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1966 studio album by the Standells From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Dirty Water is the first studio album by the American rock band the Standells, released in June 1966.[2]
Dirty Water | ||||
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Studio album by | ||||
Released | June 1966 | |||
Recorded |
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Studio | ||||
Genre | Garage rock[1] | |||
Length | 27:18 | |||
Label | Tower | |||
Producer | Ed Cobb | |||
The Standells chronology | ||||
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The majority of the album was recorded in the midst of touring in a two-day session on April 4–5, 1966 at Audio Recording in Seattle, Washington.[3] The album title is taken from the song of the same name. The single "Dirty Water" and its B-side "Rari" were recorded on March 5, 1965, at Western Recorders in Hollywood, California.[3]
The song "Dirty Water" was written by the album's producer, Ed Cobb. Its Boston and Charles River references are reportedly based on an experience that Cobb and his girlfriend had with a mugger in Boston in the mid-1960s.[4] As for the Standells band members, they were from Southern California and had never been to Boston before recording the song.[5]
Prior to this album, The Standells had only released three singles and a live album: The Standells in Person at P.J.'s (1964). Dirty Water would become the band's best-selling LP, peaking at #52 on the Billboard charts, and #39 in the Cashbox listings. The "Dirty Water" single fared much better, peaking at #11 in Billboard and #8 in Cashbox.
Original Vinyl LP[6]
Side one
Side two
CD Version
A CD version of the album, released in 1994, deletes "Sometimes Good Guys Don't Wear White" (as it was also included on the band's follow-up album), and adds six more songs:[7]
10. "Batman" (Neal Hefti) – 3:04
11. "It's All in Your Mind" (Ed Cobb) – 2:38
12. "Love Me" (Dick Dodd, Tony Valentino) – 2:45
13. "Medication" [Instrumental] (Minette Alton, Ben DiTosti) – 2:43
14. "Poor Man's Prison" (Keith Colley, Knox Henderson) – 2:23
15. "Take a Ride" – 2:08
The CD version also features the full-length recording of "Rari", running 5:32. It was edited for the original vinyl LP.[8]
*The CD correctly credits the song "Hey Joe" to songwriter Billy Roberts. It was attributed to Chester Powers on the original LP.
Album
Year | Chart | Position | Chart | Position |
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1966 | Billboard Pop Albums | 52 | Cashbox Pop Albums | 39 |
Singles
Year | Single | Chart | Position | Chart | Position |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1966 | "Dirty Water" | Billboard Pop Singles | 11 | Cashbox Pop Singles | 8 |
1966 | "Sometimes Good Guys Don't Wear White" | Billboard Pop Singles | 43 | Cashbox Pop Singles | 59 |
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