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The Spirit of '67 is the sixth studio album by American rock band Paul Revere & the Raiders. Produced by Terry Melcher and released in November 1966 by Columbia Records (CS 9395), and featured the singles "Hungry", "The Great Airplane Strike", and "Good Thing". The album would be reissued on LP (with the title "Good Thing" and with "Oh!
Revere announced his retirement from the band in August 2014; the group planned to tour without him as "Paul Revere's Raiders". In October 2014, the band's web site announced that Revere had died "peacefully" on October 4, 2014, at his Garden Valley, Idaho home, a "small estate overlooking a tranquil river canyon", from cancer.
Paul Revere & the Raiders are an American rock band from Boise, Idaho. Formed in 1958, the band released their first hit single three years later, " Like, Long Hair ", which reached number 38 on the U.S. Billboard Hot 100 chart. [ 1 ]
Good Things, a 2000 album by Toni Lynn Washington; ... "Good Thing", by Paul Revere & The Raiders from The Spirit of '67 "Good Thing", by Reel Big Fish from Cheer Up!
Thus Jon, Chip, and their nearly 60-year-old “Wild Thing” bonding moment comes full circle. As used in the film, the song underscores the pundit-defying success of Reagan’s 1966 California ...
The next single, "Good Thing", which peaked at #4 in December 1966, [21] was credited to the writing team of Melcher, Paul Revere and Mark Lindsay. Volk stated that the song was written at the Cielo Drive home of Melcher in the Beverly Glen section of Los Angeles.
Good Day Sunshine; Good Thing (Paul Revere & the Raiders song) Good to Me (Otis Redding song) Good Vibrations; The Good, the Bad and the Ugly (theme) Gorgeous (1966 song) Got to Get You into My Life; Gracias a la vida; The Gravity Car; The Great Airplane Strike; Green Grass (song)
"Kicks" is a song composed by Barry Mann and Cynthia Weil, best known as a 1966 hit for American rock band Paul Revere & the Raiders. Mann and Weill wrote the song for the Animals, but the band's lead singer Eric Burdon turned it down. [3] Instead, Paul Revere & the Raiders recorded and released it as a single in 1966.