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Dave Edmunds - The Early Edmunds (1991)

Dave Edmunds - The Early Edmunds (1991)

BAND/ARTIST: Dave Edmunds

Dave Edmunds - The Early Edmunds (1991)


Tracklist:

CD 1:
01. Morning Dew (02:52)
02. Its A Wonder (02:41)
03. Brand New Woman (02:21)
04. The Stumble (03:02)
05. 3 O'Clock Blues (05:08)
06. I Believe To My Soul (03:46)
07. So Unkind (02:55)
08. Summertime (04:04)
09. On The Road (03:34)
10. Don't Answer The Door (06:01)
11. Wang-Dang-Doodle (03:31)
12. Come Back Baby (02:44)
13. Shake Your Hips (03:20)
14. Blues Helping (03:45.93]
15. In The Land Of The Few (03:57)
16. Seagull (03:32)
17. Nobody's Talking (03:40)
18. Farandole (03:44)
19. You Can't Catch Me (03:27)
20. Mars (01:59)
21. Sabre Dance (Single Version) (04:50)

CD 2:
01. Sabre Dance (11:32)
02. Why (07:46)
03. People People (03:23)
04. Think Of Love (03:05)
05. Down Down Down (02:50)
06. I Hear You Knocking (02:49)
07. Hell Of A Pain (02:58)
08. It Ain't Easy (02:25)
09. The Promised Land (02:37)
10. Dance Dance Dance (02:43)
11. (I Am) A Lover Not A Fighter (03:32)
12. Egg Or The Hen (04:16)
13. Sweet Little Rock 'N' Roller (02:40)
14. Outlaw Blues (05:10)
15. Black Bill (03:09)
16. Country Roll (03:11)
17. I'm Comin' Home (03:02)
18. Blue Monday (02:50)
19. I'll Get Along (02:50)

In print for a brief time in the early '90s, EMI's double-disc set Early Edmunds is a valuable entry in Dave Edmunds' catalog, not just because it collects all of Love Sculpture's albums, but because it is the first time his first solo album, Rockpile, has appeared in complete form on compact disc. Combining those two worlds might result in a collection that's a little skewed -- a disc-plus of Love Sculpture's gonzo blues-psych is actually miles away from the solo stuff -- but it's a godsend for collectors, particularly because that solo debut is really fine stuff. It's not as consistent as he was just a record later, but his homespun take on classic rock & roll not only set the blueprint for his solo career, it was a little weirder (check the phoned-in vocals on the hit "I Hear You Knocking," or the general razor-thin quality of the production), and it proves that he was hip even before Nick Lowe, Elvis Costello, and Graham Parker were giving him songs (cherry picking "Outlaw Blues" from Dylan, taking Neil Young's "Dance Dance Dance," and reviving Roy Davies' "It Ain't Easy" before Bowie's classic performance on Ziggy Stardust does qualify as hip). That, along with getting all the Love Sculpture stuff at once, makes this worth tracking down at any price for the dedicated Edmunds fan.



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  • User offline
  • Diogenes
  •  wrote in 18:20
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Already gone?
:-(
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  • darkeno
  •  wrote in 23:16
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Links dead.
  • name
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  • whiskers
  •  wrote in 18:50
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Many thanks