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66 of 68 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The Best Single Disc Rascals Collection Available.
There is one reason why you should purchase "The Ultimate Rascals", over the Rhino collections, "Best Of", or "Anthology". The Warner collection is the only one that has the full album length version of "Lonely Too Long". It is hard to believe that Rhino would place a short edit version of the song and eliminate a whole verse...
Published on July 17, 2003 by Anthony Accordino

versus
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Audio is a throw back also
The songs are still a great as ever. Sure wish they had updated the audio quality though, which sounds like it's coming through tin cans.
Published on July 22, 2007 by Fredo


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66 of 68 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The Best Single Disc Rascals Collection Available., July 17, 2003
By 
Anthony Accordino (Massapequa Park, New York United States) - See all my reviews
(VINE VOICE)    (REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Ultimate (Audio CD)
There is one reason why you should purchase "The Ultimate Rascals", over the Rhino collections, "Best Of", or "Anthology". The Warner collection is the only one that has the full album length version of "Lonely Too Long". It is hard to believe that Rhino would place a short edit version of the song and eliminate a whole verse? The "Ultimate", collection is just the perfect sampler for the casual fans, who would like a nice 20 song overview of this great band at a great price. All the chart-toppers are here as well as several great album cuts.
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33 of 35 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars stop here, April 28, 2000
This review is from: Ultimate (Audio CD)
If you're looking for the best Rascals collection, you can stop right here. I excitedly bought the 2 disc collection when it came out years ago, and was disappointed with the sound and the fact that most of the first disc was mono. I knew this collection existed, but was leary as it was released at he dawn of the CD age (way back in '86). I finally took a chance and it's fantastic! All the tracks are stereo, all the essential Rascals tracks are here, and it sounds better than the 1992 remaster! Go figure.

If you're looking for the perfect 20 song distillation of essential Rascals, you've found it. Ah, go ahead. Remind yourself why these guys had so many hits between 1966 and 1968. They were awesome!

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19 of 19 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars One of the most underrated bands of the 1960's, April 27, 2005
By 
This review is from: Ultimate (Audio CD)
This disk is an excellent starting point for anyone even mildly interested in The Rascals. Before I got this disk, I only knew the big standard hits, which include "Good Lovin", "Groovin", "A Beautiful Morning", and "People Got to be Free". Each of these songs sounds better than ever on this collection for two main reasons. First, all songs on this disk (except "I Ain't Gonna Eat Out My Heart Anymore") are in stereo (apparently the only Rascals collection with "almost" all-stereo versions on it), and second, there are many other great songs on this disk for the listener to discover.

Although it took a few listens to really appreciate the rest of the songs on this CD, I realized that there was a lot of great music here that I hadn't discovered yet. Just about every song on this album is solid on its own, yet they really make the disk flow well when put together here.

Aside from the four standards mentioned above, which I'm sure many people know pretty well, a brief description of the other songs is listed below:

"I Ain't Gonna Eat Out My Heart Anymore" - shows their bluesy rocking potential prior to their first hit, "Good Lovin"; Eddie on vocals (although this song is in mono here, it still sounds great)

"Mustang Sally" - a great cover song; showcases their R&B roots

"You Better Run" - has a very strong rhythm section of drums, bass, and guitar; Felix's vocals sound threatening, ready to put the girl that wronged him in her place

"Come on Up" - has a quick, steady blues beat

"Love Is a Beautiful Thing" - a nice love song with a good beat to it

"What Is the Reason" - another nice love song with a faster beat to it and crazy drum rolls at the end

"I've Been Lonely Too Long" - nice piano, light brass in the background; a fairly big hit for them

"Girl Like You" - a good love song with a beat that swings along, with piano, light strings, and brass in the background

"How Can I Be Sure" - a great love song with just Eddie on vocals; has nice accordion playing in background

"It's Wonderful" - every cool band in 1967-68 had to have at least one psychedelic hit; this was theirs, and it's not bad at all, although a little goofy at the end

"Heaven" - has kind of a countryish waltz/shuffle beat to it with lots of brass at the end

