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Talk:Oh No Not My Baby

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Boombox? Oh No!

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Boomboxes came after "Oh No Not My Baby". Crtew (talk) 22:18, 1 December 2013 (UTC)[reply]

Brown recalls sitting on the porch of her one level house in Queens listening to the Shirelles' track play on a boom box propped in a window

Exactly. Long after. Home listening when Maxine Brown recorded it would either have been a record player, or a radio. 1964 was before boomboxes, cassettes, and eight-tracks. The 'boombox' statement is not only inaccurate, it is really misleading to readers too young to know what music formats were current in the 60s. Centrepull (talk) 17:05, 2 July 2015 (UTC)[reply]

Rod Stewart/Faces

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Also in 1973 Rod Stewart (backed by his group Faces) charted with "Oh No Not My Baby"; his self-produced version

I'm sensitive to the fact that Rod Stewart joined the Faces and then overshadowed the rest of the group, progressing to a successful solo career. It needs to be definitely correct that the Faces backed him on his version of this track, as they are not mentioned on the A-side of the 7" single, and it was not taken from an album. B-side (Jodie) is credited 'Rod & Faces'.

Stub Class

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I have removed the 'auto' flag from the Stub template. I don't know how to assess for promotion past 'stub' class, but the articles seems pretty well-developed now.Centrepull (talk) 22:26, 2 July 2015 (UTC)[reply]