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The Three Bells - The Browns
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Track Listing
  1. Rio de Janeiro
  2. Looking Back to See
  3. Itsy Witsy Bitsy Me
  4. Why Am I Falling
  5. Draggin' Main Street
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  1. Rio de Janeiro
  2. Looking Back to See
  3. Itsy Witsy Bitsy Me
  4. Why Am I Falling
  5. Draggin' Main Street
  6. Your Love Is as Wild as the West Wind
  7. Cool Green
  8. Do Memories Haunt Me
  9. It's Love I Guess
  10. I'm Your Man, I'm Your Gal
  11. Set the Dawgs on 'Em
  12. Jungle Magic
  13. You Thought, I Thought
  14. Here Today and Gone Tomorrow
  15. The Grass Is Green
  16. Lookin' On
  17. I Take the Chance
  18. I Can't See for Looking
  19. I'm in Heaven
  20. Goo Goo Dada
  21. Just as Long as You Love Me
  22. Getting Used to Being Lonely
  23. A Man With a Plan
  24. (Just a Lot Of) Sweet Talk
  25. Don't Tell Me Your Troubles
  26. The Last Thing That I Want
  27. Preview of the Blues
  28. My Isle of Golden Dreams
  29. I'm in Heaven
  30. I Guess I'm Crazy
  31. Sky Princess
  32. I'll Hold You in My Heart
  33. How Can It Be Imagination
  34. I Heard the Bluebirds Sing
  35. It Takes a Long, Long Train With a Red Caboose (To Carry My Blues Away)
  36. Don't Use the Word Lightly
  37. Waltz of the Angels
  38. The Table Next to Me
  39. Money
  40. You'll Always Be in My Heart
  41. Behave Yourself, Jose
  42. Just in Time
  43. The Man in the Moon
  44. Ain't No Way in This World
  45. Crazy Dreams
  46. True Love Goes Far Beyond
  47. Only One Way to Love You
  48. Be My Love
  49. Land of Golden Dreams
  50. Love Is in Season
  51. Would You Care?
  52. The Trot
  53. Beyond the Shadow
  54. This Time I Would Know
  55. The Three Bells
  56. Wake Up Jonah
  57. Be My Love
  58. I Still Do
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Eight CDs and over 240 songs is overkill, except that there's a lot worth hearing here. Disc One opens in 1954 with Jim Ed and Maxine Brown's debut recordings for the Fabor label, including "Looking Back to See," which was successful enough to get them a touring slot with a young Elvis Presley. The sound, while primitive in comparison to their subsequent RCA recordings is very pleasing, with bright harmonies and simple, straightforward accompaniment. As soon as they got to RCA , their sound bloomed -- the textures of the ...

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