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The Olympics All Time Greatest Hits

The Olympics All Time Greatest Hits



User Ratings and Reviews

5 Stars Complete Compilation Of Their Demon/Arvee Hits With Great Liner Notes
If one searches for this under the album title “Doin’ The Hully Gully” it takes you to this same volume, but where there are no contents showing and no previous reviews. Even the track listing above is off as track 5 is (I Wanna) Dance With The Teacher. The rest are numbered one up accordingly to 26 tracks - not 25. Amazon may wish to rectify that.

The Olympics first formed up as The Challengers while still high schoolers in Compton, California, consisting of lead Walter Ward, tenor Eddie Lewis, and baritones Charles Fizer and Walter Hammond. They actually cut some sides for Melatone in 1956, none of which charted. After changing their name to The Olympics (the summer games that year were in Melbourne, Australia) they got their first big break in summer 1958 when the catchy novelty tune Western Movies, complete with rifle ricochets, climbed to # 8 Billboard Pop Hot 100/# 7 R&B by September b/w Well! for the small Demon label. It was also in 1958 that Melvin King replaced Fizer in time for their next hit, (I Wanna) Dance With The Teacher which made it to # 71 Hot 100 in January 1959 b/w Ev’rybody Needs Love (neither B-side is included in this 1991 release by DCC Compact Classics/Arvee).

Fizer then returned to take Hammond’s place by which time they had moved to Arvee Records where Private Eye, a B-side, made it to # 95 Hot 100 in September 1959. The A-side, (Baby) Hully Gully, did not peak until February 1960 when it settled at # 72 Hot 100. Neither could crack the R&B Top 100, but Big Boy Pete did when it climbed to # 10 R&B/# 50 Hot 100 in September 1960 b/w The Slop.

A month later, Shimmy Like Kate reached # 42 Hot 100 b/w Workin’ Hard, but again failed to dent the R&B charts, as did Dance By The Light Of The Moon, a # 47 Hot 100 in late 1960/early 1961 b/w Dodge City, Little Pedro, which finished at # 76 Hot 100 in April 1961 b/w Bull Fight (Cappy Lewis), and Dooley, a # 94 Hot 100 in June b/w Stay Where You Are.

After being shut out in 1962 they resurfaced in 1963 with Tri Disc and what would become their second best Pop hit, The Bounce. With Fireworks as the flip, it hit # 22 R&B/# 40 Hot 100 in June, followed in July by Dancin’ Holiday, adapted from Liszt’s Hungarian Rhapsody No. 2, which made it to # 86 Hot 100 b/w Do The Slauson Shuffle. When they became one of many North American groups to be blanked in 1964 by the British Invasion, they moved over to Loma Records to record Good Lovin’ and that settled in at # 81 Hot 100 in May 1965 b/w The Olympic Shuffle, the last hit on which Fizer appears as he was killed in the Watts riots in August.

His replacement, Julius McMichael (”Mack Starr”), formerly the lead with The Paragons, appears on their last charters, Mine Exclusively (# 25 R&B/# 99 Hot 100 in May 1966 b/w Secret Agents), and Baby, Do The Philly Dog (# 20 R&B/# 63 Hot 100 in October 1966 b/w a re-make of Western Movies).

As for Peanut Butter by The Marathons at track 25, all I’ll tell you is that it was a # 20 Hot 100/# 25 R&B hit in 1961. For the fascinating story behind it, as well as El Pizza, you’ll have to read the seven comprehensive pages of liner notes written by Todd Everett in April 1991.

Just a wonderful compilation all ’round with excellent sound quality.

5 Stars Olympics All-Time Greatest Hits
Twenty-three Olympics recordings, plus two by other artists. I may not be an impartial judge of this CD, because the Olympics may be my all-time favorite vocal group. From 1960-1963 there was no group that could match the chilling excitement of the Olympics’ R&B-rock recordings. Of the 14 songs they had on Billboard’s top 100, this CD has 9, with The Bounce being the biggest hit lacking on the CD. I played original 45 singles of Big Boy Pete, Shimmy Like Kate, and Dance By the Light of the Moon (plus their flip sides) along with the CD, and the CD has all exact reproductions of the originals, same length, same mix, exact, complete with Arvee label’s hits’ missing most of the “S”, “C” and “T” sounds. The liner notes are excellent, including notes on audio quality, and that to preserve the original sound, only two of the songs are presented in stereo. “Western Movies” (the only song on the CD from the Demon label) has the “S” etc. sounds, but interestingly it sounds like the CD was made from vinyl as you hear a bit of popping at the start. All-in-all, the producers of this CD (and, of course, the Olympics, too) deserve a lot of tribute, undoubtedly more than they get.

