Bill Wyman's Rhythm Kings - Double Bill (2001) Lossless
Artist: Bill Wyman's Rhythm Kings
Title: Double Bill
Year Of Release: 2001
Label: Repertoire REP 5024
Genre: Blues-Rock, Rhythm & Blues
Quality: FLAC (image+.cue,log,scans)
Total Time: 47:57+42:12
Total Size: 709 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:Title: Double Bill
Year Of Release: 2001
Label: Repertoire REP 5024
Genre: Blues-Rock, Rhythm & Blues
Quality: FLAC (image+.cue,log,scans)
Total Time: 47:57+42:12
Total Size: 709 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
Disc 1
01. Long Walk To DC [0:04:03.17]
02. Hot Foot Blues [0:05:14.29]
03. Hit That Jive Jack [0:03:34.25]
04. Love Letters [0:03:35.30]
05. Love's Down The Drain [0:05:19.60]
06. I Can't Dance [0:04:22.22]
07. Medley: Snap Your Fingers - What A Friend We Have In Jesus [0:03:14.41]
08. Get In The Kitchen [0:02:22.08]
09. Boogie Woogie All Night Long [0:03:48.98]
10. Medley: Do You Or Don't You - I Wanna Know [0:03:31.65]
11. Trust In Me [0:04:10.58]
12. Turn On Your Lovelight [0:04:40.80]
Disc 2
01. The Joint Is Jumping [0:03:03.46]
02. Brownskin Girl [0:03:57.93]
03. Tired & Sleepy [0:03:21.73]
04. Lonely Blue Boy [0:03:27.46]
05. Bye Bye Blues [0:03:19.40]
06. Where's The Money [0:03:48.85]
07. Jellyroll Fool [0:03:21.61]
08. Jealous Girl [0:03:28.37]
09. My Handy Man [0:03:51.48]
10. Rollin' & Stumblin' [0:03:46.90]
11. Keep On Truckin' [0:03:28.05]
12. Breakin' Up The House [0:03:17.29]
The Former Rolling Stones Bassist Returns with Six Wyman Penned Songs Along with a Selection of Classic Tracks from the 20's and 30's. The Album features a Star-studded Line Up Including (Ex-beatle ) George Harrison, Albert Lee, Gary Brooker (Ex-procol Harum), Martin Taylor, Ray Cooper and Andy Fairweather-low and More.
On 2001's Double Bill, Bill Wyman uses two well-packed discs to prove again what he had always previously managed to make clear on a single LP: He's a monster bass player and a mediocre (at best) singer who relies on his many famous friends to help him out. The friends this time range from George Harrison (who adds slide guitar to the somnambulant blues "Love Letters") to vocal jazz legend Keely Smith, tragically underused on too few backing vocal parts. The 24 tracks on Double Bill sound like the work of a perfectly competent band working at some nondescript House of Blues-type pseudo-juke joint, the kind of place where the music is as inauthentic and geared toward inoffensiveness as the food. Double Bill isn't really a bad album -- it's frankly too boring for that -- but it's frustrating when one considers what the principals could be doing with themselves.
On 2001's Double Bill, Bill Wyman uses two well-packed discs to prove again what he had always previously managed to make clear on a single LP: He's a monster bass player and a mediocre (at best) singer who relies on his many famous friends to help him out. The friends this time range from George Harrison (who adds slide guitar to the somnambulant blues "Love Letters") to vocal jazz legend Keely Smith, tragically underused on too few backing vocal parts. The 24 tracks on Double Bill sound like the work of a perfectly competent band working at some nondescript House of Blues-type pseudo-juke joint, the kind of place where the music is as inauthentic and geared toward inoffensiveness as the food. Double Bill isn't really a bad album -- it's frankly too boring for that -- but it's frustrating when one considers what the principals could be doing with themselves.