Pass It Around [Bonus Track] Smokey

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CD - Remastered / Bonus Tracks

  • Release Date: 09/18/2007
  • Original Release: 1975
  • Sales Rank: 123,945
  • Label: GLAM / 7T'S
  • UPC: 5013929043626
 
  • Overview
  • Tracks
  • Editorial Reviews
  • Details & Credits
Track List
Click on LISTEN or link to hear an audio clip.
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Pass It Around [Bonus Track]

1LISTENPass It Around 3:07
2LISTENDaydreamin' 2:17
3LISTENOh Well Oh Well 3:17
4LISTENMy Woman 3:22
5LISTENIt Makes Me Money 2:57
6LISTENHeadspin 3:31
7LISTENGoin' Tomorrow 3:43
8LISTENI Do Declare 3:45
9LISTENDon't Turn out Your Light 4:00
10LISTENWill You Love Me 3:43
11LISTENA Day at the Mother in Laws 2:51
12LISTENThe Coldest Night 4:15
13LISTENShy Guy 3:25
14LISTENCouldn't Live Bonus Track 2:24

About this Artist

Editorial Reviews

This was the debut album for Smokie, an English quartet who were a pet project for legendary English pop producers Nicky Chinn and Mike Chapman. Although their unique blend of country-rock and pop would soon make Smokie a big success in Europe, their style comes off as tentative and unfocused on Pass It Around. The group's instrumental performance is tight and their Beach Boys-meet-Sweet vocal harmonies are quite pleasing to the ear but their songwriting abilities are not up to snuff. Too many of the songs are weighed down with lightweight lyrics: "It Makes Me Money" is a petulant jab at rock critics, and "A Day at the Mother-in-Law's" is a gimmicky novelty tune that wears out its welcome after the first listen. The worst offender in this respect is "Headspin," a song that wastes its catchy central country-rock riff on a silly lyric about getting drunk. Other songs feel more like loose collections of riffs than fully realized compositions: "Goin' Tomorrow" rides its galloping guitar riff into the ground through endless repetition, and "I Do Declare" runs into the same problem despite a catchy chorus. Despite this problem, echoes of the group that Smokie would eventually become shine through here and there: "Daydreamin'" works an infectious harmony-driven chorus into a likable guitar-fueled melody and the surprisingly complex arrangement of "Don't Turn Out Your Light" weaves serpentine guitar lines and a chorus built on escalating harmonies into a beguiling little pop tune. In the end, though, the inconsistent moments outweigh the solid tunes. Thus, Pass It Around can only be recommended to the Smokie completist. [7TS's 2007 edition featured one bonus track.] ~ Donald A. Guarisco, All Music Guide All Music Guide

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