"See" - starts out slow, sounding almost like a song finale, then it kicks into gear doubling the tempo featuring the keyboards; one of the last great hits with the original line-up of Felix-Eddie-Gene-Dino

"Carry Me Back" - another good bluesy number with some brass in it; again, one of the last great hits with the original line-up of Felix-Eddie-Gene-Dino

"Find Somebody" - a great album cut from the LP "Groovin", again showing they knew how to create a decent psychedelic song but still keeping their R&B sound at the same time

"Easy Rollin" - another great album cut, this time from the album "Once Upon a Dream"; has a laid-back countryish/psychedelic sound to it

"A Ray of Hope" - good album cut from "Freedom Suite", with a smooth beat and some brass in the background

The song selection is fantastic here and I highly recommend it to either the casual fan or a more serious fan that wants the best in overall sound quality, song selection, and good price. The first seventeen songs were either A-side or B-side singles. Unfortunately, there is noticeable hiss in each song and several songs have dropouts (most noticeably at the very beginning of "Good Lovin"), but this is no worse than your average compilation album of 1960's material on it. Also, there is no history of the band in the liner notes, but it does tell us who wrote each song, the date it was recorded, and the original album it came from. Because of the sound quality, I would only give four and ½ out of five stars here, but because this disk really turned me on to the great music of The Rascals, I will gladly give this collection five stars instead. It's nice to know that the other reviewers share the same interest in this fine collection.
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12 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The Title Is Accurate - Now Re-Issue Their Atlantic Albums, June 29, 2003
This review is from: Ultimate (Audio CD)
There's really no good reason why the Rascals' Atlantic albums - even the sometimes-obstreperous "Freedom Suite" - should remain out of print in the United States (they can be found as various import sets). The best white soul band of the 1960s deserves better than just a greatest-hits-plus anthology...but what an anthology this is. (It beats the earnest but lesser "Very Best of the Rascals" hollow.) Not just because it reminds you just why the Rascals were one of the prime reasons the top 40 was a legitimate wonderland between 1965 and 1969 (you have to be a real sourpuss to say you've heard as much of "I Ain't Gonna Eat Out My Heart Anymore," "Good Lovin'," "Groovin'," "A Girl Like You," "How Can I Be Sure," "A Beautiful Morning," or "I've Been Lonely Too Long" too many times), but because it includes the absolute best of their handful of near-misses from those years, particularly the oddly delightful "It's Wonderful" and the badly-underappreciated "See."

As a songwriting team, Felix Cavaliere and Eddie Brigati for long enough were at least on a par with Lennon and McCartney, Jagger and Richards, Holland-Dozier-Holland, and (before the dope ate the muse) John Phillips. As a band, the Rascals need no apology, particularly Dino Danelli (the no-questions-asked best white R and B drummer of his time) and Cavaliere (if he seemed like a seminar study in every known soul style, he still managed to sound completely like himself). Nor does singer Eddie Brigati need apology; he could shout with the best but his way with a ballad (remind yourself, if nothing else, with "Groovin'" and, especially, "A Beautiful Morning") was equally gripping. And since he's almost the forgotten Rascal, I'll give him his props right here: Gene Cornish was an excellent rhythm guitarist - he couldn't pull off a solo to save his life, but he didn't have to; you could call him the Ringo Starr of the guitar: he delivered just what was needed, added just a few subtleties of his own, and the Rascals would no sooner have sounded the same without him than without Danelli's deep drumming (if any 1960s drummer could have been called his own Wall of Sound, Danelli was he) or Cavaliere's broad keyboards.

Just why Cavaliere and Danelli forsook their smartly evolving soul for an ill-fated excursion into jazz (with the forgettable if well-enough played "Peaceful World,"), almost as though apologising for having "wasted" their time before, remains a mystery to me. If the pair (Cornish and Brigati were gone by 1970) thought they needed to get to a "next level," all they proved in the end was that they didn't appreciate they were already on their own level, one no one else could approach. (Lacking their songwriting acumen, Mitch Ryder and the Detroit Wheels - the only other white soul act of the time who played with the Rascals' bristling fire and then some - were goners within two years.) Perhaps by now the endurance of their classic Atlantic recordings has shown them. The Rascals as the world preferred them remain timeless. And until their Atlantic albums are resissued in full, the proof begins here.

