The Rascals

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The Rascals
Also known as The Young Rascals
Origin Image:Flag of the United States.svg New York City, New York, United States
Genre(s) Soul, Rock
Years active 1964–1972
Label(s) Atlantic, Columbia
Associated
acts
Joey Dee and the Starliters, Little Steven and the Disciples of Soul

The Rascals (previously The Young Rascals) were an American soul and rock group of the 1960s.

Contents

[edit] History

Eddie Brigati (vocals), Felix Cavaliere (keyboard, vocals), Gene Cornish (guitar) and Dino Danelli (drums) started the band in Brigati and Danelli's native state New Jersey. Their first public performance took place at the Choo Choo Club in Garfield on Saturday, February 27th, 1965. Three-quarters of the group - Brigati, Cavaliere and Cornish - had previously been members of Joey Dee and the Starliters. Eddie's brother, David Brigati, an original Starliter, helped arrange the vocal harmonies and sang backgrounds on many of the group's recordings (informally earning the designation as the Fifth Rascal). When Atlantic Records signed them, they discovered that another group (Borrah Minevitch's and Johnny Puleo's Harmonica Rascals) objected to the release of records under the name 'Rascals'. To avoid conflict, manager Sid Bernstein decided to rename the group the Young Rascals.

The Young Rascals had a minor hit with "I Ain't Gonna Eat Out My Heart Anymore" (1965), followed by the #1 single "Good Lovin'" (1966, originally by The Olympics). Then the band's songwriting team of Brigati and Cavaliere began providing most of their songs, and the hits kept coming for the next two years, including "I've Been Lonely Too Long", "You Better Run", "Groovin'" (#1, 1967), "It's Wonderful", "A Girl Like You", "How Can I Be Sure?" (which David Cassidy covered and had a #1 in the United Kingdom) and "A Beautiful Morning" (1968).

Guitarist Gene Cornish provided several songs of his own, such as I'm Gonna Love You and No Love To Give.

In early 1968, the group dropped the "Young" from their name.

The Rascals' best work arguably came from their 1968 album Once Upon A Dream, which featured several leads each from Brigati and Cavaliere. Though the only success for a single on the album was "It's Wonderful" (#20 on the US charts), the album utilized frequent instrumentals, and peaked at #9 on the album charts. The album was praised by some critics for such songs as "Rainy Day", "My World" and the title track. Understandably, the song "My Hawaii" became a Number One Hit in Hawaii.

Time Peace: The Rascals' Greatest Hits, released in mid-1968, became the group's best-selling album. The same year, "People Got to Be Free", a horn-punctuated plea for racial tolerance (the band was known for refusing to tour on segregated bills) and their third U.S. number one single, was also their final Top Ten hit. The single "People Got to Be Free" and the album "Time Peace" were at #1 on their respective charts during the same period.

Later singles and albums were not as popular, with only two top-40 releases in 1969, and none afterward.

In 1970, Brigati left the group, followed by Cornish in 1971. The last album with them as active members was Search & Nearness (hitting #198 in the U.S.), which featured Brigati's last performances as a member singing lead on the Cornish-penned "You Don't Know" and their cover of The Box Tops hit "The Letter". The only single release from the album was the spiritually-themed "Glory, Glory" (#58 in the US), with backing vocals by The Sweet Inspirations.

Cavaliere shifted toward more jazz and gospel influenced writing; he and Danelli released two more albums on Columbia Records as The Rascals, Peaceful World (U.S. #122) and The Island Of Real (U.S. #180), using other musicians and singers. These albums didn't sell as well as their earlier work and the group finally disbanded in 1972.

Cavaliere released several solo albums throughout the 1970s. Brigati, with his brother David, released Lost in the Wilderness in 1976. Cornish and Danelli worked together in other groups, including Bulldog and Fotomaker. In 1982, Cavaliere and Danelli joined Steve Van Zandt in Little Steven and the Disciples of Soul, joining Van Zandt for the group's first two albums.

The Rascals reunited (with Cavaliere, Cornish, and Danelli) for a brief reunion tour in 1988. Eddie Brigati opted not to participate in the '88 tour.

