a fantastic demonstration of Mr. Levine's engineering skills. A nice treat for my ears..... 'welcome home, baby...'
Wow, another great song I should have been enjoying for the past 50 years but no one told me about it. 1965 was smack in the middle of the peak years for American pop (not to mention the British Invasion), and this song is better than 99% of what was put out that year!
When I hear such great songs as this from Gold Star I would love to have spent time in theses recording studios and with the Wrecking Crew, such wonderful sounds.
A gem from the treasure chest that holds all the music that got buried by the '60s avalanche. Falsetto part reminds me of the touch Lou Christie would often use on his records. The swirling strings and short trumpet accent notes make this record too good. Would of been a giant hit if Motown, Beatles, Surf, and all other spokes on the 60's music wheel were not around.
I'm surprised no one else noted the similarity of the swirling strings to the Ronettes 'Keep On Dancing' (which I love BECAUSE of the beautiful swirling stings). That track was also recorded here & engineered by Mr. Levine. I think I've two versions of 'Keep On Dancing' - one which features the strings much more prominently.
This studiohave recorded such great artists of the 60's
Honestly man really like this, keep playing them tunes man
I remember this!!! Been years since I've heard this WINS New York
And the "hits" just keep on coming (to me) from Mr. Reichardt. It's been a joy over the last several months discovering all of the gems Anthony provides. As an aside Anthony, would you be related to Rick Reichardt, the U. of Wisconsin star and baseball "bonus baby" signed by the L. A. Angels in 1964?
Rick Reichardt is my dads cousin.😀
A good song with epic sound and lyrics.
The magical sound reverberating from deep withing the Gold Star echo chamber is just that.....warm. I also like to add, living and breathing.
To me, this record showcases the beauty and warmth of Goldstar itself - the studio's sound sparkles as does the echo, and this is also a fantastic demonstration of Mr. Levine's engineering skills.
A nice treat for my ears.....
'welcome home, baby...'
This is one of the best lost 60s treasures!
Wow, another great song I should have been enjoying for the past 50 years but no one told me about it.
1965 was smack in the middle of the peak years for American pop (not to mention the British Invasion), and this song is better than 99% of what was put out that year!
Three years later, frequent listening, I stand by this, no reason to change my mind, I love this song!
When I hear such great songs as this from Gold Star I would love to have spent time in theses recording studios and with the Wrecking Crew, such wonderful sounds.
Brilliant song, wonderfully produced
A gem from the treasure chest that holds all the music that got buried by the '60s avalanche. Falsetto part reminds me of the touch Lou Christie would often use on his records. The swirling strings and short trumpet accent notes make this record too good. Would of been a giant hit if Motown, Beatles, Surf, and all other spokes on the 60's music wheel were not around.
Top!!
Its quality all the way with Phil "flip" Sloan songs..
a great sounding hidden treasure from him! another great production from gold star! rob
great song..... unfortunately on a label in its final breaths. probably wasn't promoted properly....
Historic record label that imploded at the end.
what a rich sound,no one nowdays can produce this,even if they wanted to,sad fact, and if anyone has a copy of this for sale please get in touch
Great!!!
I'm surprised no one else noted the similarity of the swirling strings to the Ronettes 'Keep On Dancing' (which I love BECAUSE of the beautiful swirling stings). That track was also recorded here & engineered by Mr. Levine. I think I've two versions of 'Keep On Dancing' - one which features the strings much more prominently.
cool song
thank you so much; this is beautiful
❣️🎶💥🎼 No...Comment 🎼💥🎶❣️
did gold star record every great song of the sixties? I had no idea.
like this - rather reminiscent of Gene Pitney
I get the same vibe, too.
;)