Everybody Plays The Fool: The Best Of The Main Ingredient

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Everybody Plays The Fool: The Best Of The Main Ingredient album cover
Album Information
  • Artist: The Main Ingredient (See All Albums by The Main Ingredient)
  • Date Released: Jul 12, 2005

  • Genre: Hip-Hop/R&B, Style: Pop, R&B

  • Label: RCA/Legacy

Total Tracks: 16   Total Length: 62:30

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Speakin' of BackIn The Day...

Vinswayn-43778753

I'm a child of the 60's & 70s era and must say that this album goes way back and touches the true soul of the R&B times called: "soul music'.

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Baby, Take Me Back

AllEars

9 cuts later - I still remember the words and the times. Silky smooth, well written, strong leads with good harmonies and unique arrangements. Hard to pick a favorite - I'm so Proud - then turn the lights down

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Agree..very overlooked

Listener2010

Great singing and sound was pretty unique. Nice harmony. Some cuts much better than others, some very dated.

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Another Overlooked Group!!!

isaacmusicman

This is example of another overlooked group in the Main Ingredient. From orginal front man Donald McPherson to hit front man Cuba Gooding Sr., this group had all of the "Ingredients" of a classic group. I know everyone knows "Everybody Plays The Fool", but try songs like, "Just Don't Want To Be Lonely", "Happiness Is Just Around The Bend" and the song where Kanye West and Alicia Keys got "You Don't Know My Name" from, "Let Me Prove My Love To You". I Love "Black Seeds Keep On Growing". It sounds a little Militant, but it's super funky. It also makes me wish that RCA Legacy would release the albums. Well, until then, enjoy, you won't be sorry.

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They Say All Music Guide

The Main Ingredient were one of the best smooth soul groups of the early ’70s, but they’ve never been given much respect in terms of CD retrospectives. They were given two comps in 1990 — Collectables’ good but cheap Golden Classics and RCA’s lengthier All Time Greatest Hits, which had more tunes but bad sound — and in 1996 RCA issued Quiet Storm, a collection of their romantic ballads, but the group still needed a well-produced, remastered collection of their biggest hits. With RCA/Legacy’s 2005 release Everybody Plays the Fool: The Best of the Main Ingredient they finally get that, and while it is three tracks shorter than the 19-track All Time Greatest Hits (which is now out of print), it’s overall the better package. While this doesn’t have every single charting hit the group had — it’s missing such smaller singles as “You Can Call Me Rover,” “The Good Old Days,” and “California My Way” (the latter two were on the 1990 CD), as well as their first charting single (“I’m Better Off Without You,” 1970) and last (“Shame on the World,” 1976) — it does have all the big hits, such as “Everybody Plays the Fool,” “Just Don’t Want to Be Lonely,” “Rolling Down a Mountainside,” “I’m So Proud,” “You’ve Been My Inspiration,” and “Spinning Around (I Must Be Falling in Love).” The sound is excellent, as are the liner notes from Ron Wynn, making this disc the closest thing yet to a definitive Main Ingredient collection. – Stephen Thomas Erlewine

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