Time Peace: The Rascals' Greatest Hits

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Time Peace
Greatest hits album by
ReleasedJune 24, 1968
RecordedSeptember 1965 – March 1968
Genre
Length39:49
LabelAtlantic
ProducerThe Rascals, Arif Mardin, Tom Dowd
The Rascals chronology
Once Upon a Dream
(1968)
Time Peace
(1968)
Freedom Suite
(1969)

Time Peace: The Rascals' Greatest Hits is a

Cash Box
albums chart with a run in the Top 10 for 20 consecutive weeks

Release

The album is the only such compilation released during the group's active career. Although billed to their later name, most of the material came from when the group was known as the Young Rascals. It contains all their singles through 1968's earlier "A Beautiful Morning", as well as some of their R&B treatments from early in their career.

Time Peace was reissued on

Rhino Handmade
6-CD collection All I Really Need: The Atlantic Recordings 1965-1971, which is also now out of print.

Cover

Packaging consisted of a gatefold album cover with front and back consisting of dot-based newspaper cartoon-style drawing of the four group members, with song titles in speech balloons; the interior gave complete song credits on one side, and an ensemble photograph on the other side whose artsy nature and 1968-style dress, together with the album's punning title, foretold the thematic and artistic direction the group was about to undertake.

Reception

Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
The Rolling Stone Record Guide
[2]

Time Peace was the group's most commercially successful album, reaching number one on the

gold record on September 4, 1968.[citation needed
]

In 1969 Time Peace was awarded with a Platinum Record for sales of $2,000,000.[3]

Music critic Robert Christgau regarded the album as representative of New York City's rock music at the time,[4] and later included it in his "Basic Record Library" of 1950s and 1960s recordings, published in Christgau's Record Guide: Rock Albums of the Seventies (1981).[5]

Track listing

Side One

  1. "I Ain't Gonna Eat Out My Heart Anymore" (Pam Sawyer, Lori Burton) – 2:41
    • The Rascals' first single (Atlantic #2312, 1965); also included on the 1966 album The Young Rascals
  2. "Good Lovin'" (Rudy Clark, Arthur Resnick) – 2:28
    • The Rascals' second single (Atlantic #2321, 1966), and first #1 hit; also included on The Young Rascals
  3. "You Better Run" (Felix Cavaliere, Eddie Brigati) – 2:25
    • The A-side of the Rascals' third single (Atlantic #2338, 1966); later included on the 1967 album Groovin'
  4. "Come On Up" (Cavaliere) – 2:41
    • The Rascals' fourth single (Atlantic #2353, 1966), also included on the 1967 album Collections
  5. "
    Bonny Rice
    ) – 3:59
  6. "Love is a Beautiful Thing" (Cavaliere, Brigati) – 2:30
    • Originally released as the B-side of "You Better Run"; later included on Collections
  7. "In the Midnight Hour" (Wilson Pickett, Steve Cropper) – 4:00

Side Two

  1. "(I've Been) Lonely Too Long" (Cavaliere) – 2:57
  2. "Groovin'" (Cavaliere, Brigati) – 2:25
    • The Rascals' second #1 single (Atlantic #2401), released in 1967; also included on Groovin'
  3. "A Girl Like You" (Cavaliere, Brigati) – 2:46
    • The follow-up Top 10 single to "Groovin'" (Atlantic #2424, 1967); also included on Groovin'
  4. "How Can I Be Sure" (Cavaliere, Brigati) – 2:50
    • The Rascals' third Top 10 single of 1967 (Atlantic #2438); also included on Groovin'
  5. "It's Wonderful" (Cavaliere, Brigati) – 2:40
  6. "Easy Rollin'" (Cavaliere, Brigati) – 2:55
  7. "A Beautiful Morning" (Cavaliere, Brigati) – 2:32
    • Non-LP single from 1968 (Atlantic #2493)

Personnel

The Rascals

Chart positions

Year Chart Position
1968 Billboard Pop Albums (Billboard 200) 1

Certifications

Region Certification Certified units/sales
United States (RIAA)[6] Gold 500,000^

* Sales figures based on certification alone.
^ Shipments figures based on certification alone.

References

Further reading

  • Miller, Jim (17 May 1969). "Records". Rolling Stone. San Francisco: Straight Arrow Publishers, Inc.

External links