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Miracles

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Do It Baby

                 



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Format: LP     Want this on CD also?

Condition: VG+ COVER / VG+ LP (cover/media)    More Info
Label: Tamla
Country: Us
Released: 1974
Genre: soul
Num In Set: 1
Quantity: 1 in stock
Seller Ref:   839

Two years and two albums into the post Smokey Robinson-era and in retrospect, 1974's "Do It Baby" showed the group doing far better than anyone would have expected. Whereas Robinson still had his fingerprints on the previous album (serving as executive producer for 1973's "Renaissance"), without Robinson in the picture, The Miracles were truly at the mercy of their producers; in this case working separately with Hal David, Willie Hutch, Joe Porter, and Freddie Perren (the latter two   furnished several songs for the album).   Given the group's somewhat precarious position of not wanting to lose longstanding fans, while hoping to find a young audience, I'm guessing this was about as adventuresome as it was going to get.      As such. musically the album offered up a mixture of conventional ballads ('Up Again', 'Where Are You Going To My Love' and 'A Foolish Thing To Say') and up-tempo dance tracks (''Do It Baby and 'What Is a Heart Good For').    Say what you will about the collection, but you certainly had to admire Bill Griffin.   He'd done an admirable job stepping in for Robinson on the pervious album, but this time around he sounded completely comfortable as the head Miracle, injecting a certain degree of silky sexiness into material like 'Do It Baby' that Robinson would never had broached.      All told, one of the best of the post-Robinson releases.
"Do It Baby" track listing:
(side 1)
1.) Do It Baby    (Freddie Perren - Christian Yarian) - 3:05
As mentioned earlier, if you couldn't have Smokey Robinson, with his silky smooth voice and photogenic good looks, Billy Griffin was a pretty impressive replacement.   The album title track wasn't half bad either, mixing a bit of Norman Whitfield atmospherics with a funky, dance-ready rhythm track.   It did make a nice change from the Robinson-era ballads and fans responded well when it was tapped as a single   YouTube had a nice clip of the group lip syching the track on Soul Train:
�   rating: **** stars
2.) Up Again    (Freddie Perren - Christian Yarian) - 3:15
The spoken word introduction was cheesy to the extreme which set the bar pretty low for the rest of the breezy ballad 'Up Again'.    Nice enough and the chorus was catchy, but not one of their finest performances.    rating: *** stars
3.) Where Are You Going To My Love    (Billy Day - John Goodison - Tony Hiller - Mike Leslie) - 3:34
A lot of folks know the Tony Hiller/Brotherhood of Man original which is quite good (the female lead always reminded me of a Dusty Springfield) .   I'd argue it was actually better than this over-orchestrated and under-sung cover - Griifin just didn't sound very comfortable in the song's high key..    I think Method Man and Raekwon sampled it at some point.      rating: ** stars
4.) What Is a Heart Good For    (Leon Ware - Arthur Ross) - 2:52
The decision to include 'What Is a Heart Good For' on the album was somewhat curious given it had already appeared on the previous "Rennaissance" LP.   An up tempo, radio friendly dance track, Motown management originally released this as the first post-Robinson single (Tamla catalog number T 54240F), but for some obscure reason, quickly pulled it.   Shame since it was one of the best tracks on either of the albums.   Neither the sound, or video quality are very good, but YouTube has another YouTube clip of the group lip synching the song:
    rating: **** stars
5.) You Are Love    (Freddie Perren - Christian Yarian) - 3:22
A bland and forgettable old-school ballad, the best thing 'You Are Love' had to offer were the group harmonies.    Otherwise this was thoroughly forgettable.   rating: ** stars
(side 2)
1.) Give Me Just Another Day    (Leon Ware) - 3:33
The heavily orchestrated opening was a bit disconcerting, but once you got through that, 'Give Me Just Another Day' was actually one of the album's more memorable and enjoyable tracks.

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Bad Cat Records

Bad Cat Records (Virginia, United States)

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