Home
2 + 1 = Ponderosa Twins Plus One
Barnes and Noble
Loading Inventory...
2 + 1 = Ponderosa Twins Plus One in Franklin, TN
Current price: $14.99

Barnes and Noble
2 + 1 = Ponderosa Twins Plus One in Franklin, TN
Current price: $14.99
Loading Inventory...
Size: CD
An import reissue of the groups' 1971 release on
Horoscope Records
with two added tracks; the LP is only available on vinyl --
P-Vine
did not market this to the
MTV
crowd. A copy goes for just under 20 bucks, but the original fetches twice that -- ironic, because the Japanese reissue is better. In addition to the adds, the vinyl and the sound quality are better, but originality is all that and a bag a chips to some.
used the original cover (front and back), but the sleeve notes are in Japanese (the original didn't have sleeve notes). The additions are both sides of the groups' third single cut after the album dropped:
"Why Do Fools Fall in Love"
b/w
"Bitter With the Sweet"
;
Calvin Simon
(
Parliarment
/
Funkadellic
) produced the
Frankie Lymon & the Teenagers
' update, and
Bobby Massey
(then a member of
the O'Jays
) the flipside. The other 12 are divided evenly between
Massey
and
Michael Burton
productions with
's sides the most interesting; he knew how to record them,
Burton
saddled them with a tinny, kiddie sound, and a couple of his productions/compositions are far too strident for ears. Highlights include a remake of
Sam Cooke
's
"You Send Me,"
"Bound,"
"I Remember You,"
"Dad I Love Her."
~ Andrew Hamilton
Horoscope Records
with two added tracks; the LP is only available on vinyl --
P-Vine
did not market this to the
MTV
crowd. A copy goes for just under 20 bucks, but the original fetches twice that -- ironic, because the Japanese reissue is better. In addition to the adds, the vinyl and the sound quality are better, but originality is all that and a bag a chips to some.
used the original cover (front and back), but the sleeve notes are in Japanese (the original didn't have sleeve notes). The additions are both sides of the groups' third single cut after the album dropped:
"Why Do Fools Fall in Love"
b/w
"Bitter With the Sweet"
;
Calvin Simon
(
Parliarment
/
Funkadellic
) produced the
Frankie Lymon & the Teenagers
' update, and
Bobby Massey
(then a member of
the O'Jays
) the flipside. The other 12 are divided evenly between
Massey
and
Michael Burton
productions with
's sides the most interesting; he knew how to record them,
Burton
saddled them with a tinny, kiddie sound, and a couple of his productions/compositions are far too strident for ears. Highlights include a remake of
Sam Cooke
's
"You Send Me,"
"Bound,"
"I Remember You,"
"Dad I Love Her."
~ Andrew Hamilton
An import reissue of the groups' 1971 release on
Horoscope Records
with two added tracks; the LP is only available on vinyl --
P-Vine
did not market this to the
MTV
crowd. A copy goes for just under 20 bucks, but the original fetches twice that -- ironic, because the Japanese reissue is better. In addition to the adds, the vinyl and the sound quality are better, but originality is all that and a bag a chips to some.
used the original cover (front and back), but the sleeve notes are in Japanese (the original didn't have sleeve notes). The additions are both sides of the groups' third single cut after the album dropped:
"Why Do Fools Fall in Love"
b/w
"Bitter With the Sweet"
;
Calvin Simon
(
Parliarment
/
Funkadellic
) produced the
Frankie Lymon & the Teenagers
' update, and
Bobby Massey
(then a member of
the O'Jays
) the flipside. The other 12 are divided evenly between
Massey
and
Michael Burton
productions with
's sides the most interesting; he knew how to record them,
Burton
saddled them with a tinny, kiddie sound, and a couple of his productions/compositions are far too strident for ears. Highlights include a remake of
Sam Cooke
's
"You Send Me,"
"Bound,"
"I Remember You,"
"Dad I Love Her."
~ Andrew Hamilton
Horoscope Records
with two added tracks; the LP is only available on vinyl --
P-Vine
did not market this to the
MTV
crowd. A copy goes for just under 20 bucks, but the original fetches twice that -- ironic, because the Japanese reissue is better. In addition to the adds, the vinyl and the sound quality are better, but originality is all that and a bag a chips to some.
used the original cover (front and back), but the sleeve notes are in Japanese (the original didn't have sleeve notes). The additions are both sides of the groups' third single cut after the album dropped:
"Why Do Fools Fall in Love"
b/w
"Bitter With the Sweet"
;
Calvin Simon
(
Parliarment
/
Funkadellic
) produced the
Frankie Lymon & the Teenagers
' update, and
Bobby Massey
(then a member of
the O'Jays
) the flipside. The other 12 are divided evenly between
Massey
and
Michael Burton
productions with
's sides the most interesting; he knew how to record them,
Burton
saddled them with a tinny, kiddie sound, and a couple of his productions/compositions are far too strident for ears. Highlights include a remake of
Sam Cooke
's
"You Send Me,"
"Bound,"
"I Remember You,"
"Dad I Love Her."
~ Andrew Hamilton