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J.J. Cale - Roll On (2009)
vom: 20.02.2009
Downloads:
11353
Hochgeladen um:
08:24:12
Öffentlicher Name:
CannaPower
Format:
mp3
Beschreibung:
JJ_Cale-Roll_On-2009-RVP [img(width=316 height=60)]links/images/splogo.jpg[/img]
NFO:
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+----------------------------------------------------------------------------+ | | | Artist : JJ Cale | | Album : Roll On | | Bitrate : VBR kbps | | Label : Rounder | | Year : 2009 | | Genre : Rock | | Rip date : Feb-19-2009 | | Store date : Feb-24-2009 | | Size : 56,7 MB | | | +--------------------------------[Track List]--------------------------------+ | | |Track Listing: | | | | 01 - Who Knew 03:31 | | 02 - Former Me 02:49 | | 03 - Where The Sun Don't Shine 03:08 | | 04 - Down To Memphis 03:06 | | 05 - Strange Days 03:11 | | 06 - Cherry Street 03:44 | | 07 - Fonda-Lina 03:22 | | 08 - Leaving In The Morning 02:38 | | 09 - Oh Mary 03:35 | | 10 - Old Friend 03:57 | | 11 - Roll On 04:44 | | 12 - Bring Down The Curtain 02:54 | | | | | | 40:39 min | | | +----------------------------------[Notes]-----------------------------------+ | | | Notorious for his laid-back, rootsy style, J.J. Cale is best known for | | writing "After Midnight" and "Cocaine," songs that Eric Clapton later | | made into hits. But Cale's influence wasn't only through songwriting - | | his distinctly loping sense of rhythm and shuffling boogie became the | | blueprint for the adult-oriented roots rock of Clapton and Mark | | Knopfler, among others. Cale's refusal to vary the sound of his music | | over the course of his career caused some critics to label him as a one | | -trick pony, but he managed to build a dedicated cult following with his | | sporadically released recordings. | | | | Born in Oklahoma City but raised in Tulsa, OK, Cale played in a variety | | of rock & roll bands and Western swing groups as a teenager, including | | one outfit that also featured Leon Russell. In 1959, at the age of 21, | | he moved to Nashville, where he was hired by the Grand Ole Opry's | | touring company. After a few years, he returned to Tulsa, where he | | reunited with Russell and began playing local clubs. In 1964, Cale and | | Russell moved to Los Angeles with another local Oklahoma musician, Carl | | Radle. | | | | Shortly after he arrived in Los Angeles, Cale began playing with Delaney | | and Bonnie. He only played with the duo for a brief time, beginning a | | solo career in 1965. That year, he cut the first version of "After | | Midnight," which would become his most famous song. Around 1966, Cale | | formed the Leathercoated Minds with songwriter Roger Tillison. The group | | released a psychedelic album called A Trip Down Sunset Strip the same | | year. | | | | Deciding that he wouldn't be able to forge a career in Los Angeles, Cale | | returned to Tulsa in 1967. Upon his return, he set about playing local | | clubs. Within a year, he had recorded a set of demos. Radle obtained a | | copy of the demos and forwarded it to Denny Cordell, who was founding a | | record label called Shelter with Leon Russell. Shelter signed Cale in | | 1969. The following year, Eric Clapton recorded "After Midnight," taking | | it to the American Top 20 and thereby providing Cale with needed | | exposure and royalties. In December 1971, Cale released his debut album, | | Naturally, on Shelter Records; the album featured the Top 40 hit "Crazy | | Mama," as well as a re-recorded version of "After Midnight," which | | nearly reached the Top 40, and "Call Me the Breeze," which Lynyrd | | Skynyrd later covered. Cale followed Naturally with Really, which | | featured the minor hit "Lies," later that same year. | | | | Following the release of Really, J.J. Cale adopted a slow work schedule, | | releasing an album every other year or so. Okie, his third album, | | appeared in 1974. Two years later, he released Troubadour, which yielded | | "Hey Baby," his last minor hit, as well as the original version of | | "Cocaine," a song that Clapton would later cover. By this point, Cale | | had settled into a comfortable career as a cult artist and he rarely | | made any attempt to break into the mainstream. One more album on Shelter | | Records, 5, appeared in 1979 and then he switched labels, signing with | | MCA in 1981. MCA only released one album (1981's Shades) and Cale moved | | to Mercury Records the following year, releasing Grasshopper. | | | | In 1983, Cale released his eighth album, 8. The album became his first | | not to chart. Following its release, Cale left Mercury and entered a | | long period of seclusion, reappearing in late 1990 with Travel Log, | | which was released on the British independent label Silvertone; the | | album appeared in America the following year. 10 was released in 1992. | | The album failed to chart, but it re-established his power as a cult | | artist. He moved to the major label Virgin in 1994, releasing Close to | | You the same year. It was followed by Guitar Man in 1996. Cale returned | | to recording in 2003, releasing To Tulsa and Back in 2004 on the | | Sanctuary label and The Road to Escondido, a collaborative effort with | | Clapton, in 2006 on Reprise. | | | | | | | | | | | | | +----------------------------------------------------------------------------+
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