Confederate Railroad - The Complete Warner Years (2023)
BAND/ARTIST: Confederate Railroad
- Title: The Complete Warner Years
- Year Of Release: 2023
- Label: Warner Music Group - X5 Music Group
- Genre: Country
- Quality: FLAC (tracks) / MP3
- Total Time: 2:21:38
- Total Size: 889 / 330 MB
- WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:
01. She Took It Like a Man
02. Long Gone
03. Jesus and Mama
04. Time Off for Bad Behavior
05. She Never Cried
06. Black Label, White Lies
07. When You Leave That Way You Can Never Go Back
08. Queen of Memphis
09. You Don't Know What It's Like
10. Trashy Women
11. Daddy Never Was the Cadillac Kind
12. Summer in Dixie
13. I Am Just a Rebel
14. Elvis and Andy
15. Notorious
16. Redneck Romeo
17. Hunger Pains
18. Roll the Dice
19. Move Over Madonna
20. Three Verses
21. When and Where
22. Right Track Wrong Train
23. Toss a Little Bone
24. When He Was My Age
25. Bill's Laundromat, Bar and Grill
26. All I Wanted
27. See Ya
28. Sounds of Home
29. Oh No
30. My Baby's Lovin'
31. Keep On Rockin'
32. I Hate Rap
33. Sunday Morning and Saturday Night
34. I Don't Want to Hang Out with Me
35. A Bible and a Bus Ticket Home
36. Good Ol' Boy (Gettin' Tough)
37. Cowboy Cadillac (New Dance Mix)
38. The Big One
39. Momma Ain't Home Tonight
40. Simple Man (Pete Greene Remix)
01. She Took It Like a Man
02. Long Gone
03. Jesus and Mama
04. Time Off for Bad Behavior
05. She Never Cried
06. Black Label, White Lies
07. When You Leave That Way You Can Never Go Back
08. Queen of Memphis
09. You Don't Know What It's Like
10. Trashy Women
11. Daddy Never Was the Cadillac Kind
12. Summer in Dixie
13. I Am Just a Rebel
14. Elvis and Andy
15. Notorious
16. Redneck Romeo
17. Hunger Pains
18. Roll the Dice
19. Move Over Madonna
20. Three Verses
21. When and Where
22. Right Track Wrong Train
23. Toss a Little Bone
24. When He Was My Age
25. Bill's Laundromat, Bar and Grill
26. All I Wanted
27. See Ya
28. Sounds of Home
29. Oh No
30. My Baby's Lovin'
31. Keep On Rockin'
32. I Hate Rap
33. Sunday Morning and Saturday Night
34. I Don't Want to Hang Out with Me
35. A Bible and a Bus Ticket Home
36. Good Ol' Boy (Gettin' Tough)
37. Cowboy Cadillac (New Dance Mix)
38. The Big One
39. Momma Ain't Home Tonight
40. Simple Man (Pete Greene Remix)
Often described as a cross between Alabama and Lynyrd Skynyrd, Confederate Railroad made their name with a party-ready hybrid of modern country and Southern rock, which also earned them comparisons to Charlie Daniels and Hank Williams, Jr. Their trashy, roughneck wardrobe was a good indicator of their rowdy, tongue-in-cheek sense of humor, but they were also able to balance that with a sincere sentimental streak. Singer/guitarist Danny Shirley, lead guitarist Michael Lamb, steel guitarist Gates Nichols, keyboardist Chris McDaniel, bassist Wayne Secrest, and drummer Mark Dufresne got together in the early '80s and spent years playing the Atlanta bar scene, eventually merging into a tight unit with original material. They served as the house band at Miss Kitty's in Marietta, Georgia for several years and also worked as a backing band on the road behind Johnny Paycheck and David Allan Coe.
After around a decade of paying dues, Confederate Railroad finally earned a shot with Atlantic, and released their self-titled debut album in 1992. Lead single "She Took It Like a Man" inched into the Top 40, but the record really took off with the next two singles; "Jesus and Mama" and "Queen of Memphis" both shot into the country Top Five. Fan favorite "Trashy Women" also made the Top Ten, and two additional singles -- "When You Leave That Way You Can Never Go Back" and "She Never Cried" -- hit the Top 40. With such a large store of hits, Confederate Railroad went double platinum. The band's 1994 follow-up, Notorious, also sold over a million copies and spawned another Top Ten hit with "Daddy Never Was the Cadillac Kind"; another concert favorite, "Elvis and Andy," made the Top 20.
The title track of 1995's When and Where proved to be their last significant hit for a while, and guitarist Lamb left the band, to be replaced by Jimmy Dormire. Arriving in 1998, Keep on Rockin' confirmed the band's downward commercial slide, and keyboardist McDaniel eventually left as well; his replacement was Cody McCarver. Confederate Railroad parted ways with Atlantic and signed with the smaller Audium label for their next album, 2001's Unleashed, which spawned the hit singles "That's What Brothers Do" and "She Treats Her Body Like a Temple." The band continued to perform live, but it would be nearly five years before Confederate Railroad would step back into the studio. The resulting Cheap Thrills, released via Shanachie, found the group tackling 11 cover songs, the majority of which were from Southern rock and country artists like Billie Joe Shaver, Alan Jackson, and Johnny Paycheck. The band moved to E1 Music in 2010 and released its very first concert album, Live: Back to the Barroom. Lucky to Be Alive, the group's seventh studio long-player and first album in nine years, dropped in 2016 via Sony Music. © Steve Huey
After around a decade of paying dues, Confederate Railroad finally earned a shot with Atlantic, and released their self-titled debut album in 1992. Lead single "She Took It Like a Man" inched into the Top 40, but the record really took off with the next two singles; "Jesus and Mama" and "Queen of Memphis" both shot into the country Top Five. Fan favorite "Trashy Women" also made the Top Ten, and two additional singles -- "When You Leave That Way You Can Never Go Back" and "She Never Cried" -- hit the Top 40. With such a large store of hits, Confederate Railroad went double platinum. The band's 1994 follow-up, Notorious, also sold over a million copies and spawned another Top Ten hit with "Daddy Never Was the Cadillac Kind"; another concert favorite, "Elvis and Andy," made the Top 20.
The title track of 1995's When and Where proved to be their last significant hit for a while, and guitarist Lamb left the band, to be replaced by Jimmy Dormire. Arriving in 1998, Keep on Rockin' confirmed the band's downward commercial slide, and keyboardist McDaniel eventually left as well; his replacement was Cody McCarver. Confederate Railroad parted ways with Atlantic and signed with the smaller Audium label for their next album, 2001's Unleashed, which spawned the hit singles "That's What Brothers Do" and "She Treats Her Body Like a Temple." The band continued to perform live, but it would be nearly five years before Confederate Railroad would step back into the studio. The resulting Cheap Thrills, released via Shanachie, found the group tackling 11 cover songs, the majority of which were from Southern rock and country artists like Billie Joe Shaver, Alan Jackson, and Johnny Paycheck. The band moved to E1 Music in 2010 and released its very first concert album, Live: Back to the Barroom. Lucky to Be Alive, the group's seventh studio long-player and first album in nine years, dropped in 2016 via Sony Music. © Steve Huey
Year 2023 | Country | FLAC / APE | Mp3
As a ISRA.CLOUD's PREMIUM member you will have the following benefits:
- Unlimited high speed downloads
- Download directly without waiting time
- Unlimited parallel downloads
- Support for download accelerators
- No advertising
- Resume broken downloads