The Left Banke Too

The Left Banke Too is the second studio album by American baroque pop band The Left Banke, released by Smash Records in 1968. It would be the final album of the band's initial lifespan, with their next album not appearing until 1986.

The Left Banke Too
Studio album by
ReleasedNovember 1968 (1968-11)
Recorded1967–1968
Genre
Length31:26
LabelSmash
Producer
The Left Banke chronology
Walk Away Renée/Pretty Ballerina
(1967)
The Left Banke Too
(1968)
Strangers on a Train
(1986)
Singles from The Left Banke Too
  1. "Desirée" / "I've Got Something on My Mind"
    Released: June 1967
  2. "Dark Is the Bark" / "My Friend Today"
    Released: June 1968
  3. "Goodbye Holly" / "Sing Little Bird Sing"
    Released: November 1968
  4. "Bryant Hotel" / "Give the Man a Hand"
    Released: February 1969
  5. "Nice to See You" / "There's Gonna Be a Storm"
    Released: May 1969

Background

In between the release of the Left Banke's debut album Walk Away Renee/Pretty Ballerina and the making of this album, the original five-piece band had been whittled down to a trio after the departures of songwriter and keyboardist Michael Brown and guitarist Rick Brand.[1] To replace them, the band brought in guitarist Tom Feher, who had written songs with Brown for the group's first album.

Half of The Left Banke Too consisted of tracks that had been issued as singles in the period since the release of the band's debut album in February 1967. "Desirée", released as a single in June 1967, barely scraped into the Billboard Hot 100 chart, peaking at number 98. The band's next two singles, "Dark is the Bark", released in the summer of 1968, and "Goodbye Holly" following in November 1968, both failed to chart. Following the release of the album in November 1968, a fourth and fifth single were issued, "Bryant Hotel" b/w "Give The Man A Hand" and "Nice To See You" b/w "There's Gonna Be A Storm" respectively, but they also failed to chart.

A pre-Aerosmith Steven Tyler, then known as Steve Tallarico, contributed backing vocals to several songs on the album including ‘My Friend Today’ and ‘Dark is the Bark’.[2]

Releases

Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic[3]

The entire album was at one time available on the 1992 compact disc There's Gonna Be a Storm: The Complete Recordings 1966–1969, but that compilation went out of print in the mid-1990s. On June 28, 2011, The Left Banke Too was reissued on Sundazed Records, remastered by Bob Irwin.

Track listing

Side one
No.TitleWriter(s)Length
1."Goodbye Holly"Tom Feher2:56
2."There's Gonna Be a Storm"Tom Finn4:16
3."Sing Little Bird Sing"Tom Feher3:09
4."Nice to See You"Tom Finn2:41
5."Give the Man a Hand"Marvin Potocki2:33
Side two
No.TitleWriter(s)Length
1."Bryant Hotel"Tom Feher3:24
2."Desirée"Michael Brown, Tom Feher2:42
3."Dark is the Bark"George Cameron, Finn, Steve Martin Caro3:28
4."In the Morning Light"Michael Brown, Tom Feher2:50
5."My Friend Today"Tom Finn3:03

Personnel

The Left Banke

Additional personnel

  • Steve Tallarico — backing vocals on "Nice to See You", "Give the Man a Hand", "Dark is the Bark" & "My Friend Today", tambourine on "Dark is the Bark"
  • Paul Griffin — keyboards on "Dark is the Bark"
  • Paul Leka — string arrangements; piano on "Bryant Hotel"
  • Rick Brand — banjo on "Bryant Hotel"
  • Hugh McCracken — guitar on "Desirée" & "Dark is the Bark"
  • Ralph Casale — guitar on "Dark is the Bark"
  • Marvin Potocki — guitar on "Give the Man a Hand"
  • Chet Amsterdam — bass on "Dark is the Bark"
  • Joe Mack — bass on "Desirée"
  • Bobby Gregg — drums on "Desirée"
  • Artie Schroek — vibraphone, drums, string arrangements on "Dark is the Bark"
  • John Abbott — horn arrangements on "In the Morning Light"
  • Ray Alonge — french horn on "Dark is the Bark"
  • Ray Desio — trombone on "Dark is the Bark"
  • Marvin Stammtrumpet on "Dark is the Bark"
  • George Young — woodwinds on "Dark is the Bark"

Charts

Singles

Single Year Chart Peak
"Desiree" 1967 Billboard Hot 100 98[4]

References

  1. "Biography of The Left Banke". The Left Banke Fan Page. Retrieved September 6, 2011.
  2. "Left Banke Interview Part 2". YouTube. Retrieved November 14, 2011.
  3. Deming, Mark. "The Left Banke Too – Review". AllMusic. Retrieved July 22, 2020.
  4. "Hot 100". Billboard. 4 November 1967. Retrieved June 28, 2020.


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