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One Kiss Can Lead to Another: Girl Group Sounds Lost and Found
 
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One Kiss Can Lead to Another: Girl Group Sounds Lost and Found [BOX SET] [ORIGINAL RECORDING REMASTERED]

Various Artists (Artist)
4.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (42 customer reviews) More about this product

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Product Details

  • Audio CD (October 4, 2005)
  • Original Release Date: October 4, 2005
  • Number of Discs: 4
  • Format: Box set, Original recording remastered
  • Note on Boxed Sets: During shipping, discs in boxed sets occasionally become dislodged without damage. Please examine and play these discs. If you are not completely satisfied, we'll refund or replace your purchase.
  • Label: Rhino / Wea
  • ASIN: B000B5KRV6
  • Average Customer Review: 4.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (42 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.com Sales Rank: #14,002 in Music (See Bestsellers in Music)

    Popular in this category: (What's this?)

    #33 in  Music > Pop > Oldies > Girl Groups

Disc: 1
1. Needle in a Haystack
2. He's Got the Power
3. Nobody Know What's Goin' On (In My Head But Me)
4. I'd Much Rather Be with the Girls
5. Keep Your Hands Off My Baby
See all 30 tracks on this disc
Disc: 2
1. I Adore Him
2. Train from Kansas City
3. Please Go Away
4. Let Me Get Close to You
5. I Have a Boyfriend
See all 30 tracks on this disc
Disc: 3
1. Trouble with Boys
2. Lookin' for Boys
3. Dream Baby
4. Condition Red
5. Should I Cry [Alternate Take]
See all 30 tracks on this disc
Disc: 4
1. When the Boy's Happy (The Girl's Happy Too)
2. Don't Drag No More
3. I'm Afraid They're All Talking About Me
4. That's How It Goes
5. Some of Your Lovin'
See all 30 tracks on this disc

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com

Girl groups have enchanted humankind since the era of the ancient Greeks, when legend has it the Sirens attempted to lure wayfarers Odysseus and Jason to their fates; Persephone's chanteuses would eventually even lose a battle of the bands to the Muses. A couple millennia later, female singers would become a dominant force in the pop and rock of the ‘60s, the era anthologized on this four-disc, 120-track collection from Rhino. If the "group" tag is something of a misnomer (many of the acts here are solo artists), the vibrant female pop spirit of the times gets showcased in rare fashion by a collection that eschews the obvious to revel in showcasing rarities and surprises at every turn: the bittersweet, life-is-over-when "I'm 28" musings of a two-decades-pre-"Mickey" Toni Basil; a healthy sampling of gems by the Cookies and their various alter-egos, including the Palisades' fervent ode to uber-necking, "Make the Night Just a Little Bit Longer"; the Shangri-Las' mini-epic, "Out in the Streets"; hit songwriter Ellie Greenwich's solo turn on the haunting "You Don't Know." An impressive collection with an inclusive bent, its tracks range across the classic r&b of the Marvelettes, Chiffons and Irma Thomas, country-crossovers Skeeter Davis and Wanda Jackson, the blue-eyed soul of Jackie DeShannon and Dusty Springfield and wounded white-girl pop of Lesley Gore and Connie Francis. It's all contained in one of Rhino's most elaborately designed packages yet: each disc comes in a mock compact; its extensive liner notes and track info printed as a mini-diary; all housed in a smart replica of a vintage hat box--a treasure-packed delight for lovers of the genre and curious novices alike. -- Jerry McCulley

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Customer Reviews

42 Reviews
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 (33)
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 (5)
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Average Customer Review
4.6 out of 5 stars (42 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

