The Treniers - The Essential Treniers - The Okeh Years (2018)
BAND/ARTIST: The Treniers
- Title: The Essential Treniers - The Okeh Years
- Year Of Release: 2018
- Label: Epic - Legacy
- Genre: Rhythm and Blues, Rock and Roll
- Quality: flac lossless
- Total Time: 01:16:47
- Total Size: 360 mb
- WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist
01. Go! Go! Go! (78rpm Version)
02. It Rocks! It Rolls! It Swings! (78rpm Version)
03. Hadacole (That's All) (78rpm Version)
04. This Is It (78rpm Version)
05. Rocking On Sunday Night (78rpm Version)
06. Poon-Tang! (78rpm Version)
07. Rockin' Is Our Bizness (78rpm Version)
08. Sugar-Doo (78rpm Version)
09. Rock-A-Beatin' Boogie (78rpm Version)
10. Trapped (In the Web of Love) (78rpm Version)
11. Bald Head (78rpm Version)
12. I Said No (78rpm Version)
13. Say Hey (The Willie Mays Song) (78rpm Version)
14. Get Out of the Car (78rpm Version)
15. Everything's Wild In Wildwood (78rpm Version)
16. Ride, Man, Ride (78rpm Version)
17. Good Rockin' Tonight (78rpm Version)
18. Peace Bond Blues (78rpm Version)
19. Rock 'N Roll Call (78rpm Version)
20. Rock-A-Way (78rpm Version)
21. The Moondog (78rpm Version)
22. Cheatin' On Me (78rpm Version)
23. I'd Do Nothin' But Grieve (78rpm Version)
24. Devil's Mambo (78rpm Version)
25. Old Woman Blues (78rpm Version)
26. Taxi Blues (78rpm Version)
27. Out of the Bushes (78rpm Version)
28. Plenty of Money (78rpm Version)
29. Long Distance Blues (78rpm Version)
Featuring twin brothers Cliff and Claude Trenier, the Treniers helped link swing music to rock & roll with their brand of hot jump blues in the late '40s and early '50s. To the latter-day listener, their early-'50s singles sound closer to swing than rock; indeed, Cliff and Claude had once sung with the Jimmie Lunceford Orchestra. The group did anticipate some crucial elements of rock & roll, though, with their solid, thumping beats, their squealing saxophone solos, and their song titles, such as "Rocking on Sunday Night," "Rockin' Is Our Business," and "It Rocks! It Rolls! It Swings!." The Treniers' brand of swing-cum-R&B was undoubtedly an influence on Bill Haley, who saw them when both acts were playing summer shows in Wildwood, NJ. They had work recorded for OKeh in the early '50s; by the middle of the decade, their sound was more R&B-oriented. Like many early R&B pioneers, they were unable to find success in the rock & roll era, though they appeared in a few of the first rock & roll films.
01. Go! Go! Go! (78rpm Version)
02. It Rocks! It Rolls! It Swings! (78rpm Version)
03. Hadacole (That's All) (78rpm Version)
04. This Is It (78rpm Version)
05. Rocking On Sunday Night (78rpm Version)
06. Poon-Tang! (78rpm Version)
07. Rockin' Is Our Bizness (78rpm Version)
08. Sugar-Doo (78rpm Version)
09. Rock-A-Beatin' Boogie (78rpm Version)
10. Trapped (In the Web of Love) (78rpm Version)
11. Bald Head (78rpm Version)
12. I Said No (78rpm Version)
13. Say Hey (The Willie Mays Song) (78rpm Version)
14. Get Out of the Car (78rpm Version)
15. Everything's Wild In Wildwood (78rpm Version)
16. Ride, Man, Ride (78rpm Version)
17. Good Rockin' Tonight (78rpm Version)
18. Peace Bond Blues (78rpm Version)
19. Rock 'N Roll Call (78rpm Version)
20. Rock-A-Way (78rpm Version)
21. The Moondog (78rpm Version)
22. Cheatin' On Me (78rpm Version)
23. I'd Do Nothin' But Grieve (78rpm Version)
24. Devil's Mambo (78rpm Version)
25. Old Woman Blues (78rpm Version)
26. Taxi Blues (78rpm Version)
27. Out of the Bushes (78rpm Version)
28. Plenty of Money (78rpm Version)
29. Long Distance Blues (78rpm Version)
Featuring twin brothers Cliff and Claude Trenier, the Treniers helped link swing music to rock & roll with their brand of hot jump blues in the late '40s and early '50s. To the latter-day listener, their early-'50s singles sound closer to swing than rock; indeed, Cliff and Claude had once sung with the Jimmie Lunceford Orchestra. The group did anticipate some crucial elements of rock & roll, though, with their solid, thumping beats, their squealing saxophone solos, and their song titles, such as "Rocking on Sunday Night," "Rockin' Is Our Business," and "It Rocks! It Rolls! It Swings!." The Treniers' brand of swing-cum-R&B was undoubtedly an influence on Bill Haley, who saw them when both acts were playing summer shows in Wildwood, NJ. They had work recorded for OKeh in the early '50s; by the middle of the decade, their sound was more R&B-oriented. Like many early R&B pioneers, they were unable to find success in the rock & roll era, though they appeared in a few of the first rock & roll films.
Year 2018 | Pop | Rock | FLAC / APE
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