1. Itsy Bitsy Teenie Weenie Yellow Polka Dot Bikini (2:21) - Brian's only #1 hit has a moderate tempo. For drums, someone bangs a pan with a metal implement. Several women sing behind Brian. The girl is very nervous about wearing the attire named in the title. First she's afraid to come out of a locker, then she keeps a blanket wrapped around her, and finally she hesitates to come out of the water. Nowadays, however, some women are less ashamed about wearing such clothing when they go to beaches or swimming pools.
2. Rosemary (2:12) - Although this song is listed second on the disc, Brian actually recorded this one before he recorded "Itsy Bitsy." Again, the tempo is moderate and a few women sing behind Brian. The narrator compares Rosemary to "an angel dressed in white" and prays that she will become his girlfriend.
3. Let Me Belong To You (3:03) - This slow song features orchestral string instruments. The narrator doesn't want to be free or single; he begs the girl to enslave him, make him behave, and never to leave him alone. Starting at 1:40, Brian speaks a few lines.
4. Ginny Come Lately (2:50) - This song, slightly slower than moderate, opens with a 5-second guitar solo. Although the narrator met Ginny only two days before the setting, he believes she's the girl for him. He fell in love so fast because he liked how she smiled and the sun shone in her hair.
5. Sealed With A Kiss (2:38) - This moderately slow song features a harmonica and a piano. It's the first of three songs by Brian in which the narrator and his girlfriend are parting for the summer. For Brian, this song peaked at #3 both in the US and in the UK; later, it would also be a hit for Gary Lewis and the Playboys and for Bobby Vinton.
6. Warmed Over Kisses (Left Over Love) (2:18) - This moderately fast, 3/4 song also features a piano and a harmonica. Among the backup singers, I hear male and female voices. The narrator is heartbroken because his girlfriend has been seeing another man lately.
7. If Mary's There (2:39) - The tempo is moderate. Orchestral string instruments and finger-snapping are featured. The narrator declines an invitation to a party because he fears that Mary, his former girlfriend, will attend it. He's still in love with Mary and will be for the rest of his life.
8. I'm Afraid To Go Home (2:42) - This song, set at the end of the Civil War, has a moderate tempo. Instruments include a harmonica. The narrator is a Confederate soldier who lives in Tennessee. On his way home, he worries and wonders whether his family and girlfriend are still alive. When he reaches his hometown, he finds it burned. "Now there's not a tree / 'Tween Memphis and the sea," he laments.
9. Save Your Heart For Me (2:08) - The previous song's B-side wasn't a hit for Brian, but it would later be a Top 10 hit for Gary Lewis and the Playboys. This version is moderately slow, but slightly slower than Gary's version. I hear whistling in this version, just like in Gary's version. This is the second "parting-for-the-summer" song on this album.
10. 3000 Miles (2:40) - This song, slightly faster than moderate, features a piano and bells. Since the girl is from a rich family, the narrator worries that she might leave him for a rich man who lives far away. "I can just give you love," the narrator tells her, "but is that good enough?"
11. The Joker Went Wild (2:42) - I like this song so much, it's too bad I never hear it on the radio. The tempo is moderately fast. Chimes are featured. After his girlfriend left him, the narrator regrets having mistreated her. He advises her new boyfriend to treat her nicely.
12. Run, Run, Look And See (2:37) - This fast tune features chimes and a piano. Every time the narrator thinks he sees the girl and hears her voice, his heart tells him to run after her and look to see whether he did indeed see her.
13. Holiday For Clowns (2:33) - The tempo is somewhat faster than moderate. Instruments include a flute. The narrator's girlfriend has made a clown of him. Now he wishes there could be a day each year when clowns could parade downtown to show everyone their true, sad feelings, which they keep hidden the rest of the year.
14. Get The Message (2:43) - This moderate-tempoed song features horns. The narrator and his girlfriend have not communicated well lately. As he tells her in a sincere tone that he loves her, he hopes she will receive the message clearly this time.
15. Tragedy (2:53) - This moderately slow song features string instruments and a piano. The tragedy that has befallen the narrator is his girlfriend's departure from him. He begs her to come back to him.
16. (Why Can't You) Stay And Love Me All Summer (2:38) - A 3-second drum roll leads into a moderate, swing tempo. Instruments include a piano. In the third of the "goodbye-for-the-summer" songs, the narrator wishes that his girlfriend could stay with him rather than go on a summer vacation.
17. Could You Dig It (2:25) - The narrator of this moderately slow song asks the girl if she could "dig" being his girlfriend. He begs her to tell him whether or not she will reciprocate his immense love for her.
18. Gypsy Woman (2:33) - The tempo is moderate. Instruments include a piano, a tambourine, and chimes. The narrator spots a caravan of gypsies; one black-haired woman among them dances. The narrator falls in love with the dancer and wishes he could make his feelings known to her. This song, "Itsy Bitsy," and "Sealed" are the only three songs by Brian I ever hear on the radio; of those three, I like this song best.