Music Review: The Doobie Brothers - The Very Best of The Doobie Brothers
Published February 21, 2007
Even I was amazed at the coincidental timing of The Very Best of The Doobie Brothers. That is the type of thing that never happens to me. It always happens after I've gone out and bought something that the souped up, expanded, remastered, fairy-dust sprinkled edition gets released. I caught a break this time.
The challenge with an anthology/best of/greatest hits package is to collect all of the vital cuts without weighing it down with the unnecessary. The Very Best of The Doobie Brothers comes close. Very Best is exactly what it says it is... and then some. This set spans two discs, clocking in at over two hours and 33 songs and covers the years 1972-2000. That might surprise some of you- well, at least the back end of that. Just as some people lost the Stones after Exile and Van Halen after Roth, I am sure some fans jumped ship when McDonald edged Johnston aside. Even if you are one of those folks who found an appreciation for both, you likely lost sight of them after "Real Love" or the reunion single, "The Doctor."
The good news is nothing vital missing, sort of. The one argument you could make as far as something being missing is the use of the single version rather than the album version of a few tracks. How big of a deal that is depends. The single version will, in most cases, be the one more familiar to casual listeners and these packages are usually more aimed at the casual than the dedicated. For me, I almost always prefer the full version to the edit. I might feel differently were this a single-disc collection and edits were used to include the most songs possible, but that is not the case.It is a small gripe and not everyone will agree with me if they even care at all, but once the decision was made to go to a second disc, album versions should have been included rather than the single version.
This becomes all the more evident when you get to the second disc of the set. Very Best is presented in three suites over the two discs. The Johnston era takes up the majority of the first disc. At the end of that disc we segue to the McDonald era, which runs through most of the second disc. The second disc ends with the reunion singles. These second two suites could have been trimmed slightly to make room for those album versions. Those second two suites could have been trimmed slightly to allow the first to go longer. Those second two suites could have been trimmed because they represent the weaker portions of this presentation. I don't object to the presence of McDonald's version of The Doobie Brothers despite the occasional dig I've taken at him. Like it or not, some of their biggest hits came from this era and ignoring that would be wrong. Besides, I do like some of those songs even if they do sound a bit more dated than some of their predecessors. "What a Fool Believes," "Minute By Minute," and "It Keeps You Running" should be here, and they are. I That is the strength of this set. It is all here and well sequenced.
- Music Review: The Doobie Brothers - The Very Best of The Doobie Brothers
- Published: February 21, 2007
- Type: Review
- Section: Music
- Filed Under: Music: Classic Rock and Oldies, Review
- Writer: Josh Hathaway
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- Josh Hathaway's personal site
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Comments
i still can't believe they left "Without You" off of this collection.
i know, i'm being bitter.
Mark, you're not being bitter. This set isn't defined for people who own Captain and Vices, etc.
Linky fixy... I think. If only Skunk hadn't suggested McDonald...
Good article, I just DO NOT agree with you on Do You Believe In Magic being in any way a bad song or sucking. It is a classic and IMHO much better than the tired Summer in the City. JANK
I always thought that Daydream was the Lovin' Spoonful's biggest hit.
I've got to defend the Spoonful. Considering that they were only together, what, a year and a half? Maybe less? Okay, 2 years before Zal left and 3 before John B Sebastian left, and I don't count anything after that. There are so many wonderful tracks from that brief period. "Daydream"," "Nashville Cats," "Did You Ever Have To Make Up Your Mind?" "Darling Be Home Soon". . . It's not fair to judge them by rock band standards; they were a jug-band phenomenon, on the fringe of folk-rock, who happened to have a string of wonderful hits -- and even better songs buried on the albums (like the DBs). As such, they had a unique sound, VERY evocative of the late 60s, which may be why they got the Hall of Fame nod.
I'm with you on how solid, and underrated, the Doobie Brothers were. But we don't need to trash the Lovin' Spoonful to get there.
All right, Spooners, settle down. They were one of a range of convenient targets. I still cannot believe they are in the HoF, but I could have picked many others. Mostly I chose them because I remember watching them be inducted on VH-1. They certainly didn't get better with age. It was embarrassing. They aren't the worst band- far from it. I was also going for a laugh.
I do still hate "Do You Believe in Magic," though. It's just dreck.
Look for my next article coming soon:
The Doobie Brothers are over-rated.
However, I do love seeing them in Yacht Rock.
ElB, just remember "Vagina Grove" sounds like masturbating with fingerknives.