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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars "Ultimate" '60s pop music, November 26, 2002
By 
"jbesanko" (Crofton, MD United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Ultimate (Audio CD)
Not unlike some other unfairly overlooked bands like the Hollies, the Grass Roots or the Turtles, the Rascals may have suffered somewhat from being a largely "faceless" band, but they sure made some great music, and this single disc, 20-song collection is an excellent overview...All the Top-40 hits are here (and there were 13 of those, including three #1's and two other Top-5 hits), as well as their first chart record ("I Ain't Gonna Eat Out My Heart Anymore") and other nuggets like "Easy Rollin'," "Come On Up" and "Love Is A Beautiful Thing"...This is like an AM radio soundtrack from 1966-68, and what could be better than that? Felix Cavaliere, Eddie Brigati and company produced some of the best "blue-eyed soul" and pop music of an era which arguably was the apotheosis of a time when pop, rock and soul could all be played on the same station. My only quibble is that the liner notes are minimal, so you don't get any band history as one would normally expect with such a collection. Otherwise: awesome, and essential.
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars If There Was A Better 60s Tune Than "Groovin'" I'll Eat It, September 1, 2007
By 
AvidOldiesCollector (Ottawa, Ontario, Canada) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Ultimate (Audio CD)
Like another reviewer I was skeptical when I first bought this way back when. At the dawn of the CD age in 1986 there were far too many companies rushing out discs using re-done material and, more often than not, limiting the selections to 10 or 12. But since I had lucked out on another Warner Special Product [The Coasters] I took the chance. The first song I played was, of course, Groovin' and as soon as I heard this anthem to a long, lazy 60's afternoon I knew it was the original and that I had made a good purchase.

I, too, would have liked to have seen some liner notes but, unfortunately, that was also a fault with most of the early CDs. This group formed when Felix Cavaliere [vocals, organ], Gene Cornish [vocals, guitar] and Eddie Brigati [vocals, persussion] bolted from Joey Dee & The Starlighters to join drummer Dino Danelli in the formation of The Young Rascals in February 1965.

At the Choo Choo Club in Garfield, N.J. they donned plus-fours for their "young" look and, later that year, secured a recording contract with Atlantic. From their first hit late in 1965 - I Ain't Gonna Eat My Heart Out Anymore which peaked at # 53 Billboard Pop Hot 100 early in 1966 - to 1967's It's Wonderful [# 20 early in 1968] they racked up nine hits as The Young Rascals, including the # 1 Good Lovin' as well as the immortal Groovin' [# 1] and I've Been Lonely Too Long [# 16], both of which crossed over to the R&B charts at # 3 and # 33 respectively.

They then dropped the plus-fours and, changing their name to The Rascals, went on to score another nine hits, beginning with A Beautiful Morning [# 3], People Got To Be Free [# 1], and A Ray Of Hope [#24], all three of which also crossed over to the R&B charts [going to # 36, 14, and 36 respectively].

When the group disbanded in 1972, Cornish and Danelli joined with Billy Hocher, Eric Thorngren, and John Turi to form Bulldog and, that year, had a # 44 hit with No. The same two then hooked up with Wally Bryson, Lex Marchesi, and Frankie Vinci in 1978 to form Fotomaker and had a # 81 with Where Have You Been All My Life? and a # 63 with Miles Away that year. The original Young/Rascals were inducted into the R&R Hall of Fame in 1997.

Normally I would deduct one star for lack of liner notes and the omission of four charted hits from the 18 they had: 1967's I've Been Lonely Too Long [# 16 as The Young Rascals]; 1970's Hold On [# 51] and Glory Glory [# 58 with The Sweet Inspirations]; and 1971's Love Me [a # 95 for Columbia and their last charted hit]. Instead, they filled out the CD with Mustang Sally [the flip of Good Lovin'], What Is The Reason [the flip of Come On Up] and two obscure cuts - Easy Rollin' and Find Somebody.

