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Deming felt that it "anticipates the grandiose tone of Carmen's later solo work." [5] A live version of the song performed solo by Eric Carmen was released on Carmen's The Essential Eric Carmen. [16] Both Ultimate Classic Rock critic Dave Swanson and Kachejian rated "I Don't Know What I Want" as being among the Raspberries' Top 10 songs.
Carmen and Bonfanti dropped out but Bryson, Smalley and their Starting Over bassist, Scott McCarl, decided to continue on briefly. The trio released a six-song EP entitled Raspberries Refreshed in September 2000. [22] [23] The album's tracks, written by the three remaining members, re-created the group's original sound. [22]
Eric Howard Carmen (August 11, 1949 – March 2024) was an American singer-songwriter and multi-instrumentalist. He was the lead vocalist of the Raspberries, with whom he recorded the hit "Go All the Way" [2] and four albums.
Eric Carmen, who became an icon of early ’70s power pop as the frontman of the Raspberries before achieving solo success with hits like “All By Myself” and “Hungry Eyes,” has died at age 74.
When the Raspberries disbanded in 1975, Carmen, a guitarist and pianist, began his successful career as a solo artist. Carmen grew up in the Cleveland area Carmen was born in Cleveland in 1949 ...
Carmen's first brush with fame arrived in 1972, the year the Raspberries took "Go All the Way" all the way to five on the Billboard Hot 100. Eric Carmen, frontman of the Raspberries and 'All By ...
Raspberries Capitol Collectors Series is a 1991 compilation of 20 tracks recorded by the band between 1972 and 1974. This release was the first time that many of these songs were available on compact disc. The CD contained two unlisted bonus tracks of radio spots used to promote the albums Fresh Raspberries and Starting Over. The compilation ...
Ultimate Classic Rock critic Dave Swanson rated it as the Raspberries 2nd best song, calling it "a powerhouse rock and roller that uncorks like a mound of caffeine" and noting that the "urgent machine gun like snare drum opening grabs the listener's ears as the jangling guitars chime in to let us know the Raspberries are at it again."