Joe Brown - Live in Liverpool (2017)

  • 16 Mar, 12:58
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Artist:
Title: Live in Liverpool
Year Of Release: 2017
Label: Nyquest Productions
Genre: Pop Rock, Folk
Quality: FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 2:10:32
Total Size: 832 MB
WebSite:

Tracklist:

1. Welcome and Band Introduction (Live) (03:25)
2. Darling Corrie (Live) (03:19)
3. Cloverleaf Rag (Live) (03:19)
4. Ballad of John Hurt (Live) (04:22)
5. Ain't No Pleasing You (Live) (05:09)
6. Call Me The Breeze (Live) (04:11)
7. Mystery Train (Live) (04:17)
8. Leave The Light On (Live) (03:57)
9. Helpless (Live) (05:33)
10. In The Jail House Now (Live) (04:36)
11. I Like You (Live) (04:59)
12. That's What Love Will Do (Live) (03:42)
13. Tickle My Heart (Live) (02:58)
14. Welcome Back (Joe Brown) (Live) (01:09)
15. Darktown Strutters Ball (Live) (03:02)
16. Malt 'N' Barley Blues (Live) (03:55)
17. Picture of You (Live) (03:09)
18. I Still Haven't Found What I'm Looking For (Live) (04:40)
19. Long Forgotten Dream (Live) (03:17)
20. Black Betty (Live) (03:31)
21. That's The Way It Goes (Live) (04:03)
22. Killing the Blues (Live) (03:41)
23. Well, Well, Well (Live) (03:40)
24. You're My Wildest Dream (Live) (04:46)
25. Souvenir D'Alvito (Live) (02:51)
26. Sea of Heartbreak (Live) (03:54)
27. Hava Nagila (Live) (03:38)
28. Shine (Live) (03:54)
29. All Shook Up (Live) (03:22)
30. Let Your Loss Be Your Lesson (Live) (05:21)
31. Henry VIII (Live) (02:42)
32. Ain't Too Old (Live) (07:54)
33. I'll See You In My Dreams (Live) (04:04)

With a career that began in the 1970s and was still going strong in the opening decades of the 21st century, Joe Brown has cut a unique swath across British rock & roll. The east London-raised artist is most well-known for his bittersweet U.K. hit "A Picture of You," from 1962, the same year in which the Beatles opened for him on a string of dates. However, Brown's prolific run of early hits came to an end with the rise of Merseybeat, after which he increasingly pursued acting roles and became a broader entertainer. The '70s saw him unveil a new act, Brown's Home Brew, cementing his reputation as a musician's musician. Upon moving to Henley-on-Thames early the following decade, he reinforced his close friendship with his new neighbor George Harrison when the pair bonded over the ukulele. Following Harrison's death in 2001, Brown closed the Concert for George tribute show at the Royal Albert Hall (at the request of Harrison's wife Olivia), with a moving solo uke rendition of "I'll See You in My Dreams." His performance is reputed to have been the catalyst for renewed public interest in the instrument.



  • pyxlax
  •  09:34
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Thank you so very much!!