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Jerry Jeff Walker - A Man Must Carry On, Volume 1 & 2 (Reissue) (1977/1997)

Jerry Jeff Walker - A Man Must Carry On, Volume 1 & 2 (Reissue) (1977/1997)

BAND/ARTIST: Jerry Jeff Walker

  • Title: A Man Must Carry On, Volume 1 & 2
  • Year Of Release: 1977/1997
  • Label: MCA
  • Genre: Country Rock
  • Quality: Mp3 320 / Flac (tracks)
  • Total Time: 01:25:34
  • Total Size: 207/530 Mb
  • WebSite:
Tracklist:

Volume 1:
01. Stereo Chickens
02. Don't It Make You You Wanna Dance
03. Roll On Down The Road
04. Song For The Life
05. Leavin' Texas
06. Honky Tonk Music
07. Railroad Lady
08. Ro-Deo-Deo Cowboy
09. Derby Day
10. Long Afternoons

Volume 2:
11. His Heart Was So Full Of Mischief
12. The Stranger (He Was The Kind)
13. Rockin' Chair
14. It Shall Be A Midnight Music
15. Luckenbach Moon
16. Like Some Song You Can't Unlearn
17. My Buddy
18. The Stranger (He Was The Kind) Reprise
19. Mr Bojangles
20. L.A. Freeway
21. Sea Cruise Medley
22. One Too Many Mornings
23. Up Against Then Wall
24. Will The Circle Be Unbroken

A Man Must Carry On is Jerry Jeff Walker with the Lost Gonzo Band and some poet friends, Willie Nelson, and a bunch of folks. Some of it is live in front of an audience, some of it is in the studio, and some of it is a mess. And thank goodness. Released at the dawn of punk rock -- though most folks had no idea until 1980 or so -- A Man Must Carry On was Jerry Jeff and producer Michael Brovsky doing what they did best, throwin' stuff at the wall to see what stuck. Most of this does. The live material is truly fine, wooly and free-flowing. It's worth the purchase price for side four alone: "Mr. Bojangles; "LA Freeway"; a rock & roll medley of "Sea Cruise," "Johnny B. Goode," and "Peggy Sue"; a version of Dylan's "One Too Many Mornings"; and rounded off with the profane and the sacred: Ray Wylie Hubbard's anthem "Up Against the Wall Redneck Mother," which gives way to the Carters' "Will the Circle Be Unbroken." Talk about immediacy, spontaneity, and energy...screw the Sex Pistols. Other treasures include deeply moving renditions of "Honky Tonk Music" and "Railroad Lady" by Walker and Jimmy Buffett. The latter was actually cut by Merle Haggard! But the uncovering of it all is the place near the end of side three when Hondo Crouch, an infamous mayor of a small Texas town, gets up and reads his cowboy poetry in his unwavering, aged voice. Where else but on a Jerry Jeff Walker record could you get hillbilly music, live rock & roll, and performance art along with spirituals?





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  • User offline
  • whiskers
  •  wrote in 12:03
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Many Thanks
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  • mufty77
  •  wrote in 19:00
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Many thanks for lossless.