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Tiddlywinks

Tiddlywinks in Bloomington, MN

Current price: $17.99
Get it at Barnes and Noble
Tiddlywinks

Tiddlywinks in Bloomington, MN

Current price: $17.99
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Size: CD

Get it at Barnes and Noble
Tiddlywinks
was
NRBQ
's eighth album and followed the captivating
Kick Me Hard
by less than a year. Released by
Red Rooster
through
Rounder
, the set featured the classic line-up of
Terry Adams
,
Al Anderson
Tom Ardolino
and
Joey Spampinato
with the
Whole Wheat Horns
--
Keith Spring
on tenor sax and
Donn Adams
on slide trombone. The grooving 11-track set is easily one of the most consistent and satisfying in the band's discography.
Adams
Anderson
, and
Spampinato
individually claimed authorship on ten of the set's 11 tunes.
The album kicks off with "Feel You Around Me." Composed by guitarist
, its easy meld of vintage 1960s pop and jazzy swing is laid-back and tender, with one of
' finest-ever vocals and a nice glockenspiel hovering around the backdrop. Single "Me and the Boys," one of
's best-known tunes, is up next. Following a classic rock & roll progression, it is a garage band anthem with squalling Telecasters, gutbucket basses, controlled feedback, and cracking snare and hi-hat. Above it all are
' smooth, effortless vocals adding whimsy and tender jocularity. It was such a natural fit for the core sound of
Dave Edmunds
, he covered it on 1982's
D.E. 7th
. The album's only cover is a reading of the 1936 novelty hit "The Music Goes Round and Round (And Comes Out Here)," made immortal duriung the '50s by
Louis Prima
.
' modern keyboard sounds meet vintage guitars, horns, hard-swinging drums, and a walking bassline in a good-time fingerpopper. Even the ballads work here: there's the lilting country-pop of "Beverly," the
Beatles
que "When I Get Back Home," and the honky tonk stride boogie blues in "I Want You to Feel Good Too." The punchy, swaggering, hooky "You Can't Hide" could easily have been covered by Rockpile, and the intersection of Randy Newman and Billy Joel on "Are You Here" is a standout. The set's second single, "Never Take the Place of You," is warm, jazzy, and sparkling yacht rock. When the record closes with the choogling "Hobbies," a bluesy instrumental with Adams singing wordlessly, the listener has been on a journey in the band's stylistic universe. Throughout, the songwriting is consistently excellent, and the performances sound effortless as well as inspired. Remarkably, there is no filler. For a band as musically restless as NRBQ, this is rare. After 1978's At Yankee Stadium, it may be their finest album. [In 2023,
Omnivore Recordings
reissued the album with four bonus tracks: "I Don't Think Ofâ?¦" and "Big Goodbyes were recorded during the
sessions and released on 1983's
Tapdancin' Bats
collection. Also included are the two controversial TV and radio spots originally issued as the flipside of "Never Take the Place of You." The package includes updated artwork and liner notes from original engineer
Tom Mark
.] ~ Thom Jurek
Tiddlywinks
was
NRBQ
's eighth album and followed the captivating
Kick Me Hard
by less than a year. Released by
Red Rooster
through
Rounder
, the set featured the classic line-up of
Terry Adams
,
Al Anderson
Tom Ardolino
and
Joey Spampinato
with the
Whole Wheat Horns
--
Keith Spring
on tenor sax and
Donn Adams
on slide trombone. The grooving 11-track set is easily one of the most consistent and satisfying in the band's discography.
Adams
Anderson
, and
Spampinato
individually claimed authorship on ten of the set's 11 tunes.
The album kicks off with "Feel You Around Me." Composed by guitarist
, its easy meld of vintage 1960s pop and jazzy swing is laid-back and tender, with one of
' finest-ever vocals and a nice glockenspiel hovering around the backdrop. Single "Me and the Boys," one of
's best-known tunes, is up next. Following a classic rock & roll progression, it is a garage band anthem with squalling Telecasters, gutbucket basses, controlled feedback, and cracking snare and hi-hat. Above it all are
' smooth, effortless vocals adding whimsy and tender jocularity. It was such a natural fit for the core sound of
Dave Edmunds
, he covered it on 1982's
D.E. 7th
. The album's only cover is a reading of the 1936 novelty hit "The Music Goes Round and Round (And Comes Out Here)," made immortal duriung the '50s by
Louis Prima
.
' modern keyboard sounds meet vintage guitars, horns, hard-swinging drums, and a walking bassline in a good-time fingerpopper. Even the ballads work here: there's the lilting country-pop of "Beverly," the
Beatles
que "When I Get Back Home," and the honky tonk stride boogie blues in "I Want You to Feel Good Too." The punchy, swaggering, hooky "You Can't Hide" could easily have been covered by Rockpile, and the intersection of Randy Newman and Billy Joel on "Are You Here" is a standout. The set's second single, "Never Take the Place of You," is warm, jazzy, and sparkling yacht rock. When the record closes with the choogling "Hobbies," a bluesy instrumental with Adams singing wordlessly, the listener has been on a journey in the band's stylistic universe. Throughout, the songwriting is consistently excellent, and the performances sound effortless as well as inspired. Remarkably, there is no filler. For a band as musically restless as NRBQ, this is rare. After 1978's At Yankee Stadium, it may be their finest album. [In 2023,
Omnivore Recordings
reissued the album with four bonus tracks: "I Don't Think Ofâ?¦" and "Big Goodbyes were recorded during the
sessions and released on 1983's
Tapdancin' Bats
collection. Also included are the two controversial TV and radio spots originally issued as the flipside of "Never Take the Place of You." The package includes updated artwork and liner notes from original engineer
Tom Mark
.] ~ Thom Jurek

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