Portraits

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Portraits album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 14   Total Length: 42:39

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Hey Baby, it's good to buy this album

Hoosierhotshot

One of the things I love about eMusic is that I can round up old recordings without having to buy new CDs or rummage through bins at garage sales and flea markets. This is one of those great recordings I had as an LP, but disappeared along the way. The Buckinghams WERE everything good about Chicago music and for about a decade you couldn??t turn on WLS or WCFL without catching one of their great tunes. Of course, ??Hey Baby? may be one of the best teen anthems ever. But ??Susan? is pretty powerful, too. Kids in cars across the Midwest lived for these songs.

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Of all the popular music styles and sub-genres of the late '60s and early '70s, "horn rock" is perhaps the only one that hasn't been revived and revered by subsequent generations. A perhaps inevitable offshoot of mid-'60s "blue eyed soul" acts like Tom Jones, The Righteous Brothers and Mitch Ryder & the Detroit Wheels, the "horn rock" movement began in earnest in 1967 when Chicago pop group The Buckinghams, under the direction of producer James William… more »

They Say All Music Guide

After producer James William Guercio steered the Buckinghams in a quasi-experimental direction with their previous album, the group continued to try out material too ambitious for the 45 rpm format on their third LP. The big difference this time around was that they wrote almost everything, instead of playing songs by Guercio and other outside writers. Some bands blossom given the room to stretch; others, when given the opportunity, prove that they’re better off when constrained within the limitations of commercial singles. The Buckinghams, as laudable as their ambition was, fell into the latter category. The over-arching horn and string arrangements (still by Guercio), and occasional bouts of quasi-psychedelic weirdness — not to mention the arty reprises of three songs — couldn’t disguise that these were, at heart, ordinary pop/rock songs trying to be something better and different. The two hit singles, “Hey Baby (They’re Playing Our Song)” and “Susan,” proved all of the above points by being the best (and most incongruous) cuts on the album, even as they were the least ambitious. Sundazed combined Portraits with the group’s second LP, Time & Changes, on a single-disc CD reissue. – Richie Unterberger

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