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Nilsson Schmilsson

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (237 ratings)
Nilsson Schmilsson album cover
01
Gotta Get Up
2:24 $0.99
02
Driving Along
2:02 $0.99
03
Early In The Morning
2:48 $0.69
04
The Moonbeam Song
3:18 $0.99
05
Down
3:24 $0.99
06
Without You
3:16 $1.29
07
Coconut
3:48 $0.99
08
Let The Good Times Roll
2:42 $0.99
09
Jump Into The Fire
6:54 $0.99
10
I'll Never Leave You
4:11 $0.99
11
Si No Estas Tu
3:14 $0.99
12
How Can I Be Sure Of You
3:04 $0.99
13
The Moonbeam Song
3:30 $0.99
14
Lamaze
1:44 $0.99
15
Old Forgotten Soldier
2:41 $0.99
16
Gotta Get Up
5:06 $0.99
Album Information

Total Tracks: 16   Total Length: 54:06

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eMusic Review 0

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Ben Fong-Torres

eMusic Contributor

Ben Fong-Torres was a writer and music editor at Rolling Stone and was portrayed as such in the 2000 film, Almost Famous. He is the author of eight books, inclu...more »

06.30.09
Harry Nilsson, Nilsson Schmilsson
2004 | Label: RCA/BMG Heritage

Although he'd scored with "Me and My Arrow" and "Everybody's Talkin'," Nilsson wanted a standalone hit, one not tied into a movie or TV show. He wrote a stack of new tunes and enlisted, as producer, a fellow Brooklynite, Richard Perry, who, like Nilsson, leaned more towards pop than rock, and whose credits included Barbra Streisand. They struck a good balance in Nilsson Schmilsson, and were rewarded with three hit singles of wildly varying colors: the dramatic Badfinger tune, "Without You," which hit the top of the pop charts and got him a Grammy; the novelty smash "Coconut," and the then-requisite self-indulgent, seven-minute rock workout ("Jump Into the Fire").

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Ahhhhh.

Greeble

I wish I still had 90 downloads per month rather than 50, then I could download this right now. One of the gems of my youth! I hope you don't have to wait, download it now.

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Unique and ageless

srdill

As we all come into contact with more and more songwriters and musicians in the age of the Internet and the self-publishing possibilities it affords, it becomes increasingly evident how hard it is for most people to be totally unique in their creativity. Harry Nilsson created songs that have few recognizable references to the music of the day and stand as strong today as they did when they were first released, no mean feat! So VERY worth the download in its entirety!

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In a class by itself

whalle

Memorable, lively pop/rock.

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great record

gonzoknife

I'm new to Harry Nilsson and this was a great way to start. The songs are brilliant pop that still hold up (and keep getting covered).

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Really a Nice Trip

WDumont

A lovely trip to a forgotten part of pop's past. Really well-crafted song-writing and a love of melody and balance that will leave you feeling weird wild and giddy.

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Great album, I've had it for years.

Katrina

eMu's version has 6 more tracks than my original.

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Icon: Harry Nilsson

By Ben Fong-Torres, eMusic Contributor

Born in Brooklyn in 1941 and raised in Los Angeles, Harry Edward Nelson III became Nilsson in the mid '60s, when he began writing and performing - singing and playing piano and guitar. He recorded for RCA, an American musical institution, long before it became BMG. The Beatles were among his early fans, and he loved the vintage sounds out of Tin Pan Alley. But he was an outsider, a renegade, a natural indie. He established himself… more »

They Say All Music Guide

Harry Nilsson had a hit, a Grammy, and critical success, yet he still didn’t have a genuine blockbuster to his name when it came time to finally deliver a full-fledged follow-up to Nilsson Sings Newman, so he decided it was time to make that unabashed, mainstream pop/rock album. Hiring Barbra Streisand producer Richard Perry as a collaborator, Nilsson made a streamlined, slightly domesticated, unashamed set of mature pop/rock, with a slight twist. This is an album, after all, that begins by pining for the reckless days of youth, then segues into a snapshot of suburban disconnectedness before winding through a salute to and covers of old R&B tunes (“Early in the Morning” and “Let the Good Times Roll,” respectively), druggie humor (“Coconut”), and surging hard rock (“Jump Into the Fire”). There are certainly hints of the Nilsson of old, particularly in his fondness for Tin Pan Alley and McCartney melodicism — as well as his impish wit — yet he hadn’t made a record as cohesive as this since his first time out, nor had he ever made something as shiny and appealing as this. It may be more accessible than before, yet it’s anchored by his mischievous humor and wonderful idiosyncrasies. Chances are that those lured in by the grandly melodramatic “Without You” will not be prepared for either the subtle charms of “The Moonbeam Song” or the off-kilter sensibility that makes even his breeziest pop slightly strange. In short, it’s a near-perfect summary of everything Nilsson could do; he could be craftier and stranger, but never did he achieve the perfect balance as he did here. [RCA/BMG Heritage reissued Nilsson Schmilsson in 2004 with six bonus tracks. Three of these -- demos of "The Moonbeam Song," "Gotta Get Up," and "Old Forgotten Soldier" -- were included on Britain's RCA Camden 2000 reissue, but the other three are not. There's the Spanish version of "Without You," plus two songs not on the album: "How Can I Be Sure of You" and "Lamaze." None of these are essential (though "Lamaze" is pretty funny), but they're all nice to hear. What is frustrating is that the Camden reissue has five bonus tracks not on this disc, meaning that Nilsson nuts need to own both reissues, which is a bit of a pain.] – Stephen Thomas Erlewine

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