Create account Log in

Can't Break the Habit

[Edit]

Download links and information about Can't Break the Habit by Ferris Wheel. This album was released in 1967 and it belongs to Hip Hop/R&B, Soul, Rock, Funk, Psychedelic genres. It contains 20 tracks with total duration of 53:34 minutes.

Artist: Ferris Wheel
Release date: 1967
Genre: Hip Hop/R&B, Soul, Rock, Funk, Psychedelic
Tracks: 20
Duration: 53:34
Buy on iTunes $9.99
Buy on Amazon $9.49
Buy on Songswave €1.52

Tracks

[Edit]
No. Title Length
1. You Keep Me Hangin' On 2:55
2. What Is Soul 2:13
3. Something Good (Is Going to Happen to You) 2:26
4. I Can't Break the Habit 2:11
5. Stay With Me 3:47
6. Taking Inventory 2:13
7. Said I Wasn't Gonna Tell Nobody 2:59
8. B-A-B-Y 2:41
9. Three Cool Cats 2:51
10. Number One Guy 1:59
11. It's Been a Long Way Home 2:29
12. She Put the Hurt On Me 2:30
13. Let It Be Me 3:45
14. You, Look At You 2:58
15. The Na Na Song 2:23
16. You Don't Know Where Your Interest Lies 2:51
17. But the Dream Went Wrong 3:12
18. I Can't Break the Habit (Single Version) 2:18
19. Number One Guy (Single Version) 1:59
20. Three Cool Cats (Single Version) 2:54

Details

[Edit]

Anyone lucky enough to own this ultra-rare album has grabbed themselves a piece of the finest British psychedelic soul and superb pop-soul in any category. In 1967, while Motown was still coming to grips with the psychedelic boom going on around them, the British-based Ferris Wheel was doing a gently trippy, soaring, and occasionally searing brand of soul music that made them favorites on the club scene in London. "I Can't Break the Habit" is a case in point, a bright, memorable dance number that manages to recall Martha & the Vandellas at their most alluring and ornamented, with a Revolver-style guitar break and choruses as smooth as anything generated by the 5th Dimension. Diane Ferraz's voice is the focal point of the sextet's sound, though two of the guys also turn in solid lead performances — the group's range is astonishing and their experience shows in the fact that none of the 12 songs on this album sounds like anything around it, and they even make the old Leiber & Stoller chestnut "Three Cool Cats" sound fresh. This was reissued in 2000 by Sequel Records in England with eight bonus tracks (three of them single versions of album tracks) that are as strong as anything on the original album.