Introducing The Beau Brummels

Introducing The Beau Brummels is the debut album by American pop rock band the Beau Brummels. It was produced by Sly Stone, lead singer of Sly & the Family Stone. Unlike with most other debut albums of the era, ten of the twelve songs on this album are originals. The album peaked at number 24 on the U.S. Top LPs chart in 1965.[2]

Introducing The Beau Brummels
Studio album by
ReleasedApril 1965
Recorded1964-1965
GenreGarage rock, folk rock, pop rock
Length30:30
LabelAutumn
ProducerSylvester "Sly Stone" Stewart
The Beau Brummels chronology
Introducing The Beau Brummels
(1965)
The Beau Brummels, Volume 2
(1965)
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic[1]

Tracks

All songs written by Ron Elliott, except where noted.

Side 1
  1. "Laugh, Laugh" - 2:54
  2. "Still in Love With You Baby" - 2:32
  3. "Just a Little" (Bob Durand, Elliott) - 2:23
  4. "Just Wait and See" - 2:22
  5. "Oh Lonesome Me" (Don Gibson) - 2:22
  6. "Ain't That Loving You Baby" (Deadric Malone) - 2:22
Side 2
  1. "Stick Like Glue" - 1:58
  2. "They'll Make You Cry" - 3:05
  3. "That's If You Want Me To" - 2:23
  4. "I Want More Loving" - 2:23
  5. "I Would Be Happy" - 2:40
  6. "Not Too Long Ago" - 3:06

1998 Repertoire bonus tracks

  1. "Good Time Music" (John Sebastian) - 3:05 (A-side)
  2. "Gentle Wanderin' Ways" - 2:45
  3. "Fine With Me" - 2:17 (B-side)
  4. "Just a Little" (Durand, Elliott) - 2:23 (Demo)
  5. "It's So Nice" - 1:48 (Demo)
  6. "How Many Times" - 2:07 (Demo)
  7. "She's My Girl" - 2:28 (Demo)
  8. "News" - 1:56 (Demo)
  9. "I'll Tell You" - 2:45 (Outtake from Volume 2)
  10. "No Lonelier Man" - 2:01 (Demo)
  11. "She Loves Me" - 3:11 (Demo)
  12. "Tomorrow Is Another Day" - 2:44 (Demo)

Personnel

Chart performance

Chart (1965) Peak
position
U.S. Top LPs (Billboard)[2] 24
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gollark: So companies are supposed to just give goods to their "friends"...?
gollark: To some extent, but it's fuzzier, and how is that meant to work for *factories* or whatever?
gollark: And it's (very roughly) gotten by providing stuff people want, so organizations which can do that can pay more than ones which can't.
gollark: And "who can pay most" is simple and objective.

References

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