Both Sides of an Evening (Expanded Edition)

Both Sides of an Evening (Expanded Edition)

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by Bruce EderBoth Sides of an Evening is usually cited as the place where the Everly Brothers' music and career started to go wrong. Their relationship with their longtime producer and publisher, Wesley Rose, had fallen apart in late 1960 amid a conflict over copyrights, specifically their decision to record as a single an old Nacio Herb Brown\u002FArthur Freed song called Temptation that he didn't publish. Cut off from their regular source of songs, Felice and Boudleaux Bryant, who were Rose-published composers, were left to their own devices as songwriters, with the complication that they were also signed to Rose and there were now pending lawsuits in the relationship. Finding potential hits in such circumstances, much less a dozen good songs at a time to record, was a serious challenge. Their answer was an album consisting of rhythm numbers on side one (For Dancing) and slow ballads (For Dreaming) on side two. Most of the first side -- apart from the unfortunate decision to record Mention My Name in Sheboygan -- worked beautifully, their version of Muskrat even getting a kind of shimmering Bo Diddley-style shave and a haircut beat, and the duo even put a fresh (and unexpected rock) spin on the Al Jolson number My Mammy. Side two is very soft for a rock & roll album and isn't helped by the presence of Hi-Lili, Hi-Lo and Little Old Lady, though it is sung so beautifully that any of the group's teenaged fans that listened to it all the way through couldn't complain of the singing. In some ways, Both Sides of an Evening was the duo's most ambitious and mature record to date, but it just wasn't terribly exciting or of much interest (especially the second side) to the teeenagers that made up the vast bulk of their audience.