David Cassidy - Come On Get Happy The Very Best Of The Partridge Family
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 See Larger Image | Come on Get Happy! The Very Best of the Partridge Family Artist : The Partridge Family List Price : $11.98 USD Your Price : $10.99 USD ProductGroup: Music Release Date : 2005-05-03 Studio : Arista Label : Arista Avg. Customer Rating : (41 reviews)
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Reviews Customer Reviews for Come On Get Happy The Very Best Of The Partridge Family Best Music Ever! Rating: This is a great compilation of the hits from the show. If you want to listen to hits from the 70's choose this it is a great find. Enjoyed playing over and over!
Customer Reviews for Come On Get Happy The Very Best Of The Partridge Family Cd About time for the rarites!! Woo hoo!! Rating: "Stephanie" and the 2 songs from the pilot are totally sought after. I am really glad it's now available. I noticed "Together" had an additional vocal layering over the whole song than the TV pilot's version. Of course, that and "Let the good times in" doesn't include David Cassidy on the vocal. This makes it very rare. And to think this was all going to be The Cowsills show until their parents opted out. Too bad for them. I wonder if there is a "Stephanie" version fully recorded by Bobby Sherman?? However, this is a great treat for fans and they need to release other unreleased songs from the series episodes. Great job!
What about the original opening "When we're singing"? Will that be available soon?
Editorial Reviews for Come On Get Happy The Very Best Of The Partridge Family Audio Cd Amazon.com It doesn't happen all the time, but occasionally kitsch burrows itself into the popular consciousness and stays put because it's timelessly, compellingly good. Such is the case with The Very Best of the Partridge Family, which at long last allows pop aficionados who have closeted their dirty-little-secret obsession with the fictitious TV group to come clean. Never mind the ruffles and dove-wing lapels?heartthrob hang-ups aside, David Cassidy can sing (skip "I Think I Love You" and check his soul chops on the raging "Roller Coaster" or his Elvis-like vocal nuances on "Point Me in the Direction of Albuquerque" instead.) And it doesn't hurt that the material he crooned was penned by some of the era's top songwriters. Barry Mann and Cynthia Weill, for example, lent their graceful imagery to "Looking Through the Eyes of Love," and Gerry Goffin was behind "I'll Meet You Halfway." Add to that the band's layered-harmony-nailing background singers and a stash of sensational session players, and it can't be helped: You get happy. -Tammy La Gorce
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