DJR,
I realize the subject was already addressed by Holly but I gotta get my $.02 in on the Spoonful (which I realize was one of a "variety of choices" you had available when making your case for the Doobies).
First of all, "Do You Believe In Magic" is not horseshit.
The line "it's like trying to tell a stranger about rock and roll" for me says it all. They are saying the very same thing with that single line our guy Saleski is saying in his very poignant Friday Morning Listen on Springsteen today. It's about the emotion you feel when you hear (or play, or write about) this music and how it makes you want to share it with the world.
Second, another Spoonful classic is the song "You Didn't Have to Be So Nice (I Would have Liked You Anyway)'. This, for my money, is just one of the most sweetly innocent little pop tunes of the sixties.
The Spoonful, along with the Byrds, Mamas and Papas, and Buffalo Springfield represented the vanguard of folk rock. You made a (very rare for you) bad call here DJR.
As for your assessment of the Doobies, pretty much spot on.
-Glen
Glen, I appreciate yours and everyone else's thoughts on this. Maybe it wasn't as good a joke as I thought. It wouldn't be the first time.
I think the Spoonful belong in the Hall of Good, not the Hall of Fame. I don't like "Do You Believe in Magic" and no amount of anything is going to change that. That said, the band obviously has a group of people who respond to what they did.
The HoF, while a silly thing, should ideally stand for something and when everybody is special, nobody is special. There are a lot of nice bands that people like and then there are those who rise to the top and tower above all others. While I might have gone too far with the joke, I'd stand by the premise that TLS aren't a tower of song (thanks, Leonard).
I just thought that Spoonful was an odd insertion into an otherwise great piece on the Doobies DJR (I've got my own coming, which will come more from the perspective of listening to these songs on the radio as a teenager in the seventies).
Agree on the HoF too by the way. But these things that honor people are never, ever perfect.
But the Spoonful did have an impact. I think if you remove them your remark and replace them with somebody like the Beau Brummels (who really DID have only two songs -- "Laugh, Laugh" and "Just A Little"), your point is much better made. Thats all.
And like I said, your piece is otherwise spot on.
-Glen
I know you apologized for the Spoonful thing, but bad jokes/cheap shots deserved to be slapped down, boy! The above commenters had all good points, PLUS the Lovin' Spoonful scored two soundtracks for a couple of young directors who turned out to be Francis Ford Coppola and Woody Allen. (Even though the latter was the producer's idea, and not Allen's.) These projects were done before "The Graduate" brought into the mainstream soundtracks by rock bands who are not The Beatles.
"Do You Believe in Magic" is not one of my favorites, but the album "Hums of the Lovin' Spoonful" is a forgotten classic that showcases their unique sound that's part pop, part folk and part country. A number of different Lovin' Spoonful songs have been covered by artists as diverse as David Lee Roth (Coconut Grove), Quincy Jones (Summer in the City), Johnny Cash (Darlin' Companion), Peggy Lee (Didn't Want to Have To Do It), and um... Aly and AJ (Do You Believe in Magic -- which I don't understand that "band," but the little girls seem to like them). As someone else once put it, they were a band that focused on the "roll" part of "rock and roll."
As for the Doobies, I like Long Train Running and their Michael McDonald singles-- which have a sound that truly stands out among other songs on the radio -- but as for the rest of their songs, I can't differentiate them from other guitar bands at the time -- Bob Seger, Steve Miller, the Eagles.... All have good songs, but I think of them as one radio station, rather than individual bands/artists.


Josh Hathaway is 


Haha, funny stuff even as I couldn't help but to agree with your take. "Vagina Grove"? Try singing ELO's "Strange Magic" to the missus and see if she thinks you're saying "Gotta...scratch my dick". Somebody could make a mint selling a board game devoted to mangling the words of classic rock songs.
I've been to China Grove several times, my brother once worked at the bakery there. It may "out around San Antone" but the place is a one red light town seemingly in the middle of nowhere. Definitely not the kind of place that you would think could inspire such a monster riff. I think the only way the Doobies could have found it was by taking the wrong exit off of east Loop 410.
Hey, glad I was able to help in a small way to get the gears in your head going (psst - linky not worky). I loved the Brothers from that period, including that third band guitarist/pedal steel player extraordinaire, Skunk Baxter.
When Michael McDonald comes out with his own "Best Of" CD, you should take a crack at that one, too. The Viagra crowd would be delighted ;&)