OLDIES BUT GOODIES, VOLUME 5 and BEST OF THE BUBBLE GUM YEARS

I use music as a memory jogger. I’m always surprised (and occasionally delighted!) to hear a song I haven’t heard in over 50 years. With the BEST OF THE BUBBLE GUM YEARS (1988) includes some classics like “Yummy, Yummy, Yummy” by Ohio Express and a “Little Bit of Soul” by the Music Explosion. Of course, there’s a lot of dreck on this CD, too. “Green Tambourine” by Lemon Pipers remains annoying after all these years. The same with “The Rapper” by The Jagger Z.

Oldies But Goodies, Volume 5 (1986)is somewhat better. I love The Shirelles’ “Mama Said” and “Tossin’ and Turnin’ by Bobby Lewis. I enjoy Dion’s “The Wanderer” but prefer “Teenager in Love.”

How many of these songs do you remember? Any favorites here? GRADE: C for Best of the Bubble Gum Years; B- for Oldies But Goodies, Volume 5

Track Listings

1Green Tambourine – Lemon Pipers
2Simon Says – 1910 Fruitgum Co.
3Yummy, Yummy, Yummy – Ohio Express
4Little Bit Of Soul – Music Explosion
51, 2, 3 Red Light – 1910 Fruitgum Co.
6Chewy, Chewy – Ohio Express
7Indian Giver – 1910 Fruitgum Co.
8The Rapper – The Jagger Z
9Mercy – Ohio Express
10Rice Is Nice – Lemon Pipers
11Goody Goody Gumdrops – 1910 Fruitgum Co.
12Quick Joey Small – Kasenetz Katz Singing Orchestral Circus
13Down At Lu Lu’s – Ohio Express
14Special Delivery – 1910 Fruitgum Co.

TRACK LIST:

1 Since I Don’t Have YouJames Beaumont / Joseph Rock / The Skyliners 02:36 

2 Angel BabyRosie “Rosalie” Hamlin / Rosie & the Originals 03:36 

3 Little StarVito Picone / Manuel Ponce / Arthur Venosa / The Elegants 02:42 

4 A Thousand StarsKathy Young 03:12  

5 When We Get MarriedThe Dreamlovers 02:29 

6 Daddy’s Home  — Shep & the Limelites 02:47 

7 Diamonds and PearlsThe Paradons 02:20  

8 Harlem ShuffleBob & Earl 02:53 

9 Mr. Big StuffJean Knight 02:45 

10 The Wanderer  — Dion 02:42 

11 Mama SaidThe Shirelles 02:11  

12 Who’s Making Love?Johnnie Taylor 02:49 

13 Tossin’ and Turnin’  — Bobby Lewis 02:21  

14 Rockin’ RobinBobby Day 02:36  

15 Sixty Minute ManThe Dominoes 02:31  

16 Alley OopThe Hollywood Argyles. 02:43

 

21 thoughts on “OLDIES BUT GOODIES, VOLUME 5 and BEST OF THE BUBBLE GUM YEARS

  1. Cap'n Bob

    Bubblegum rock sucks bigtime! The other one has a number of good songs, especially Since I Don’t Have You! It’s credited to James Beaumont but as Jimmy Beaumont he fronted The Skyliners! I think B- is too low a grade!

    Reply
  2. Deb

    Numbers 9 through 14 on the first album appear to just be filler; at least, I’m not familiar with any of them. Unlike you, I do like “Green Tambourine”. “A Little Bit of Soul” seems to have wandered in from another record. “The Rapper” seems to have been too late to be called bubble gum: that songs sounds like 1970/71 to me and not bubble-gummy at all. On the whole, I prefer the second CD which features some real gems (“The Wanderer”, “Mama Said”). Again, there are some songs here that seem to be from another era: “Mr. Big Stuff” and “Who’s Making Love” are definitely late-1960s/early-1970s, everything else has a decidedly pre-Beatles vibe—but my perceptions could be askew.

    Reply
    1. george Post author

      Deb, your perceptions are right on the money. OLDIES BUT GOODIES, VOLUME 5 includes a variety of songs from various years. But BEST OF THE BUBBLE GUM YEARS lacks the iconic “Sugar, Sugar” by The Archies!

      Reply
  3. Fred Blosser

    I’m with Deb on “Green Tambourine,” although I don’t regard it as Bubble Gum, more the hippy-trippy stuff from the Summer of Love 1967-68 era. Also with Deb on “The Rappe,” and “Little Bit of Soul,” definitely not BG. I’d give the first album a B- for nostalgia, but for a better, larger BG collection, I’d go with “25 All Time Greatest Bubblegum Hits” from Varese Sarabande. Some good cuts on the second CD.