4 Stars Almost Perfect Compilation of the Hard To Find
The Olympics, an L.A. based group fashioned after the Coasters, had a couple of national and quite a few regional hits on several small labels. Titles like Good Lovin’ and Big Boy Pete were either directly covered by or inspired hits recorded later by others. I wore out my vinyl versions of their albums before the 60’s ended. As you rarely hear their music played, this well remastered collection was a welcomed fine. A bonus are extensive and well researched liner notes. I was disappointed that the extended album version of Hully Gully (one of their bigger hits) was not selected along with their outstanding rendition of What’d I Say (one of the best recordings - except for Ray Charles original - of this classic). Why El Pizza (not an Olympics record) was included I have not a clue - but I had forgotten this great send up of El Paso and it was fun hearing it again. Alternate versions and unreleased material will add appeal to any die hard fans, but there is plenty here to interest anyone who loves classic R&B.

1 Star It must Be Good
It was sampled in Fatboy Slims “Soul Surfing” which was in his top selling album “Youve Come Along Way Baby”. Lets face it we all new Norman Cook wasn’t the one playing the guitar.

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Gitarooman Lives

Gitarooman Lives




Gitaroo Man Lives was big hit in Japan and the US when it was first released on the Playstation. Now it’s available on your PSP with all-new modes, for even more guitar-playing action! It features a new ad hoc multiplayer mode, a Duet mode for playing co-op or head-to-head, and all-new vocals provided by well-known Japanese pop stars.

User Ratings and Reviews

5 Stars Fun and musical challenge
As far as music games, this is the one I like the most. I first played the game on the PS2, and it still meets my expectations on the PSP.

The music is lively and entertaining, and the story line is great from the humble beginnings of U-1, down to the climatic battle with Zowie.

The game is also helpful with practicing rhythm, if you hit the right button exactly on the beat you will get a “Great”. Some stages can get a little tricky, rhythmically speaking.

I like the added Jukebox feature, where you can listen to the music you have unlocked during the game. Also after each stage, you have the option of watching a replay of your performance.

3 Stars A Decent Port
If you’re a fan of Gitaroo Man and wish you could play it anywhere you go, then this is a good port of it. Gitaroo Man is my favorite game all time, but I do have a few complaints on this game.

First, this may be resolved with the new 3rd gen PSPs coming out…sometime in the future, when the new PSPs can handle more movement, but for now with my 2nd generation PSP, some of the movement of the symbols on the screen become fuzzy and hard to follow. This makes it quite difficult and can sometimes cause real headaches.

Second, the hard mode has been watered down. Anyone who is familiar with Hard Mode and the pure pain of the Sanbone Trio will be disappointed (or glad) that now, they no longer each have their own set of attacks. Now, the trio does their easy set of songs all together. It makes the level way too easy to beat whereas it took me months to pass some of the dreaded unique combinations that would keep this level fresh each time you play.

Lastly, I love the two new songs on here, they are great. My final complaint is that you have to turn on your wireless and play versus if you want to play the songs on your own. I’m not sure if it works this way on the PSP, but I know for sure on my DS that the wireless function kills battery and with the PSPs already short battery, it could be the same problem here too.

Either way, I am glad that I purchased this game cause it brings back so many memories,and if you’re a Gitaroo Man fan, it’s a must have.

4 Stars its great!!!
the music and storyline and graphics… everything is pretty much great except its really short and load times are unbelieveable… but other than that… its great

5 Stars Best of the Best!!!
Gitarooman is amazing. If you own a PSP and do not have this game, you are missing out - guaranteed. This genre is underrated in the US and is called Bemani. Bemani gameplay centers around music, rhythm, and timing… This game in particular is truly diverse because of its unique gameplay and excellent control system.

You utilize the analog controller to follow wavy instrumental tubes that strangely follow the music as they move with the rhythm. You also use the buttons x,o etc. which blaze at you for impressive mind bending game play. You will be amazed of how fast this game moves. For clarification, the tubes are not annoying they follow the music in a very natural and pleasing way.

The story is beautiful and has a strong and clear message that is relevant to life. It focuses on believing in yourself - similar to the Parappa story - but more moving and gorgeous imagery.

This port is from the PS2 version and is an exact translation. To describe how popular it was on the PS2, when people finally realized this game was a masterpiece, it was selling for over a $100.00. I sold mine here on Amazon for over 80 - and was a little upset - I missed it much.

The Stats:

Gameplay:10++++

Music: 10++++

Controls: 10++++

Replay Value: 10++++

Graphics: 10++++ Japanese Anime

No Cons: Except maybe I want a sequel of this!

Cautions: This game is so intense; that you will probably brake your analog controller on the PSP. I replaced mine and found the parts very cheap -ck Ebay for controller. Be careful the screws will strip easily if not using correct phillip.

Again - One of, if not the best game of all time - and I played many and have had most systems.

5 Stars More challenging that it looks
This game is quirky but strangely addictive. The story line is obscure but the gameplay undenialble. This is one rhythm based game that makes you want to replay and get a better score. Perfect title for a portable game system.

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Walt Disneys The Jungle Book Rhythm N Groove

Waking Hour

Waking Hour



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