The (Young) Rascals were inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame on May 6, 1997, and they were inducted into the Vocal Group Hall of Fame in 2005.

For those interested in acquiring quality recordings of The Rascals, the entire run of albums from Atlantic Records have been re-released on August 28 2007.

[edit] Membership

[edit] Discography

[edit] Albums

Release Date Label/Catalog # Album Title Billboard Top 200
03/28/1966 Atlantic 8123 (mono) Atlantic SD-8123 (stereo) The Young Rascals
10
01/09/1967 Atlantic 8134 (mono) Atlantic SD-8134 (stereo) Collections
15
07/31/1967 Atlantic 8148 (mono) Atlantic SD-8148 (stereo) Groovin'
6
02/19/1968 Atlantic 8169 (mono) Atlantic SD-8169 (stereo) Once Upon A Dream
8
06/24/1968 Atlantic SD-8190 (stereo) Time Peace: The Rascals' Greatest Hits
1
03/17/1969 Atlantic SD 2-901 (stereo) Freedom Suite
16
12/15/1969 Atlantic SD-8246 (stereo) See
18
03/01/1971 Atlantic SD-8276 (stereo) Search and Nearness
198
 ??/??/1971 Columbia G30462 (stereo) Peaceful World
122
 ??/??/1972 Columbia KC 31103 (stereo) The Island of Real
180

[edit] Singles

Release Date Label/Catalog # Titles (A-side / B-side) Billboard Top Singles Cashbox
11/22/1965 Atlantic 2312 I Ain't Gonna Eat Out My Heart Anymore / Slow Down
52
63
02/21/1966 Atlantic 2321 Good Lovin' / Mustang Sally
1
1
05/30/1966 Atlantic 2338 You Better Run / Love Is A Beautiful Thing
20
23
09/12/1966 Atlantic 2353 Come On Up / What Is The Reason
43
51
01/16/1967 Atlantic 2377 I've Been Lonely Too Long / If You Knew
16
17
04/10/1967 Atlantic 2401 Groovin' / Sueño
1
1
07/03/1967 Atlantic 2424 A Girl Like You / It's Love
10
8
07/17/1967 Atlantic 2428 Groovin' (Spanish Version) / Groovin' (Italian Version)
--
--
08/28/1967 Atlantic 2438 How Can I Be Sure / I'm So Happy Now
4
2
11/27/1967 Atlantic 2463 It's Wonderful / Of Course
20
15
04/01/1968 Atlantic 2493 A Beautiful Morning / Rainy Day
3
3
07/01/1968 Atlantic 2537 People Got To Be Free / My World
1
1
11/18/1968 Atlantic 2584 A Ray of Hope / Any Dance'll Do
24
14
01/27/1969 Atlantic 2599 Heaven / Baby I'm Blue
39
17
05/05/1969 Atlantic 2634 See / Away Away
27
13
08/25/1969 Atlantic 2664 Carry Me Back / Real Thing
26
12
12/15/1969 Atlantic 2695 Hold On / I Believe
51
29
07/06/1970 Atlantic 2743 Glory Glory / You Don't Know
58
42
12/07/1970 Atlantic 2773 Right On / Almost Home
119
--
06/1971 Columbia 4-45400 Love Me / Happy Song
95
74
 ??/1971 Columbia 4-45491 Lucky Day / Love Letter
--
--
 ??/1971 Columbia 4-45568 Brother Tree / Saga of New York
--
--
 ??/1971 Columbia 4-45600 Hummin' Song / Echoes
--
--

[edit] External links

The Rascals
Discography
The Young Rascals: The Young Rascals (1966) | Collections (1967) | Groovin' (1967)
The Rascals: Once Upon a Dream (1968) | Freedom Suite (1969) | See (1970) | Search and Nearness (1971) | Peaceful World (1971) | The Island of Real (1972)
de:The (Young) Rascals

fr:The Rascals pl:The Rascals simple:The Rascals sv:The Rascals uk:The Rascals

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