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Lonnie Donegan - The Polygon / Nixa / Pye Anthology (2014)

Lonnie Donegan - The Polygon / Nixa / Pye Anthology (2014)

BAND/ARTIST: Lonnie Donegan

  • Title: The Polygon / Nixa / Pye Anthology
  • Year Of Release: 2014
  • Label: Sanctuary Records
  • Genre: Pop, Blues, Folk, Country
  • Quality: FLAC (tracks)
  • Total Time: 8:37:46
  • Total Size: 2.38 GB
  • WebSite:
Tracklist:

01. The Midnight Special
02. (In the Evening) When the Sun Goes Down (Live)
03. New Buryin' Ground
04. Worried Man Blues
05. Harmonica Blues
06. Lost John
07. Stewball
08. The Ballad of Jesse James
09. Ol' Riley
10. Railroad Bill
11. Stackalee (Stack O'lee)
12. Bring a Little Water, Sylvie
13. Dead or Alive
14. Wabash Cannonball
15. How Long, How Long Blues
16. Nobody's Child
17. I Shall Not Be Moved
18. I'm Alabammy Bound
19. I'm a Ramblin' Man
20. Wreck of the Old '97
21. Frankie and Johnny
22. I've Got Rocks in My Bed
23. Rock Island Line
24. Don't You Rock Me Daddy-O
25. On a Monday (Live at Conway Hall)
26. (Go Down) Old Hannah (Live at Conway Hall)
27. Muleskinner Blues (Live at Conway Hall)
28. Precious Memories (Live at Conway Hall)
29. Brother Moses Smote the Water (Live at Conway Hall)
30. Ella Speed (Live at Conway Hall)
31. Glory (False Start, Live at Conway Hall)
32. Black Girl (Live at Conway Hall)
33. Glory (Live at Conway Hall)
34. Cumberland Gap
35. Love Is Strange
36. Theme from 'Light Fingers'
37. Gamblin' Man
38. Gamblin' Man (Live)
39. Puttin' On the Style (Live)
40. My Dixie Darling
41. I'm Just a Rolling Stone
42. Jack O'Diamonds
43. Ham and Eggs
44. Hard Travellin' (Version 1)
45. Grand Coulee Dam
46. Nobody Loves Like an Irishman
47. Sally Don't You Grieve
48. Betty, Betty, Betty
49. Lonesome Traveller
50. The Sunshine of His Love
51. Ain't No More Cane on the Brazos
52. Ain't You Glad You Got Religion
53. Times Are Getting Hard, Boys (Stereo)
54. Lazy John
55. Light from the Lighthouse
56. I've Got Rocks in My Bed (Alternate Mix)
57. Long Summer Day (Stereo)
58. I've Got Rocks in My Bed (Alternate Take)
59. Shorty George
60. Hard Travellin' (Version 2)
61. Baby Don't You Know That's Love
62. Lonnie's Skiffle Party, Pt. 1
63. Lonnie's Skiffle Party, Pt. 2
64. Tom Dooley
65. Rock O' My Soul
66. Hard Travellin' (Version 3)
67. Does Your Chewing Gum Lose Its Flavour (On the Bedpost Overnight) (Live)
68. Aunt Rhody (The Old Grey Goose)
69. Bewildered (So Bewildered)
70. It's No Secret
71. Kevin Barry
72. My Laggan Love
73. My Only Son Was Killed In Dublin (The Dying Rebel)
74. Ace in the Hole
75. Fort Worth Jail
76. Whoa Buck (Whoa Back, Buck)
77. The Battle of New Orleans
78. Darling Corey
79. Sal's Got a Sugar Lip
80. Chesapeake Bay
81. Just a Closer Walk With Thee
82. Ice Cream
83. The Gold Rush Is Over
84. The House of the Rising Sun
85. John Hardy
86. Talking Guitar Blues (US Version)
87. You Pass Me By
88. San Miguel
89. Take This Hammer
90. Fancy Talking Tinker
91. Gloryland
92. Miss Otis Regrets (She's Unable to Lunch Today)
93. Jimmy Brown the Newsboy
94. Mr. Froggy
95. Talking Guitar Blues
96. John Hardy (Alternate Version)
97. My Old Man's a Dustman
98. The Golden Vanity
99. I Wanna Go Home (The Wreck of the John B)
100. I Wanna Go Home (The Wreck of the John B; Long Version)
101. Take This Hammer (Single Version)
102. Lorelei
103. In All My Wildest Dreams
104. Corrine, Corrina
105. Junko Partner
106. Sorry But I'm Gonna Have to Pass
107. Nobody Understands Me
108. Beyond the Sunset (US Version)
109. The Wreck of the John B
110. Lively!
111. Black Cat (Cross My Path Today)
112. Banana Split for My Baby
113. When I Was Young
114. Virgin Mary
115. Beyond the Sunset (UK Version)
116. (Bury Me) Beneath the Willow
117. Leave My Woman Alone
118. Have a Drink On Me
119. Seven Daffodils
120. Just A-Wearying for You
121. Keep on the Sunny Side
122. Tiger Rag
123. Michael Row the Boat Ashore
124. Lumbered
125. The Comancheros
126. Ramblin' 'Round
127. Red Berets
128. The Party's Over
129. Over the Rainbow
130. I'll Never Fall in Love Again
131. Keep On the Sunny Side (Version 2)
132. I'll Never Fall in Love Again (Alternate Take)
133. I'll Never Smile Again
134. Pick a Bale of Cotton
135. Steal Away
136. Sing Hallelujah
137. We Shall Walk Through the Valley
138. No Hiding Place
139. Good News! Chariots A' Comin'
140. Noah Found Grace In the Eyes of the Lord
141. Joshua Fit de Battle of Jericho
142. His Eye Is On the Sparrow
143. Born in Bethlehem
144. This Train
145. New Burying Ground
146. Nobody Knows the Trouble I've Seen
147. The Market Song (Live)
148. Tit Bits (Live)
149. Losing By a Hair
150. Trumpet Sounds
151. It Was a Very Good Year
152. Rise Up
153. Lemon Tree
154. I've Gotta Gal So Fine
155. 500 Miles Away from Home
156. Beans in My Ears
157. It's a Long Road to Travel
158. Fisherman's Luck
159. There's a Big Wheel
160. Bad News
161. Lovey Told Me Goodbye
162. Get Out of My Life
163. Won't You Tell Me
164. I'm Gonna Be a Bachelor
165. Interstate Forty
166. After Taxes
167. Where in the World (Are We Going)
168. Diamonds of Dew
169. Bound for Zion
170. She Was a T-Bone Talking Woman
171. Wedding Bells
172. Reverend Mr. Black
173. The Doctor's Daughter
174. Blistered
175. Farewell (Fare Thee Well)
176. Louisiana Man
177. Cajun Joe (The Bully of the Bayou)
178. Nothing to Gain
179. World Cup Willie
180. Ding Ding
181. Leaving Blues
182. Auntie Maggie's Remedy
183. (Ah) My Sweet Marie