 
62 of 64 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Mammoth Compiilation Hits One Out Of The Park !, October 7, 2005
Even those who've known me the longest will think I've finally imploded and left the planet for good...until they hear this one for themselves. Why? Glad you asked. It's because I can say without reservation that this is the Mother of All Boxed Sets. It's that simple. Having been a lifelong girl group fanatic and having bought several of these tracks as singles when they were released, I am FLOORED by the combination of material, taste, research and packaging that I now hold in my hands. It's truly a case of quality meets quantity. And even those cuts I already possess sound better in this collection. Within this clever hatbox (Bonwit Teller circa 1962?) resides a peerless collection that even the completist simply must have.
Perhaps it's most impressive characteristic is how the sub strains of this fascinating and addictive genre fall seamlessly into place on four packed to capacity CDs. The Great Disc Jockey in the Sky has tendered his resignation. Not all of the tunes here were intended as dance numbers, but you'll have a hard time keeping still for long and those with multi-disc players will be vindicated for making such a purchase.
This isn't a complete surprise, however. Nobody does box sets like Rhino. Only Deutschland's Bear Family comes close, and the edge must be given to Rhino as a result of their packaging prowess. Aside from the aforementioned hatbox, the graphics and superior commentary in the almost one inch thick '"diary" add to the overall value of this landmark package with its blue snakeskin cover (disclaimer: no reptiles were harmed or humiliated for this project).
Since none of the 120 selections here even approaches filler status, I won't babble on about my personal favorites- there are way too many. I'll just finish up by reiterating: there is no downside here. And the price is more than fair. A landmark release with very highest marks all around.
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76 of 81 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Girl group heaven, October 20, 2005
By Michael Miller (Carmel, IN USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
I've been in seventh heaven listening to Rhino's latest boxed set, One Kiss Can Lead to Another: Girl Group Sounds, Lost and Found. I'm a long-time fan of the early-60s Girl Group/Brill Building/Wall of Sound genre (and of Rhino Records, of course), and this boxed set is perhaps the finest representation to-date of the Girl Group part of that equation.

First, the details. This is a 4-CD set, each CD with 30 songs each, for a total of 120 girl group classics. It comes with the kind of in-depth liner notes, in a separate booklet, that one expects from the folks at Rhino. And it's all wrapped up in what looks to be a 60s-era hatbox, very cute.

The recordings are all first-rate, fully remastered in glorious mono (in most cases). Many of the songs here are available on other collections (such as K-Tel's long out-of-print The Brill Building Sound boxed set), but the sound here is much superior to what I've heard elsewhere. Take, for example, the forgotten gem "My One and Only, Jimmy Boy" by The Girlfriends. This song first got rediscovered on The Brill Building Sound, then later was included on one of Ace Records' Early Girls compilation CDs. In both those instances, the sound was muddy, without a lot of headroom; it sounded as if it had been recorded in a trashcan. Not so on Girl Group Sounds. Here the sound is bright and clear, almost as if it had been recorded last year instead of forty years ago. (It first hit the charts in February of 1964, where it got swept away by the Beatles invasion.) You can hear every footstomping beat, every crack from Hal Blaine's snare drum, and all the glory of Steve Douglas' rockin' sax solo. The sound is so vibrant, so joyous, you just want to get up and dance along.

As I said, most of the songs on the Rhino set have been available in other collections, although you had to look hard for them. Rhino's mid-1980s The Best of the Girl Groups compilations offered some of these tunes, as did K-Tel's late, lamented 1993 The Brill Building Sound box. More recently, U.K. reissue label Ace Records had dug up several of these cuts for their Early Girls and Where the Boys Are compilations, although both the sound and the liner notes are superior in this new Rhino set.