But, for a 1986 original release, this is a gem, and the fact that it's still available after all these years - albeit with a different cover - reflects that assessment.
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Worth Its Weight In Gold, October 27, 2006
By 
G. J Wiener (Westchester, NY USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Ultimate (Audio CD)
This compilation by the Rascals is oh so complete. Great songs and top notch arrangements dominate this recording. Not too mention good crisp vocal harmonies. All the big hits are here-Its A Beautiful Morning, Ain't Gonna Eat Out Of My Heart Anymore, Good Lovin', Groovin', Mustang Sally, I could go on. However there are many lesser known tunes-See, Its Wonderful, Carry Me Back, and Easy Rollin' which all have special qualities whether it be awesome vocals, catchy lyrics, delectable keyboard passages, steady drumming, precise guitar embelleshments all leading to a feel good mood.

Every track is a winner here folks. Pick this one up to enjoy the delectable sounds of this great band.
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent pop group of the late sixties, January 13, 2005
This review is from: Ultimate (Audio CD)
Originally called the Young Rascals, this group never made much impact in the UK (where they only had one major hit and one minor hit) but they were more successful in their American homeland, where they had several big hits including three that went all the way to number one. This 20-track compilation contains nearly all their hits and a few other tracks.

In the beginning, their music was mainly up-tempo R+B. They and Wilson Pickett sometimes recorded each other's songs - this collection includes Mustang Sally, a hitherto obscure song recorded by the Young Rascals before Wilson Pickett covered it

Their first single, I ain't gonna eat my heart out anymore, was a minor hit but the follow-up, a cover of Good lovin' (originally recorded by the Olympics) became their first chart-topper. After this, they started to write their own hits beginning with two top twenty hits (You better run, I've been lonely too long) and a minor hit (Come on up), all of which they wrote.

1967, possibly the best year in popular music history, was also the best year by far in the careers of the Young Rascals, yielding three major American hits and their only UK hits. Groovin' provided the Young Rascals with their second American number one, while also making the UK top ten. It was very different from their earlier up-tempo R+B music, marking the start of a new style - mellow, romantic, sunny music. The follow-up, A girl like you, maintained the new style, becoming a top ten American hit and a minor UK hit. They never again made the UK charts but their next single, How can I be sure, was a top five hit in their homeland. In 1970, it provided Dusty Springfield with a minor UK hit. Following all those successes, the Young Rascals became the Rascals. The hits continued with It's wonderful (top twenty) and A beautiful morning (top three). This was the last of their sunny, romantic songs. Events in America changed their music forever.

Their music became political., starting with their last big hit - People get to be free, which they wrote and recorded in response to Bobby Kennedy's assassination. It was their third and last chart-topping single. After this, they never again made the American top twenty, though they had lesser hits with A ray of hope, Heaven, See and Carry me back, all of which made the top forty. They had one minor hit (Glory glory, not included here) before finishing their recording contract.

If you enjoy late sixties pop music, you will probably enjoy this.
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Attention warranted, June 10, 2002
This review is from: Ultimate (Audio CD)
This compilation contains all The Rascals' big AM hits and many other fine songs. Indeed, this '60s band's earthy sound blending R&B and soul turned out to be a good fit for AM radio, and The Rascals also achieved substantial commercial success with their LPs. The veritable classic "Good Lovin'" and the anthem "People Got to Be Free," along with the group's trademark smoothie, "Groovin'," were all No. 1 hits. A superb cover of Wilson Pickett's "In the Midnight Hour" is a noteworthy omission, but this CD does contain The Rascals' rendition of Mack Rice's "Mustang Sally," Pickett's version of which is more well known, and it is one of their best moments. The group could be pretty, too, with songs like "It's A Beautiful Morning" and the syrupy "How Can I Be Sure." The gorgeous soul masterpiece "Love Is A Beautiful Thing" is my favorite. "The Ultimate Rascals" provides an opportunity to experience quite thoroughly one of the more important '60s groups.
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6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Quite possibly the best CD I own, January 1, 2005
This review is from: Ultimate (Audio CD)
We played it for the first time while eating dinner on New Year's Eve. I couldn't even get up and wash the dishes until the whole CD was over. IT'S THAT GOOD.
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Ultimate by Rascals (Audio CD - 1990)
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