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Bubblegum, Lemonade &... Something for Mama is the second solo album released by Cass Elliot under the billing "Mama Cass". It was recorded in 1969 and arranged and produced by Steve Barri. The album was originally released in June 1969, with only 11 tracks.
The label warned the band that each member would be sued for $250,000 if the band did not deliver the album. [ 74 ] [ 75 ] A lawsuit and countersuit between the band and label were settled out of court, and it was determined that the band would record under John Phillips's label, Warlock Records, distributed by Dunhill Records. [ 76 ]
Bubblegum, Lemonade, and... Something for Mama #91 1969 Make Your Own Kind of Music #169 Reissue of Bubblegum, Lemonade - with the hit title song added. 1970 Mama's Big Ones #194 1971 Dave Mason & Cass Elliot #49 with Dave Mason: 1972 Cass Elliot - 1972 The Road Is No Place for a Lady - 1973 Don't Call Me Mama Anymore - Recorded Live
"Easy Come, Easy Go" is a song written by Jack Keller and Diane Hildebrand that was a hit single for Bobby Sherman in 1970. [1]The song was first released by Mama Cass Elliot on July 5, 1969, on her album Bubblegum, Lemonade, and...
[1] [2] [3] Elliot would in 1971 claim that at Dunhill she had been "forced to be so bubble gum that I'd stick to the floor when I walked", [4] and in fact Elliot's solo singles had been progressively less successful, Dunhill president Jay Lasker commenting after Elliot's sixth solo single stalled at #42 in early 1970 "'New World Coming' has ...
"Move in a Little Closer, Baby" was the first advance single from Cass Elliot's second solo album Bubblegum, Lemonade, and... Something for Mama. Elliot would recall recording "Move in..." "as a lark. I did all the background voices and it sounds like [Elliot's former group] the Mamas & the Papas.
Renais Faryar - vocals on "The Room Nobody Lives In" and "Rubber Band" Brenda Holloway - backing vocals on "You Know Who I Am" Philip Austin - voice; Denny Doherty, Jill Gibson, John Phillips, Michelle Phillips, Scott McKenzie - backing vocals on "Dream a Little Dream of Me" The Blossoms - backing vocals on "Blues for Breakfast" and "You Know ...
Elliot would be less easygoing in her 1971 summation of her 1968–1970 tenure with Dunhill Records, saying she had been "forced to be so bubblegum that I'd stick to the floor when I walked." [ 4 ] Barri, while admitting—also in 1971—that "Cass was one artist I couldn't find the answer for," [ 1 ] would maintain: "We never recorded anything ...