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Stan Webb / Chicken Shack - Going Up, Going Down… The Anthology 1967-1968-2001 (2004)

Stan Webb / Chicken Shack - Going Up, Going Down… The Anthology 1967-1968-2001 (2004)

BAND/ARTIST: Stan Webb / Chicken Shack

  • Title: Going Up, Going Down… The Anthology 1968-2001
  • Year Of Release: 2004
  • Label: Castle Music
  • Genre: Blues Rock
  • Quality: APE (image, .cue, log)
  • Total Time: 02:35:20
  • Total Size: 922 Mb (scans)
  • WebSite:
Stan Webb / Chicken Shack - Going Up, Going Down… The Anthology 1967-1968-2001 (2004)


Tracklist:

CD 1:
01. Everyday I Have The Blues (1997)
02. Tell Me (1997)
03. When The Train Comes Back (1997)
04. San Ho Zay (1997)
05. Mean Old World (1997)
06. You�ve Done Lostyour Good Thing Now (1997)
07. I�m Tore Down (1997)
08. You Take Me Down (2000)
09. The Thrill Has Gone (1995)
10. My Mood (1997)
11. Midnight Hour (1997)
12. Set Me Free (1994)
13. I�d Rather Go Blind (1994)
14. Going Up Going Down (1995)
15. Lost The Best Friend I Ever Have (1997)
16. Black Night (1997)
17. Prisoner (1997)
18. He Knows The Rules (1973)

CD 2:
01. Mine All The Time
02. Cryin� Won�t Help You
03. Poor Boy
04. The Looser
05. Quick Step
06. Unlucky Boy
07. As Times Goes Passing Bye
08. Hear Me Cry
09. Meeting On A Hill
10. Use What You�ve Got
11. Little Bird
12. Let Me Love You Baby
13. Back Door Man
14. Tell Me
15. Strange Situations
16. The House That Love Lives In
17. I Know
18. The Last Time

Guitar – Stan Webb
Piano – Christine Perfect
Vocals – Christine Perfect, Stan Webb

Going Up, Going Down is a double-disc set on the Castle label focusing on Chicken Shack singer and guitarist Stan Webb. The first disc captures the early days of his British electric blues band when the lineup included future Fleetwood Mac keyboardist Christine Perfect (pre-McVie). Their earliest repertoire, made up of electric blues cover versions, is reflected through both studio recordings and various live gigs, with fundamentally decent takes of "Everyday I Have the Blues," "Tell Me," "San Ho Zay," "I'm Tore Down," "I'd Rather Go Blind," and "He Knows the Rules." The second disc is a bit more interesting as the band progresses into a harder and louder guitar-driven unit, utilizing Webb's original songs, which have more in common with Paul Rodgers and Free than the previous incarnations did with classic electric blues. Unfortunately, the two live tracks are the weakest on the second disc; "Back Door Man" gets bogged down with pseudo-Hendrix wah-wah pedal hysterics, and the second reading of "Tell Me" is perfunctory. At 36 tracks, Going Up, Going Down may be too much for the novice, but the collector will certainly find this of interest.



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  • User offline
  • whiskers
  •  wrote in 13:00
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Many Thanks
  • User offline
  • blues_boy
  •  wrote in 03:10
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Many thanks for the re-up :)