My favorite tunes? There's a bunch. "He's Got the Power," by The Exciters. "You Don't Know," a rare solo singing turn by songwriter Ellie Greenwich. "Please Don't Wake Me," by The Cinderellas. "I Never Dreamed," by The Cookies. "Break-A-Way" by Irma Thomas. The Bacharach-like "Girl Don't Come," by Sandie Shaw. "The One You Can't Have," by The Honeys, written and produced by Brian Wilson in his best better-than-Spector mode. The aforementioned, "My One and Only, Jimmy Boy," by The Cinderellas, a rollicking Wall of Sound-alike by future Bread-winner David Gates. "Dream Baby" by a very young Cher, where producer Sonny Bono shows that he learned something when he used to work for Phil Spector. "I'm Blue (The Gong-Gong Song)" by the Ikettes, recently revived in Quentin Tarantino's Kill Bill Vol. 1. "Peanut Duck," an irresistibly odd dance number by an anonymous singer billed as Marsha Gee. A somewhat obscure Dusty Springfield number titled "I Can't Wait Till I See My Baby's Face." A rare live version of Patty & The Emblems' "Mixed Up, Shook Up Girl." And too many more to mention.

The Girl Group sound was inspired by the popular female pop singers of the 1950s (Patti Page, Rosemary Clooney, et al), the burgeoning R&B genre (Ruth Brown, Etta James, et al), and various female doo-wop groups. The fire was lit by early rock 'n' roll, and the fuel provided by the era's best producers, songwriters, and studio musicians. Its birthplace was New York, but it quickly migrated to Los Angeles, Detroit, London, and beyond. At its best, the Girl Group sound mixed bits of Brill Building pop, Phil Spector Wall of Sound, sassy Motown soul, and the sound of swingin' London -- although it doesn't fall squarely into any of these camps. After all, Brill Building songwriters also wrote for male teen heartthrobs and manufactured groups like the Archies and the Monkees; the Wall of Sound powered hits by The Righteous Brothers and Ike & Tina Turner; Motown was at least as much Temps and Tops as it was Supremes and Marvelettes; and London pop eventually devolved into schmaltzy Tom Jones and Englebert Humperdinck. So the Girl Group sound was more than the sum of its parts -- it was its own distinct sound, whether fronted by a real group or a solo singer with backups.

To many critics, the post-Elvis, pre-Beatles era was a musical wasteland, but they just weren't listening hard enough. The best of the Girl Groups (and solo singers working with backup groups) transcended the factory-like approach to the music, working with the best songwriters, producers, and studio musicians to create classic tracks that bear their unique imprint. I'm talking about groups like The Shangra-La's, The Chiffons, and The Shirelles, and solo singers like Ronnie Spector (of The Ronettes), Darlene Love (of The Blossoms), Dusty Springfield, Petula Clark, Leslie Gore, and, of course, Diana Ross (and The Supremes). These are great songs, great performances, and great records. I can listen to them all day long -- and often do.
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23 of 24 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Intelligent & Loving Exploration of an Oft-Ignored Genre, December 28, 2005
By Natalie Miller (New Orleans, LA) - See all my reviews
One Kiss Can Lead to Another is the first & only box set dedicated solely to the "girl group" genre. This is NOT a "girl groups" box set, as some people seem to believe, but a collection of "girl group sounds", as the title states it. Hence, the box is most certainly not intended for an audience of vinyl-hoarding purists, but it IS a mass-market-friendly exploration of the grand productions & catchy pop songs being delivered by female solo acts and groups from the period. The sheer number of "sounds" that were collected for this set -- 120 songs on four CDs -- is almost overwhelming by itself, but what is truly amazing about it is the number of artists. There is relatively little "overlap", and the number of strange and hard-to-find one-offs, b-sides, and flat-out obscura by artists both "known" (Peggy Lee, Jackie DeShannon) and "unknown" (Peanut, The Whyte Boots) is where the real reward lay.

DO NOT get this box set if you are looking to find a crowd-pleasing selection of hits. While there are some undeniably great gems within, the box set works best as a sort of "Intro to Girl Group 101" text. There is a variety of sounds, artists, and experiments covered but no particular facet of the girl group genre is represented with any real depth. This is just as well -- there are plenty of compilations out there that detail this long-maligned genre with much more specificity (The "Girls in the Garage" compilations come to mind), and the volume of sounds herein more than makes up for it.

