True to form,
Lovin' Things, the fourth album by
the Grass Roots, contains another nugget in "The River Is Wide," a tremendous pop tune fusing a mainstream '60s sound with
Phil Spector innovations. It's a wonderful
Steve Barri production, their sixth hit record, and a song as brilliant as any of their first seven that hit the Top 40. Like labelmates
Three Dog Night, this crew found great songs when producer
Steve Barri and his former partner,
P.F. Sloan, weren't writing them for the group. Unlike
Three Dog Night, though, the band didn't pack an album with outside material poised for Top 40, and
Lovin' Things is a perfect example of the two sides of this group.
Larry Knechtel,
Hal Blaine,
Joe Osborn, and other name session folk are no doubt on the first two songs -- the title track, "Lovin' Things," and the hit, "The River Is Wide." Both songs carry big sound and great
Rob Grill vocals,
Warren Entner adding his fine voice to "The River Is Wide" as well, and though it was the fourth weakest of their 14 hits, it's still one of their best. There are two originals from guitarist
Warren Entner and singer
Grill, the enjoyable "(You Gotta) Live for Love" and a very interesting "Fly Me to Havana." "Havana" works because the band puts a
Ray Davies/
Kinks riff from "Till the End of the Day" into a mix with guitar sounds straight from
the Count Five's "Psychotic Reaction." Consider that had the band issued more of this highly regarded '60s sound along with their slick radio hits, they would have crossed over to the realm where music by
the Seeds and
Chocolate Watchband continues to dwell: sacred territory. Though
P.F. Sloan was gone by this point, they do cover two of his songs, "City Women" and "I Can't Help But Wonder, Elisabeth," as well as a
Sloan/
Barri title, "Baby, You Do It So Well."
P.F. Sloan himself became an enigmatic minor-league
Brian Wilson, in more ways than one, and adds a hipness that should make these albums more cherished in collectors circles than they are.
Bob Mann's song "Pain" ends side one, and dramatically different from the group's material, as well as the
Sloan and
Barri stuff, it adds yet another dimension to this quirky made-for-record-company group. Let's face it,
the Grass Roots were an effort by Dunhill Records to create a kind of
Monkees without a television show, music produced to climb the Top 40. There's nothing wrong with that. In fact, despite the crass commercialism behind
the Monkees, the band developed their own pop legacy from years of touring after their hit show. The problem with
the Grass Roots was that they could have taken the original business plan and used it as a platform to become a very hip and very chic item. Just listen to the Gordon/Grant tune "I'm So Excited," which starts off side two, then play
Ian Hunter's song of the same name which ends side two of his debut solo album six years after this in 1975. It's the exact melody opening each chorus, only
Mick Ronson and
Ian Hunter bring it all the way home. In order to carry a strange album track like "The Days of Pearly Spencer,"
Warren Entner needed to be as big a personality as an
Ian Hunter, and he isn't. From singing on this album, he went on to manage
Quiet Riot, and the members of
the Grass Roots never managed to create an identity as strong as
Micky Dolenz,
Peter Tork,
Davey Jones, and
Mike Nesmith. Heck, even Dale "Buffin" Griffin and Peter Overend Watts from
Mott had more name recognition in rock circles, and it's that lack of personality which held back a band with over a dozen hit records. As creative as these
Steve Barri-produced 11 tracks are, more hit songs were necessary for this LP's survival. That's what this band was all about, and the photos of
Grill,
Entner,
Coonce, and
Bratton on the back of the album just didn't register with those who heard a little masterpiece like "The River Is Wide."