The Crickets - The Crickets and Their Buddies (2004/2021)

  • 09 May, 19:39
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Artist:
Title: The Crickets and Their Buddies
Year Of Release: 2021 (2004)
Label: Time-Life Music
Genre: Pop, Rock, Rock'n'Roll
Quality: FLAC (tracks) | Mp3 / 320kbps
Total Time: 43:08
Total Size: 276 MB | 98,6 MB
WebSite:

Tracklist
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01. The Crickets; Rodney Crowell - That'll Be The Day
02. The Crickets; Phil Everly; Jason Everly - Rave On
03. The Crickets; Tonio K.; Peter Case - Not Fade Away (with Peter Case)
04. The Crickets; Eric Clapton - Someone, Someone
05. The Crickets - The Real Buddy Holly Story
06. The Crickets; JD Souther - Everyday
07. The Crickets - Love You More Than I Can Say
08. The Crickets; Nanci Griffith - Heartbeat
09. The Crickets; Bobby Vee - Blue Days, Black Nights
10. The Crickets; Albert Lee - Learning The Game
11. The Crickets; Waylon Jennings - Well...All Right
12. The Crickets; Graham Nash - Think It Over
13. The Crickets; John Prine - Oh Boy!
14. The Crickets; Vince Neil - I Fought The Law
15. The Crickets; Johnny Rivers - Love's Made A Fool Of You

The Crickets & Their Buddies is an incredibly intriguing album, both because it features the original members of a storied group that has been around for fifty years (J.L. Allison, Sonny Curtis and Joe B. Maudlin were all original Crickets, along with Buddy Holly, of course) playing on their classic songs (some of which are post-Buddy), and because of the eclectic range of artists -- from Bobby Vee to Mötley Crüe's Vince Neil -- who sit in on guest vocals. Most of it works surprisingly well, although Neil's version of "I Fought the Law," written by Sonny Curtis, sounds more cartoonish than defiant, and Eric Clapton's rendition of a post-Buddy song, "Someone Someone," seems a bit tentative. Among the cuts that do work here are the version of "Rave On" sung by Phil Everly and his son, Jason Everly, and Waylon Jennings' blue collar take on "Well...Alright" (this was the last studio recording Jennings did before his death, meaning he began and ended his career with the Crickets). A clear highlight is "The Real Buddy Holly Story," written and sung by Sonny Curtis, which attempts to set the record straight on Holly's career, which was severely distorted in the biopic that starred Gary Busey. Less we forget, Holly and the Crickets started as a kick-ass country band, fiddles and all, and while Holly was clearly a genius songwriter, Curtis was no slouch, either. Also featuring songs sung by Rodney Crowell, Nanci Griffith, Graham Nash , Johnny Rivers and John Prine, The Crickets & Their Buddies is made up of way more hits than misses.


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