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The Youngbloods LP

The Youngbloods (Get Together)
The Youngbloods Get Together Album.jpg
Studio album by The Youngbloods
Released January 1967
Recorded 1966 at RCA Victor's Studio B in New York City
Genre Folk rock
Length 33:38
Label RCA Victor
Producer Felix Pappalardi
The Youngbloods chronology
The Youngbloods
(1967)
Earth Music
(1968)Earth Music1968
Singles from The Youngbloods
  1. "Grizzly Bear"/"Tears Are Falling"
    Released: November 1966
  2. "Get Together"/"All My Dreams Blue"
    Released: July 1967
  3. "Get Together"/"Beautiful"
    Released: June 1969

The Youngbloods is an album by the American rock band The Youngbloods, released in 1967. It was also reissued in 1971 under the title Get Together after the popular single from the album. The album peaked at number 131 on the Billboard 200 although two years later the single "Get Together" reached number five and sold more than a million copies.

"Get Together" was written by Chet Powers (aka Dino Valenti of Quicksilver Messenger Service) and had already appeared in 1966 as a track on the first album by The Jefferson Airplane. Upon first release as a single by The Youngbloods in 1967, it only went to #62 in the pop charts. Two years later, after being featured in radio and television commercials, the track was re-released and climbed to number 5 in charts, selling more than a million records.

The first song on the album, "Grizzly Bear" (spelled "Grizzely Bear" on the album cover), was also released as a single reaching #52 in the pop charts in December 1966.Jerry Corbitt took credit for writing this song, but it had appeared on a 1928 recording by singer/songwriter Jim Jackson. The song featured the "jug band" style popularized by The Lovin' Spoonful, Jim Kweskin Jug Band and other similar groups of the middle 1960s. The title refers to a popular dance style of the 1910s. Corbitt also wrote the second song on the LP, the ballad "All Over the World (La La)". Side one also featured Blind Willie McTell's "Statesboro Blues" and another ballad, "One Note Man" written by fellow Cambridge folk musician Paul Arnoldi (spelled "Arnaldi" on the record label).


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