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You Never Know Who Your Friends Are

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Download links and information about You Never Know Who Your Friends Are by Al Kooper. This album was released in 1969 and it belongs to Rock, Blues Rock, Rock & Roll, Pop genres. It contains 12 tracks with total duration of 43:33 minutes.

Artist: Al Kooper
Release date: 1969
Genre: Rock, Blues Rock, Rock & Roll, Pop
Tracks: 12
Duration: 43:33
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Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Magic In My Socks 3:55
2. Lucille 3:24
3. Too Busy Thinking About My Baby 3:20
4. First Time Around 2:48
5. Loretta 3:48
6. Blues, Pt. IV 5:04
7. You Never Know Who Your Friends Are 2:53
8. The Great American Marriage/Nothing 4:48
9. Don't Know Why I Love You 3:22
10. Mourning Glory Story 2:16
11. Anna Lee 3:18
12. I'm Never Gonna Let You Down 4:37

Details

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Al Kooper's second solo album is a bit more uneven than its predecessor, I Stand Alone, for understandable reasons — it would have been nothing less than a miracle for Kooper to have matched the consistency and daring of that album, and he doesn't have quite the same array of memorable tunes here. He's still ranging freely, however, through pop, jazz, R&B, and soul, with some songs that are among the most glorious of his output. "Magic in My Sock" is a good enough opener, making up in its virtuoso horn parts and guitar for what it lacks in melodic invention; "Lucille" is hardly the best ballad that Kooper has ever written, but it forms a good bridge to "Too Busy Thinkin' About My Baby," a Motown cover that's one of the highlights of Kooper's entire output — from a black singer this track would be a priceless gem, but coming from Kooper it's extraordinary in its every nuance. You get some blues instrumental (principally piano-based) and an abortive but entertaining effort at pop/rock with the title tune, and then Kooper plunges into arty balladry with the hauntingly beautiful "The Great American Marriage/Nothing." He goes back into Motown territory, just as successful as before, on "I Don't Know Why I Love You," and back to moody art-song with Harry Nilsson's "Mourning Glory Story." Kooper returns to the soulful side of rock on "Anna Lee (What Can I Do for You)" and finishes with "I'm Never Gonna Let You Down" — the latter would be worth the price of the album by itself, a soaring, more lyrical and moody original classic that manages to be unpretentious yet epic in its treatment.