Mama's Big Ones

From WikiProjectMed
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Mama's Big Ones
Compilation album by
ReleasedOctober 1970
Recorded1966-1970
GenrePop rock
LabelDunhill
Mama Cass chronology
Bubblegum, Lemonade, and... Something for Mama
(1969)
Mama's Big Ones
(1970)
Dave Mason & Cass Elliot
(1971)

Mama's Big Ones is a compilation album of previously released material as noted below, by Cass Elliot.

Overview

Cass Elliot's solo tenure with Dunhill Records, inaugurated in the spring of 1968, had proven contentious, the label insisting the onetime member of the Mamas & Papas be billed as Mama Cass and that she resume recording in the soft rock vein which had afforded the Mamas & Papas' success.[1][2][3] Elliot would in 1971 claim that at Dunhill she had been "forced to be so bubble gum that I'd stick to the floor when I walked",[4] and in fact Elliot's solo singles had been progressively less successful, Dunhill president Jay Lasker commenting after Elliot's sixth solo single stalled at #42 in early 1970 "'New World Coming' has gotten great airplay because it came along and expressed hope in the midst of despair. Unfortunately, it isn't selling all that well, so we're going back to an old theme. The message here - at least to us - is that 'the message record has had it'. [Now] Mama Cass is going to do love songs."[5]

In fact it was announced in July 1970 that Elliot would depart Dunhill for RCA Records, the anthology Mama's Big Ones being issued in October 1970 as a final album owed by Elliot to Dunhill.[1] Mama's Big Ones featured nine of Elliot's ten Dunhill single releases - omitting 1968's "California Earthquake" - and adding the Mamas & Papas' hit "Words of Love" which featured Elliot as lead vocalist. Mama's Big Ones provided the album debut for the tracks "New World Coming", "A Song That Never Comes", "The Good Times Are Coming", "Don't Let the Good Life Pass You By" and "One Way Ticket" and "Ain’t Nobody Else Like You" which were all single releases (the last-named being the UK B-side of Elliot's version of "Easy Come Easy Go").

Track listing

No.TitleChart PositionLength
1."It's Getting Better" (from Bubblegum, Lemonade, and... Something for Mama)US #30 Pop/#13 AC, UK #8 (5/1969) 
2."Dream a Little Dream of Me" (from The Papas & The Mamas)US #12 Pop/#2 AC, UK #11 (6/1968) 
3."Make Your Own Kind of Music" (from Make Your Own Kind of Music/It’s Getting Better)US #36 Pop/#6 AC (10/1969) 
4."Words of Love" (with the Mamas & the Papas) (from The Mamas & the Papas))US #5, UK #12 (11/1966) 
5."New World Coming"US #42 Pop/#4 AC (1/1970) 
6."Move in a Little Closer, Baby" (from Bubblegum, Lemonade, and... Something for Mama)US #58 Pop/#32 AC (2/1969) 
7."One Way Ticket"  
8."The Good Times Are Coming"US #104 Pop/#19 AC (11/1970) 
9."Easy Come, Easy Go" (from Bubblegum, Lemonade, and... Something for Mama)  
10."Don't Let the Good Life Pass You By"US #110 Pop/#34 AC (11/1970) 
11."Ain't Nobody Else like You"  
12."A Song That Never Comes"US #99 Pop/#25 AC (7/1970) 

Reception

The album was released in October 1970[6][7] and peaked at the #194 spot on the Billboard Charts.[8]

Today

The album was reissued by MCA in 1980 and again by MCA, on CD, in 1987.

The album can be seen hanging on the wall of the character Leah in the 1996 British film Beautiful Thing while she is listening to "One Way Ticket". "It’s Getting Better", "Make Your Own Kind of Music", "Dream a Little Dream of Me", and "Move in a Little Closer, Baby" are also featured in the film.

Songs from the album (namely "It’s Getting Better", "Make Your Own Kind of Music", and "New World Coming") were used on the American television series Lost.

"Don’t Let the Good Life Pass You By" was a backing track and the name of Season 3 episode 8 of the NBC fantasy comedy The Good Place

References

  1. ^ a b Feigel, Eddi (September 28, 2005). Dream a Little Dream of Me: The Life of Cass Elliot. Chicago Review Press. p. 290. ISBN 978-1556525889.
  2. ^ Hopkins, Jerry. "Interview October 26, 1968". Rolling Stone. Retrieved 3 February 2016.
  3. ^ Melody Maker 1 March 1969 "It's Tea For Two with Mama Cass" by Tony Wilson p.9
  4. ^ Los Angeles Times 5 December 1971 "Mamas & Papas: four rugged individuals getting back together" by Nat Freedland p.705
  5. ^ Los Angeles Times 22 March 1970 "The Dunhill David vs Grammy Goliaths" by Wayne Warga p.438
  6. ^ "Billboard October 17, 1970 Album Reviews". Amazon. 17 October 1970. Retrieved 3 February 2016.
  7. ^ Thompson, Dave (September 28, 2005). Goldmine Record Album Price Guide. Chicago Review Press. p. 181. ISBN 978-1440243721.
  8. ^ "Mama's Big Ones". All Music. Retrieved 3 February 2016.