To look at Lonnie Donegan today, in pictures taken 40 years ago when he was topping the British charts and hitting the Top Ten in America, dressed in a suit, his hair cut short and strumming an acoustic guitar, he looks like a musical non-entity. But in 1954, before anyone (especially anybody in England) knew what rock & roll was, Donegan was cool, and his music was hot. He's relatively little remembered outside of England, but Donegan shares an important professional attribute with Elvis Presley, Bill Haley, the Beatles, the Rolling Stones, and the Sex Pistols -- he invented a style of music, skiffle, that completely altered the pop culture landscape and the youth around him, and for a time, completely ruled popular music through that new form. What's more, his music, like that of Presley and Haley, was vital to the early musical careers and future histories of the Beatles, the Stones, and hundreds of other groups. And he did it in 1954, before Elvis was known anywhere outside of Memphis and before Bill Haley was perceived as anything but a Western swing novelty act.

Anthony James Donegan was born in Glasgow, Scotland on April 29, 1931, the son of a classical violinist who had played with the Scottish National Orchestra. Donegan received no encouragement to play an instrument or choose music as a profession, for his father, like many talented musicians during the economic slump of the '30s, was continually out of work. The family, which moved to East London in 1933, had no desire to see him go into a dead-end profession. He first became interested in the guitar at age nine, but it was to be another five years before he took matters into his own hands and bought his first guitar for £12.50 (about $70 American in those days).



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  • User offline
  • whiskers
  •  wrote in 15:23
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Many thanks
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  • nilesh65
  •  wrote in 16:10
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Thank you so much!!!
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  • mufty77
  •  wrote in 21:50
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Many thanks for lossless.