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C.W. McCall - Wolf Creek Pass

Wolf Creek Pass
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5 out of 5.0 stars 1 Rating (1 Review)

Album Details: Wolf Creek Pass

Release Date:01/01/1975
UPC:

Track List: Wolf Creek Pass

  1. Night Rider
  2. Classified
  3. Old 30
  4. I've Trucked All Over This Land
  5. Four Wheel Drive
  1. Rocky Mountain September
  2. Old Home Filler Up and Keep on T...
  3. Sloan
  4. Glenwood Canyon
  5. Wolf Creek Pass

User Reviews: Wolf Creek Pass

  • Overall:

    Wolf Creek Pass by CW McCall

    By Edward  Oct 6, 2002

    This is an excellent album for country lover's and trucker's alike. This is one of the best albums I've heard in a long time. I really hope to to be able to replace this album. My only problem is to be able to get on COD or an address to send in the... payment. Thanks a million. Ed tanner Read more Less

Pro Reviews: Wolf Creek Pass

  • All Music Guide

    Though this album will never win any awards for depth or transcendence, it shows that C.W. McCall (aka William Fries) did have a way of investing his truck-driving songs with charm and humor. The Johnny Cash soundalike wades through ten selections that deal mostly with life on the highway, including the hits "Wolf Creek Pass" and "Old Home Filler-Up an' Keep On a-Truckin' Café." Humor is the main element in most of the songs, and one can almost see McCall smiling his way through these tunes. ("Eight stools and a promise" is one way that he describes the "Old Home Filler-Up an' Keep On a-Truckin' Café.") In "Sloan," a song about a dog, McCall laments that "he didn't have a license or shots or nuthin'/I thought he was a goner." Female backup singers on several cuts sound like they were rounded up from a local coffee shop, but they add an element of kitsch to the recordings, whether intended or not. One seeming exception to the tongue-in-cheek humor of most of the cuts is the last song, "...Glenwood Canyon." Lamenting the loss of natural habitat through development, it is surprisingly affecting and foreshadowed McCall's later political involvement in environmental issues. - Michael Ofjord, All Music Guide Read more Less

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Biography

C.W. McCall

Essentially a character created by advertising executive William Fries, C.W. McCall was the instrumental figure behind the truck-driving craze that swept America in the mid-'70s. Fries was born November 15, 1928, in Audubon, IA, and while he displayed musical promise as a child, he was more interested in graphic design. While attending the University of Iowa, Fries stud... Read more