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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Masterful Effort from a Legend, April 23, 2003
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This review is from: Easy Does It (Audio CD)
It's a mystery to me why this LP is not available in the USA, and is not on CD. Al is in peak form, totally relaxed, in his top form. The compositions here are far more intricate and comlpex than on his better known work, the playing is superb, and the arrangements flawless. This is surely the gem recording of his fabulous career. If you can find a copy, grab it!
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Best Al Kooper's Album, April 8, 2001
By 
Francisco Urosa P (Miami, Florida United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Easy Does It (Audio CD)
Excelent !!! I do not understand why it may have not been released in US in CD format, since it is a legendary Gold Columbia Records classic. It was released in Venezuela too, early 70'ties !!!
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Title Should Have Been Taken to Heart, November 11, 2008
By 
A. Peters "ablpete" (Near Chicago, United States) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: Easy Does It (Audio CD)
Over all, a well rounded album by Al Kooper. I would have given it 4.75 stars, but Amazon deals only in whole numbers. His vocals here are better than his lifetime average. Some songs are somewhat overproduced, hence the sentiment that the title should have been taken to heart a little more often. In Kooper's own commentary on this disk, he said that he regrets, in retrospect, his covers of James Taylor's `Country Road' and John Loudermilk's `A Rose and a Baby Ruth'.
On this third solo album circa 1970, Kooper plays piano, organ, guitars, ondioline, sitar, vibes, prepared guitar, and electronic effects.
1. Brand New Day: could have been the title song to another album (remember, this was originally a double album, although it is now on one CD). A classic tale of the kids coming of age, and their parents' inability to deal with it.
2. Piano Solo Introduction: Kooper's variations on the theme of Ray Charles' 'I Got a Woman'.
3. I Got a Woman: A faithful cover of the Ray Charles classic.
4. Country Road: Somewhat overpowering horns distract you from James Taylor's original imagery. In the abstract, a very interesting interpretation, even though Kooper calls it `dreadful'.
5. I Bought You the Shoes: Features David Bromberg on pedal steel guitar. Lament over a leaving wife, something Kooper came to know well.
6. Introduction: A bit of studio goofing around, in which a saxophone seems to be answering a question with "I don't know". This sort of track always set Kooper's albums apart, making it seem as though you're in the studio with him.
7. Easy Does It: Great title track for the album. Phenomenal keyboard and horn interplay. Verses carefully done in 5/4 time. Great shout at the end (you'll hear about this again later).
8. Buckskin Boy: Lament to the treatment of native American Indians.
9. Love Theme from `The Landlord': A different version of the song Kooper wrote as part of the soundtrack for the movie, starring Beau Bridges.
10. Sad, Sad Sunshine: Written while coming down from an LSD trip, with the morning sun falling in through the hotel room window. Western melody played very well on the sitar.
11. Let the Duchess No: A Seatrain (spin off of Blues Project) song. Pete Drake on pedal steel guitar. Some Ray Charles inspired piano, too.
12. She Gets Me Where I Live: Co-written with Charlie Calello, yet arranged and conducted by Jimmie Haskell (no relation to Eddie).
13. A Rose and a Baby Ruth: Cover of John Loudermilk's 1950's classic, with David Bromberg on pedal steel guitar. While Kooper finds it regretful in retrospect, taken in context, it is quite listenable. A bit of studio chatter included at the end of the track, again keeping the listening experience more personal.
14. Baby Please Don't Go: Over 12 minutes covering Big Joe Williams' song. Done with full respect to the original, giving the piano plenty of room to shine. A few other themes rolled into the piano solos, too.
15. God Sheds His Grace on Thee: A tip of the hat to the counterculture's sentiments of the time. This track is followed by "out-takes" of the shout at the end of `Easy Does It', one with a bleep, one without. Again, Kooper was one of a few that admitted things didn't always come out exactly perfect on the first take. He may have been the only one to include his own "gag reel" in his commercial releases.
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5.0 out of 5 stars A Desert Island Disc!, October 5, 2010
This review is from: Easy Does It (Audio CD)
I've owned this (as vinyl) since it came out in 1970. I have always loved this album and enjoy what Kooper does here more than any of his other work. One reviewer noted about the song "Brand New Day" that it was a "classic tale of the kids coming of age, and their parents' inability to deal with it". When I was in high school, 10th through 12th grade ('70-'72), I started EVERY morning right after I got out of bed with this song blasting from my "hi-fi"! (And, for some unknown reason, my father let me.) "Rose and a Baby Ruth" is a bit over-produced, true, but it's delightful. I still find my self singing or whistling it walking through the mall parking lot, down the street or wherever. "I Bought You The Shoes (You're Walking Away In)" is an absolute miniature gem of a song (and song writing). This double album is one of my favorites that I'd include on my Desert Island Disc choices. It's sometimes what some call "over-produced", but it's sonically rich for it, in my opinion. Recordings this well done are very rare these days.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Easy Does It, December 15, 2009
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This review is from: Easy Does It (Audio CD)
An old friend and I used to listen to this album all the time a few decades ago. Hadn't heard it in 35 years until the CD arrived a few weeks ago. It is still kick ass; timeless. If you want to know how good Blood, Sweat & Tears could have been had Kooper stuck around, here's your chance.
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5.0 out of 5 stars On Of The Era's Best Songwriter..., February 10, 2008
This review is from: Easy Does It (Audio CD)
This self taught musician's influence on people like The Stones Beatles, Bob Dylan, Stephen Stills, Mike Bloomfield...speak for itself. His inclusion in such bands as Super Sessions, The Blues Project not to mention Blood Sweat and Tears is a standing tribute to a man who truly influenced his generations music.
PS, check out the album "I Stand Alone"
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Easy Does It
Easy Does It by Al Kooper (Audio CD - 1999)
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