Yahoo! Services

Account Options

New User? Sign Up Sign In Help

Yahoo! Search

Artist Main
Biography
Downloads
Albums
Lyrics
Similar Artist
Reviews
Fan Sites


    The Rascals
    Reviews
The Rascals
Rating affects your music played in LAUNCHcast and Music Videos.
Your Artist Rating:
Why Rate?

Once Upon A Dream Review

07/13/2005 5:34 AM, AMG


This is a welcomed reissue in Atlantic's Original Sound series, with souped-up audio and a neat reproduction of the original gatefold jacket. It's also a little flawed -- only 11 tracks indexed while the jacket says 14. Once Upon a Dream is a fascinating record, capturing the Rascals in transition from white soul band to progressive jazz-blues-rock fusion outfit. Working amid the psychedelia flourishes of the post-Sgt. Pepper era, this is the Rascals at their most ornate, backed by flautist Hubert Laws, saxman legend King Curtis, and trumpet player Mel Lastie and a string orchestra. "Rainy Day"'s outro, with its mention of peace and love, is the dead giveaway about where the band was heading -- luckily, the soulful "Please Love Me" and "It's Wonderful" follow immediately, retaining the toughness and drive of their earlier work; and Felix Cavaliere's "Singin' the Blues Too Long" marks the peak of the band's blues experiments, as well as a compelling foray into jazz, five minutes of surging trumpet and sax, soulful choruses, and searing guitar from the composer/singer. Gene Cornish's "I'm Gonna Love You" is one of the group's strangest tracks up to that time, a mixture of soul and marching band, no less. Not everything here works, by a longshot -- the gentle, trippy, sitar-laden "Sattva" is one of the silliest things the band had recorded up to that time; "My Hawaii" is a boring interlude, and the title song is too self-consciously pretty and profound. Those flaws aside, however, Once Upon a Dream marked the end of an era, the last Rascals album that could be absorbed casually, without any demanding pretensions or larger messages. ~ Bruce Eder, All Music Guide