    Reply
  4. Jeff Smith

    There were session players in both England and America who churned out track after track which they sent to the bubble gum labels — who then randomly plastered one of the group names onto them and released them. One label hired a local band to change their name to Ohio Express so they could go on tour and play “their” hits. They had never even heard of “Chewy Chewy” until it came on the radio and fans asked for it in concert.

    Reply
  5. Todd Mason

    OLDIES BUT GOODIES was probably one of the first LP repackage series of such hits…I know those compilations have been around close to forever. I have one or two on vinyl in my stacks.

    Never was too fond of most bublegum, but Steam was credited with a number of the least bad items.

    Reply
    1. Todd Mason

      The first vinyl album version of V. 5 was released (with the same cover format) in ’63, as per Discogs (one wonders if rights were temporary, more expensive in some cases as time went on, etc.):

      1 The Elegants– Little Star
      Written-By – Venosa*, Picone*
      2:37
      A2 Rosie And The Originals*– Angel Baby
      Written-By – Ponci*
      2:45
      A3 The Skyliners– Since I Don’t Have You
      Written-By – Rock*, Skyliners*
      2:36
      A4 The Paradons– Diamonds And Pearls
      Written-By – West Tyler
      2:15
      A5 Shep And The Limelites*– Daddy’s Home
      Written-By – Baskerville*, Basset*, Sheppard*
      2:47
      A6 The Channels– The Closer You Are
      Written-By – Robertson*, Lewis*
      3:00
      B1 The Hollywood Argyles*– Alley-Oop
      Written-By – D. Frazier*
      2:36
      B2 Maurice Williams– Stay
      Written-By – Williams*
      1:37
      B3 The Dominoes– Sixty-Minute Man
      Written-By – Ward*, Marks*
      2:25
      B4 Bobby Day– Rockin’ Robin
      Written-By – Thomas*
      2:25
      B5 Preston Epps– Bongo Bongo Bongo
      Written-By – Egnoian*, Nitzsche*
      2:08
      B6 The Jewels (6)– Hearts Of Stone
      Written-By – Ray*, Jackson*
      2:29
      Liner Notes – Art Laboe
      Matrix / Runout (Side A label): #or-5563
      Matrix / Runout (Side B label): #or-5564
      Title (Format) Label Cat# Country Year
      Oldies But Goodies Vol. 5 (LP, Album, Compilation, Stereo) Original Sound OSR-LPS-8855 US 1963
      Oldies But Goodies Vol. 5 (LP, Album, Compilation, Mono, Scranton Pressing) Original Sound OSR-LPM-5007 US 1963
      Oldies But Goodies Vol. 5 (LP, Album, Compilation, Mono) Original Sound OSR-LPM-5007 US 1963
      Oldies But Goodies Vol. 5 (LP, Album, Compilation, Stereo) Original Sound OSR-LPS-8855 US 1970
      Oldies But Goodies, Vol. 5 (LP, Compilation, Reissue, Stereo, Rechanneled) Original Sound OSR-8855 US 1982

      Reply
  6. Jeff Meyerson

    I don’t agree. I like “Green Tambourine” more than anything else on that Bubble Gum record, except “Little Bit O’ Soul.” I had 45s of both of them. We’ve been listening to the 60s Channel on Sirius in the car, and they play the odd Bubble Gum song there. Most are pretty bad.

    The Oldies But Goodies album is exactly what Jackie and I were talking about yesterday! I had one with the classic novelty song, “Stranded in the Jungle” by The Cadets. Jackie remembers “Image of a Girl” on hers, but she had three that I remember. This is clearly a reissue, as the originals only had 10 songs, and this throws in ’70s stuff like “Mr. Big Stuff.” Overall, I know them all and like a lot of them. Glad to seer the classic “Sixty Minute Man,” which we saw the late Ed Bradley sing at a Jimmy Buffett concert after 9/11.

    Reply
  7. Jeff+Meyerson

    By coincidence, in the car just now, they played the original bubble gum song that led to all the others, “Simon Says, ” and like it or not, it was a very catchy song. Jackie says she used it in her classroom for aerobic breaks. Also coincidentally, this was followed by the Paul Simon-written “Red Rubber Ball,” which also has a bubble gum sound.

    Reply
    1. Jeff+Meyerson

      “Simon Says” looked even better when it was followed by the egregious “Yummy Yummy Yummy (I’ve Got Love in My Tummy)” by the so-called Ohio Express.

      Reply
    2. george Post author

      Jeff, I love “Red Rubber Ball” written byBruce Woodley of The Seekers and Paul Simon of Simon & Garfunkel, recorded by The Cyrkle, whose version reached No. 2 on the US Billboard Hot 100, and in South Africa and New Zealand. In Canada, the song reached No. 1. Catchy and sadly a “One Hit Wonder” for The Cyrkle.

      Reply

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