Label: Universal Music (Japan), UICY-75565
Style: Classic Rock, Rock
Country: Los Angeles, California, U.S.
Time: 32:21
Format: Flac Tracks 16/44,1 kHz
Size: 208 Mb
According
to lead singer Chuck Negron's book Three Dog Nightmare, the album's
working title was The Wizards of Orange, with a cover featuring the
band's members wearing orange make-up and posing in the nude. The band's
record company, ABC/Dunhill, rejected the original album title and
cover art, although some configurations of their first "greatest hits"
album, 1971's Golden Bisquits, would later be packaged using It Ain't
Easy's original cover photo.
Reviewing in Christgau's Record Guide:
Rock Albums of the Seventies (1981), Robert Christgau wrote: "Admitting
it won't gain me any of the hip cachet I crave, but I admired and
enjoyed this group's first LP. I found the second mediocre and the live
job that followed it wretchedly excessive, but this one-their fourth in
just fourteen months-gets back: exemplary song-finding and not too much
plastic-soul melon-mouthing or preening vocal pyrotechnique. Highlights:
the hit version of Randy Newman's 'Mama Told Me Not to Come,' with just
the right admixture of high-spirited schlock to turn it into the AM
giant it deserves to be, and a departure from pre-Beatles times called
"Good Feeling (1957)."
(en.wikipedia.org/wiki/It_Ain%27t_Easy_(Three_Dog_Night_album))
01. Women (04:40)
02. Cowboy (03:41)
03. It Ain't Easy (02:47)
04. Out In The Country (03:10)
05. Good Feeling 1957 (03:35)
06. Rock & Roll Widow (02:57)
07. Mama Told Me (Not To Come) (03:19)
08. Your Song (03:59)
09. Good Time Living (04:08)
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