Wooden Head
B**.
A varied ride from over their whole career....in one stop shopping platter....
Nice set of out-takes ....makes for a bit of a various mish-mash ride....but a fine set of tunes is a fine set of tunes either way. Buy it and ride the various styles and sounds....you are sure to find some awesome moments ,along with some pretty cool pop too. Not as good as their greatest....but really no slouch either. Enjoyable for the patient fans out there!
E**H
Leftovers Make for Yet Another Good Album
"Wooden Head" was released by the Turtles in 1970, so one would think that it contained the style of pop rock that the group played in the latter part of their career, but the album largely consists of folk rock songs from several years earlier that were never released. Not every song here is great, but all in all, the album holds up well--my favorites were "Tie Me Down" and the mesmerizing "She'll Come Back." It is the mark of a great group when, at career's end, the band has enough unreleased material to put out another pretty good album on its way out the door.
D**C
For completists only
Good Turtles album but the previous 5 ones are essential
F**N
... of unreleased turtles recordings but then again I've always liked the Turtles
Interesting mix of unreleased turtles recordings but then again I've always liked the Turtles.
D**N
Probably the best of the Turtles' "early period".
With "You Baby," the Turtles made a shift away from folk rock into the more "good-time-y" style they would keep at the forefront for much of their future career. The thing is, they apparently had quite a bit of folk-rock-styled material still in the can, and Wooden Head (issued in 1970, around the time the Turtles stopped functioning as a band) is an interesting combination of those tracks, some others, and some later-period recordings. Many of the tracks are originals, but the covers are some of the band's best: "I Get Out of Breath" (one of P. F. Sloan's best tracks) and "Tie Me Down" (by David Gates, of all people) are very nice, and this "heavier" recording of We'll Meet Again bests the earlier version in my opinion. Additionally, it must be noted that the early-Beatles imitative superwide stereo of the first two albums--all instruments on one side and all vocals on the other--is thankfully not imitated here, with more natural stereo mixes carrying the load.Around track 11, however, things get a bit weird..."Wanderin' Kind" is the "Lady Jane" of this compilation, as it appears on the first album and really has no business being here (it's a decent song, but wholly derivative of Mr. Tambourine Man). And while "Ain't Gonna Party No More" is an excellent little tune, this is an odd place to stick it chronologically.The last track brings up another unfortunate aspect of this particular disc. Sundazed--usually noted for its excellent with regard to sound quality, packaging, and liner notes--really didn't pull out all stops with its Turtles releases. The liner notes here are decent, although short on facts and insight and long on speculation. But was anybody paying attention when it came time to assign songwriting credits? Howard Kaylan is listed as the writer of "Who Would Ever Think that I Would Marry Margaret," a song he notoriously despised. As Repertoire's release of the album makes the same mistake, it's clear that Sundazed and Repertoire were working from the same info, and neither bothered to check sources.The verdict? Wooden Head is a strangely strong album, and probably works better than either of the first two LPs officially released by the group; the half-finished tracks work in the band's favor, nixing the occasionally-shmaltzy horn/string overdubs that marked their early work.BUT!Sundazed's reissue is really nothing special. And while in many cases the Sundazed disc would have something that Repertoire's CD of the album would not (a stereo mix of "Sound Asleep" etc.), Repertoire's disc has everything the Sundazed disc has...and more. An extra five tracks, to be precise, many of which are hard to find otherwise, and are well worth having. Avoid the Sundazed disc, and get the Repertoire Records release of this album instead...you'll be happy you did.
A**R
Surprising....
First of all, I believe the cover art for this album is awesome. Very unique. And the music lives up to it as well. However, I do believe this is a hit-or-miss, because I have heard of many people not caring for it. As for myself, I thought it was exceptional despite the "lack of hits." This release consists of demos and unreleased material that makes one wonder why it was neglected.It starts off with "I Can't Stop," which is probably one of the few tracks on this album that you can truly get into on first listen.Next comes "She'll Come Back," which is probably my least favorite, with the exception of "Tie Me Down." Its a bit slow and mopey."Get Away" sounds very modern. It seems as if it hasn't aged one bit."Wrong From the Start" is a little bit mediocre. Still a decent listen nonetheless."I Get Out of Breath" consist of a pretty cool chorus, and if you really listen to the lyrics you'll appreciate what it has to say."We'll Meet Again" is very jumpy and happy. Quite dance-able too."On a Summer's Day" is pretty slow-paced. Serious and mellow."Come Back" has alright lyrics, but isn't too interesting."Say Girl" is one of the better tracks on this album. It sounds like a simplified version of "She's My Girl," one of The Turtle's hits.I simply cannot find anything good about "Tie Me Down." Its basically a repeated phrase of "She tried to tie me down!" The only track on this album I completely dislike.Here's where the album starts to come to a close, and of the beginning of a reward for waiting. "Wanderin' Kind" proves this."Aint Gonna Party No More" is THE BEST track on this album hands down, if not THE BEST Turtles track ever recorded."Who Would Ever Think That I Would Marry Margaret" was a song The Turtles were forced to record by their jackass record label. However, it isn't bad at all. It actually turned out very good.So, in conclusion, I reccomend this album to those that are fond of The Turtles and aren't knew to their style of music. If you are just getting into The Turtles, I reccomend you start out with "20 Greatest Hits." It contains everything worth listening to of The Turtles, and, as far as I'm concerned, doesn't contain a single bad track. Don't start with "Solid Zinc: The Turtles Anthology." While it has several great songs, it also has quite a few that those just starting out wouldn't appreciate. If you enjoy "20 Greatest Hits," then maybe go for "Wooden Head." I may just be an exception though, as I must mention the fact that it has not had good reviews by others, but for under twenty bucks, what the hell. I mean, if worse comes to worse, you can always just stare at the cover art for a little bit....
M**Y
sweet harmonies live on
back in the day people played with style and created tight harmonies. This is that type of pop rock with really clear and well played songs from the midsixties. There are some later tracks on here too from 1970 but the bulk of the disc is that really good type of guitar pop from 1966 and there's not a bad song on here. Songs like 'I can't stop" , 'almost there' and others really are enjoyable to listen to. The original wooden head was released after the band initially broke up and white whale their record company collapsed soon afterward. So it's a good thing we finally get to have these tracks back.
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