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Creedence Clearwater Revival - Creedence Clearwater Revival (1986)

Creedence Clearwater Revival - Creedence Clearwater Revival (1986)
  • Title: Creedence Clearwater Revival
  • Year Of Release: 1986
  • Label: Fantasy/Ace
  • Genre: Rock
  • Quality: FLAC (tracks+.cue,scans)/320
  • Total Time: 00:33:54
  • Total Size: 335/102 MB
  • WebSite:
Tracklist:

01. I Put A Spell On You (Screamin' Jay Hawkins) 04:32
02. The Working Man 03:04
03. Suzie Q (Dale Hawkins, Eleanor Broadwater, Stanley Lewis) 08:36
Recorded January 19, 1968.
04. Ninety-Nine And A Half (Steve Cropper, Eddie Floyd, Wilson Pickett) 03:38
05. Get Down Woman 03:09
06. Porterville 02:24
Recorded October 1967. Initially released as a single in November 1967. It was the last single that the band released as The Golliwogs.
07. Gloomy 03:50
08. Walk On The Water (J.Fogerty, Tom Fogerty) 04:37
This track is a remake of "Walking on the Water", a recording released by the band as a single, in 1966, while they were still known as The Golliwogs.

Released in the summer of 1968 -- a year after the summer of love, but still in the thick of the Age of Aquarius - Creedence Clearwater Revival's self-titled debut album was gloriously out-of-step with the times, teeming with John Fogerty's Americana fascinations. While many of Fogerty's obsessions and CCR's signatures are in place -- weird blues ("I Put a Spell on You"), Stax R&B (Wilson Pickett's "Ninety-Nine and a Half"), rockabilly ("Susie Q"), winding instrumental interplay, the swamp sound, and songs for "The Working Man" -- the band was still finding their way. Out of all their records (discounting Mardi Gras), this is the one that sounds the most like its era, thanks to the wordless vocal harmonies toward the end of "Susie Q," the backward guitars on "Gloomy," and the directionless, awkward jamming that concludes "Walking on the Water." Still, the band's sound is vibrant, with gutsy arrangements that borrow equally from Sun, Stax, and the swamp. Fogerty's songwriting is a little tentative. Not for nothing were two of the three singles pulled from the album covers (Dale Hawkins' "Susie Q," Screamin' Jay Hawkins' "I Put a Spell on You") -- he wasn't an accomplished tunesmith yet. Though "The Working Man" isn't bad, the true exception is that third single, "Porterville," an exceptional song with great hooks, an underlying sense of menace, and the first inkling of the working-class rage that fueled such landmarks as "Fortunate Son." It's the song that points the way to the breakthrough of Bayou Country, but the rest of the album shouldn't be dismissed, because judged simply against the rock & roll of its time, it rises above its peers.



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