Marshall Chapman - It's About Time... (Recorded Live at the Tennessee State Prison for Women) (1995)
Artist: Marshall Chapman
Title: It's About Time... (Recorded Live at the Tennessee State Prison for Women)
Year Of Release: 1995
Label: Rhino Records
Genre: Folk Rock, Americans
Quality: Mp3 320 / Flac (tracks)
Total Time: 01:03:38
Total Size: 154/387 Mb
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:Title: It's About Time... (Recorded Live at the Tennessee State Prison for Women)
Year Of Release: 1995
Label: Rhino Records
Genre: Folk Rock, Americans
Quality: Mp3 320 / Flac (tracks)
Total Time: 01:03:38
Total Size: 154/387 Mb
WebSite: Album Preview
01. Intro (Live)
02. Jailhouse Rock (Live)
03. Don't Want Nothing (If I Can't Have You) [Live]
04. Real Smart Man (Live)
05. Happy Childhood (Live)
06. Bad Debt (Live)
07. Goodbye Forever (Live)
08. Alabama Bad (Live)
09. Bizzy Bizzy Bizzy (Live)
10. Late Date with the Blues (Live)
11. Booze in Your Blood (Live)
12. Beyond My Wildest Dreams (Live)
13. Girl in a Bubble (Live)
14. Betty's Bein' Bad (Live)
15. Goodbye Little Rock and Roller (Live)
"This live album opens with the sound of the prison's electric gates slamming open for Marshall Chapman and her band and then slamming shut behind them. The next thing we know, they're on stage, banging out a wild and woolly version of the most appropriate song for the occasion -- "Jailhouse Rock." They follow it up with "Don't Want Nothing (If I Can't Have You)," which proves Chapman can write her own Elvis songs. The female prisoners respond warmly from the start, but the sparks don't really fly until Chapman jumps into "Bad Debt," her rockabilly revenge on all the freeloading boyfriends she ever had. When she describes them "stretched out on my couch, drinking all my beer, I'm paying all the bills," cheers of recognition go up from the crowd. Except for "Jailhouse Rock," Chapman wrote every song on the album. It's hard to imagine these inmates ever getting a more spirited performance than they did on October 29, 1993, at the Tennessee State Prison for Women." -- Geoffrey Himes