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Let's Make Up and Be Friendly

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Download links and information about Let's Make Up and Be Friendly by Bonzo Dog Doo - Dah Band. This album was released in 1972 and it belongs to Rock, Pop, Humor, Psychedelic genres. It contains 16 tracks with total duration of 01:10:13 minutes.

Artist: Bonzo Dog Doo - Dah Band
Release date: 1972
Genre: Rock, Pop, Humor, Psychedelic
Tracks: 16
Duration: 01:10:13
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Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. The Strain (2007 Digital Remaster) 3:24
2. Turkeys (2007 Digital Remaster) 2:14
3. King of Scurf (2007 Digital Remaster) 5:01
4. Waiting For the Wardrobe (2007 Digital Remaster) 2:49
5. Straight From My Heart (2007 Digital Remaster) 3:06
6. Rusty (Champion Thrust) (2007 Digital Remaster) 7:20
7. Rawlinson End (2007 Digital Remaster) 9:07
8. Don't Get Me Wrong (2007 Digital Remaster) 4:55
9. Fresh Wound (2007 Digital Remaster) 4:26
10. Bad Blood (2007 Digital Remaster) 5:34
11. Slush (2007 Digital Remaster) 2:23
12. Jam (featuring Topo-D-Bill) 3:12
13. I Love To Bumpity Bump (2007 Digital Remaster) (featuring Roger Ruskin Spear) 2:36
14. Lie Down and Be Counted (2007 Digital Remaster) (featuring Neil Innes) 3:10
15. The Bride Stripped Bare (By the Batchelors) (Early Version) 6:47
16. No Matter Who You Vote For the Government Always Gets In (Demo Version) 4:09

Details

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While not up to the high standards set by the band's earlier work, this contractual obligation album does offer a few glimpses of the skewed brilliance for which the Bonzos were so rightly famous. Highlighting the LP is "Rawlinson End," and perhaps Viv Stanshall's finest narrative. A spoken word tour de force, this intricately surreal English soap opera is a worthy successor to the earlier "Rhinocratic Oaths," and offers a preview of Stanshall's full-length solo effort, Sir Henry at Rawlinson End. With some exceptions, the rest of the LP replaces the previous Bonzo albums' affectionate throwbacks to the music of earlier eras with broad rock parodies and defiantly tasteless humor. The band lets loose with "The Strain," Stanshall's scatological tribute to constipation (it's funnier than it sounds). "Turkeys," a Neil Innes instrumental, achieves a strange cinematic beauty. Legs Larry Smith's contribution, "Rusty," is a lugubrious lament about the end of a rather kinky relationship. Another clever Stanshall parody, "Bad Blood" presents a Western revenge saga with a surprise ending. Winding up the album and the group's career, the Bonzos literally get the last laugh with the horror comedy of "Slush."