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Lonnie Donegan - Talking Guitar Blues: The Very Best of Lonnie Donegan [Castle] (CD)

Talking Guitar Blues: The Very Best of Lonnie Donegan [Castle]
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Album Details: Talking Guitar Blues: The Very Best of Lonnie Donegan [Castle]

Release Date:12/12/2000
Label:Castle [Navarre]
UPC:602923666624

Track List: Talking Guitar Blues: The Very Best of Lonnie Donegan [Castle]

Disk 1

  1. Lost John
  2. Stewball
  3. Railroad Bill
  4. Bring A Little Water, Sylvie
  5. Dead Or Alive
  6. Wabash Cannonball
  7. Nobody's Child
  8. Frankie & Johnny
  9. Don't You Rock Me Daddy-O
  10. Cumberland Gap
  11. Gamblin' Man
  12. Puttin' On The Style
  13. My Dixie Darling
  1. Jack O'Diamonds
  2. On A Monday
  3. Mule Skinner Blues
  4. The Grand Coulee Dam
  5. Sally, Don't You Grieve
  6. Betty, Betty, Betty
  7. Lonesome Traveller
  8. Light From The Lighthouse
  9. Lonnie's Skiffle Party Medley - ...
  10. Tom Dooley
  11. Does Your Chewing Gum Lose Its F...
  12. Fort Worth Jail

Disk 2

  1. Battle Of New Orleans
  2. Sal's Got A Sugar Lip
  3. Take This Hammer
  4. You Pass Me Bay
  5. San Miguel
  6. Talking Guitar Blues (UK Version)
  7. My Old Man's A Dustman
  8. I Wanna Go Home
  9. Lorelei
  10. Sorry But I'm Gonna Have To Pass
  11. Lively!
  12. Virgin Mary
  13. Have A Drink On Me
  1. Michael Row The Boat
  2. Lumbered
  3. The Comancheros
  4. The Party's Over
  5. I'll Never Fall In Love Again
  6. Pick A Bale Of Cotton
  7. This Train
  8. Noah Found Grace In The Eyes Of ...
  9. Beans In My Ears
  10. She Was T-Bone Talking Woman
  11. Farewell (Fare Thee Well)
  12. World Cup Willie

Pro Reviews: Talking Guitar Blues: The Very Best of Lonnie Donegan [Castle]

  • All Music Guide

    It might be hard to credit, but Lonnie Donegan was one of the greatest pioneers of modern British music -- and its first genuine star. He started the skiffle movement -- playing folk or blues songs on acoustic guitar, accompanied by bass and washboard -- and launched thousands of boys with guitars who'd form the original British Invasion. Interestingly, for all its billing as "The Very Best Of," Donegan's first, and most influential, hit doesn't appear here -- his cover of Leadbelly's "Rock Island Line." Instead, the collection picks up with "Lost John," his second smash, and follows his career to what was essentially the bitter end in 1965 (although he'd see a rebirth in the late '90s). He quickly established a style for most of his discs, with a slow opening and diving right in frantically, the band following bravely, and it worked most of the time, especially when he did mix it up with some slower cuts. And he did perform a huge service, exposing a generation to old blues, folk, and... country songs (like Jimmie Rodgers' "Mule Skinner Blues"), albeit sung in a fake American accent. However, coming closer to home for two novelty songs ("Does Your Chewing Gum Lose Its Flavor" and "My Old Man's a Dustman") that have remained perennial favorites. With the advent of the Beatles, Donegan's days were numbered, and his chart positions reflected that, even if his music was as good as ever, and the final hurrah of "World Cup Willie" (written for the 1966 World Cup, staged in Britain), completely failed to chart. But Donegan's significance in British music should never be forgotten -- he literally changed the course of pop forever. Now, if only they'd got that first hit on here, it would have made for a truly complete collection. - Chris Nickson, All Music Guide Read more Less

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Biography

Lonnie Donegan

To look at Lonnie Donegan today, in pictures taken 40 years ago when he was topping the British charts and hitting the top Ten in America, dressed in a suit, his hair cut short and strumming an acoustic guitar, he looks like a musical non-entity. But in 1954, before anyone (especially anybody in England) knew what rock 'n roll was, Donegan was cool, and his music was ho... Read more