One Kiss Can Lead to Another actually bears a lot of similarity to that OTHER genre-defining classic Rhino set, the whopping Nuggets & Nuggets II. Much like that set, you will find little in the way of keg-party smashes in favor of much more interesting & bizarre cuts by artists of varying popularity (and, as a caveat, prolonged listening to the box set in one sitting might prove to be an exercise in the endurance of repetition). There are no real "career"-defining moments here for any of the artists nor any unified sound; This is simply a good collection of the good, the strange, and the flat-out weird.

There will be plenty of naysayers that are eager to point out the fact that the set lacks any true "hits", that the lack of actual Spector recordings and inclusion of many Spector "rip-offs" is abundant, that the packaging is rather "gimmicky" and that several of the artists included (Wanda Jackson?) aren't true "girl groups". That's okay -- those who dig strict adherence to convention over having fun probably shouldn't be listening to girl groups in the first place. For the rest of us, the box is nothing short of amazing, and downright touching in the way it's compilers have managed to cull so many great/weird/interesting recordings for a genre as condescendingly named & long-dismissed as this one. What sets this collection apart from the number of budget-bin compilations is the fact that so many "standards" have been left off in favor of less-popular hits, in hopes that the listenener will be forced to think about the nature of the sound rather than be omforted by the familiarity of the sound itself. For anyone interested in looking beyond the oldies-station format and into the ups, downs, side-steps and downright mis-steps of girl group music as a whole, this is the collection for you, and it's every bit worth it. It's a literal hat-box of fun.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews

4.0 out of 5 stars Broad anthology of girl group rarities
There's little to fault in the research and production put into this set, but the breadth of collected works and the focus on rarities makes this the province of collectors rather... Read more
Published 6 months ago by hyperbolium

5.0 out of 5 stars GREAT MUSIC - WATCH FOR DEFECTIVE COPIES
I have been getting an unusual number of defective disks from Rhino. Read my review for Nuggets. My copy of this played OK, but on one disk the ink used on the front of the disk... Read more
Published 9 months ago by Syd

5.0 out of 5 stars Super Fun
I think this a fun boxed set from the music to the packaging. It has a TON of great songs youd never get to hear. Read more
Published 21 months ago by JRJ

5.0 out of 5 stars Girl Power!
Ah, girl groups. Who doesn't like them? Especially if they're the teeny-bopper, bubble-gum classics from the 1960s. Read more
Published 22 months ago by Paul Gray

5.0 out of 5 stars A true anthology
I use many of these songs in my US History class when talking about the evolution of rock and roll.

This collection is a true anthology--a representative sampling of... Read more
Published 22 months ago by James V. Holton

5.0 out of 5 stars Greatest Girl Group Reissue Project Ever!
You could spend the next year (or more) and hundreds of dollars (or much, much more)tracking down these gems of the Brill Building Pop era, or you could buy this fabulous set,... Read more
Published 23 months ago by Thomas Bumbera

5.0 out of 5 stars Simply stunning collection: Rhino does Girl Groups right
Packaged in a life size replica of a 60s hat box, containing a thick booklet of background info, historical essays, and rare photos, and naturally 4 CD's jam-packed with some of... Read more
Published on September 17, 2007 by Casey Scott

5.0 out of 5 stars How can this set NOT BE LESS than 5 stars???
I mean really!!! This set is utter perfection, from the genius (and USEFUL) hatbox package, the CDs themselves looking like compacts and powderpuffs, the clear-as-a-bell... Read more
Published on August 10, 2007 by Larry Davis

5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent and entertaining.
This CD set is fantastic, a great combination of obscurities and semi-obscurities. Just listening to Margaret Ross of the Cookies (aka the Cinderellas/Palisades/Honeybees) singing... Read more
Published on August 7, 2007 by D. Pagano

5.0 out of 5 stars More important than the bible
First, the downside: no Phil Spector. But, plenty of Shadow Morton and "wall-of-soundalikes." Decent mix of ballads and uptempo numbers. Read more
Published on March 8, 2007 by G. Hill

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