Details for this torrent 


Ramblin_Jack_Elliot-A_Stranger_Here-2009-ONe
Type:
Audio > Music
Files:
15
Size:
56.59 MB

Tag(s):
folk
Quality:
+0 / -0 (0)

Uploaded:
Apr 30, 2009
By:
bitsarah



RELEASE: Ramblin Jack Elliot - A Stranger Here
ARTIST : Ramblin Jack Elliot
ALBUM  : A Stranger Here
GENRE  : Folk
DATE   : 29-04-2009
ENCODER: Lame 3.97 -V2
QUALITY: VBR kbps

Track List
----------
01.Rising High Water Blues                                          [03:56]
02.Death Don't Have No Mercy                                        [06:09]
03.Rambler's Blues                                                  [05:15]
04.Soul of a Man                                                    [04:17]
05.Richland Women Blues                                             [04:26]
06.Grinnin' in Your Face                                            [03:56]
07.New Stranger Blues                                               [03:26]
08.Falling Down Blues                                               [04:53]
09.How Long Blues                                                   [04:45]
10.Please Remember Me                                               [04:03]
                                                                    -------
                                                          55,0 MB @ 45:06 min

Notes
-----
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Ramblin' Jack Elliott is one of folk music's most
enduring legends. An influence on everyone from Bob Dylan and Pete Seeger to the Rolling Stones and the Grateful Dead, Elliott used his charismatic cowboy image to bring his love of folk music to one generation after another. On A Stranger Here, Elliott takes on depression era blues songs that have a particular resonance in these turbulent times. With his world scarred voice wrapped around these dark songs of
dark days, Elliott has made his masterpiece, an album at once elegiac and defiant, that can stand beside great late career recordings by master singers like Billie Holiday and Frank Sinatra. With the fantastically sympathetic producer Joe Henry at the board, Ramblin
Jack delivers the album his legend has always
deserved, and finally proves not just that he is a great folk singer, but a great American singer.