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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Three-way value, October 5, 2005
This review is from: Little Eva (Audio CD)
The Loco-Motion bookends this compilation, first in the huge hit by Little Eva, who also devised the dance that became such a craze, and finally in the name of the band who provide the only selection not by Little Eva, The Locomotions, a Philadelphia group featuring Leon Huff. They provide the song inspired by the dance and which was named Little Eva in her honour. Midway we also get the throw-away cash-in Old Smokey Loco-Motion.
Subtitled The Complete Dimension Recordings, it lives up to its name well, the only omission I could spot being the single Heigh-Ho which was a duet with Big Dee Irwin and therefore technically doesn't count, although room has been found for four other collaborations with Big Dee, including the hit Swinging On A Star.
This album is valuable in three ways: first, as a collection of Little Eva's best solo recordings (she was also sang with the Cookies, and they in turn sing on a number of her records) between 1962 and 1965; secondly as a representation of some of the best recordings on the short-lived Dimension "girl group" label which Don Kirshner formed in 1962; and thirdly as a veritable Goffin and King songbook. They were staff writers for the label and their names appear on all but ten of its 29 tracks.
Little Eva was the only artist to have an album released on Dimension. Produced by Gerry Goffin it was called L L L L Loco-Motion and included Loco-Motion and the hit follow-up Keep Your Hands off My Baby (added to the album's second pressing). It also had her versions of Goffin and King songs originally given to the Drifters, Ben E King, Bobby Vee and the Shirelles, as well as covers of Breaking Up Is Hard To Do and the Crystals' Uptown (both Brill Building songs). One oddity was the West Side Story number I Have A Love. The album came out in mono and ghastly electronically-channeled stereo - the complete album is here in mono.
Little Eva also devised another popular dance, the Turkey Trot, and there are a number of turkey references in the songs including, of course, on the big hit Let's Turkey Trot (farmyard noises by the Cookies). Other A-sides were the excellent The Trouble With Boys, Let's Start The Party Again, which gets into Lesley Gore territory, and Wake Up John (written by Chip Taylor). Get Him, recorded at the same sessions as Wake Up John, remained unreleased until 1988. These records have an infectious charm and innocence that derive from their ephemeral intent but that can still be fully enjoyed today.
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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Much more than Locomotion, April 6, 2003
This review is from: Little Eva (Audio CD)
Although she had other hits too, Little Eva will forever be remembered for Locomotion, which provided a huge hit for her in the early sixties. It was revived by Grand funk railroad in the seventies and again by the brilliant Australian singer, Kylie Minogue, in the eighties.

Following the success of Locomotion, an album was rush-released, mainly filled with covers of contemporary hits, including Some kind of wonderful, Up on the roof (both Drifters), Breaking up is hard to do (Neil Sedaka), Sharing you, Run to her/him (Bobby Vee), Uptown (Crystals) and Will you love me tomorrow (Shirelles).

Keep your hands off my baby, the follow-up to Locomotion, was a top twenty hit in America, just making the top thirty in Britain, while her third hit, Let's turkey trot, was a top twenty hit on both sides of the Atlantic.

Her next hit was a duet with Big Dee Irwin, although Little Eva was not credited. The song, Swinging on a star, was originally a number one American hit for Bing Crosby, but the sixties version is very different. I enjoy both versions in different ways. It provided them with a top ten British hit, but barely made the American top forty. The B-side, Another night with the boys, was also a duet and was the third Drifters hit that Little Eva had covered.

That marked the effective end of Little Eva's chart career, though there were to be a couple of minor hits in America. Those hits, together with all previously mentioned tracks and all other recordings that Little Eva made for Dimension records are included on this excellent compilation.

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5.0 out of 5 stars Little Eva -The Complete Dimension Recordings, August 31, 2007
This review is from: Little Eva (Audio CD)
Wow it has been along time since I really listened to Little Eva sing anything but Locomotion. This girl has a great voice and can do all types of songs as this c.d. proves. This IS a MUST BUY for true rock n roll fans and lovers of female singers who were there at the start of Rock n roll . I could not find a bad song on this compact disc. Buy it and enjoy it. I have just finished listening to the whole disc and this girl blows most of todays girl singers out of the water. I agree with the ones who say she was NEVER given the credit she deserves. Try it you'll love it !
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Little Eva
Little Eva by Little Eva (Audio CD - 2001)
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