Three Dog Night - The Complete Hit Singles

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Three Dog Night - The Complete Hit Singles album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 21   Total Length: 74:30

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three dog night the complete hit singles

thedrakester

bogus album...covers by a really good band...not the first time this has happened on emusic.

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A surprise in concert

FiddlinGreg

3DogNight were fun during that period, but I went to one of their concerts and was amazed at their energy and electricity. Lightweight? Not! These guys had a good groove and it shows up in nearly every song.

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Playing Something Sweet

thegrandwazoo

never thought i would plunk down more money for tres noche perro again, but a new listen found new pleasures -- at the tail end of time when there were bands who put out decent albums but wrote few of their own songs, this band proved soulful and consistent , or proved that if you can't write good songs, at least you know one when you hear one -- yeah, there's more than a few hokey moments, but there's also some fine musicianship and excellent vocals

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They Say All Music Guide

Three Dog Night ran off a string of 21 Top 40 hits between 1968 and 1975, including three number ones: “Joy to the World,” “Mama Told Me (Not to Come),” and “Black & White.” Despite this, they are often written off as a lightweight band who couldn’t write their own songs. Granted they were laid-back and very easygoing, but they had some heft. The vocals of Chuck Negron, Danny Hutton, and Cory Wells were surprisingly soulful and the band that backed them was solid, and even rocked pretty hard on occasion. They didn’t write songs — it is true — but their genius was picking songs. Along with producer Richard Podolor, the group found songs by writers like Randy Newman, Harry Nilsson, Laura Nyro, Hoyt Axton, Paul Williams, and John Hiatt and turned them into hits. So the group had laudable credentials, but more importantly, the songs collected here play like the soundtrack to the ’70s. If you were just a casual fan, listening to Complete Hit Singles provides moment after moment of “I didn’t remember these guys did that song!” exclamations. The hits just keep coming one after the other: “Joy to the World,” “Celebrate,” “Shambala,” “Liar,” “An Old Fashioned Love Song,” and “Let Me Serenade You.” Never sappy, never overbearing, always settled into a low-key, hooky groove, these songs are about as good as early-’70s pop gets. Another impressive thing about Three Dog Night is that they never showed any signs of slowing down. 1974′s “Play Something Sweet (Brickyard Blues)” is just as good as “Eli’s Coming” from 1969. The only thing that stopped them was the inevitable bout of creative differences that split the band up in 1976. This collection basically supplants the excellent Best of Three Dog Night from 1983. It boasts improved sound and one more song, their last Top 40 hit, “Til the World Ends,” from 1975. – Tim Sendra

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