Creedence Country

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Creedence Country album cover
Album Information
EDITOR'S PICK

Total Tracks: 15   Total Length: 49:02

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CCR is Country

vleedavis

When I listened to the tunes on this Disk, I at once recognized the Country in CCR. They are original country classic rock and forever modern. The audio is fantastic and no problems downloading this album.

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Great Album

meaneyedcat

Very cool tunes from a classic band

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One of only a few original things on this site!

enersen

Not too much original stuff on this site. Creedence & some Kinks are. Most of the other stuff is either re-recorded by the original artists in their nursing homes, or by other "artists". Someone must have been cleaning out a warehouse. I can find a better selection of original stuff in my local supermarket!

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you work it

WVMMRH

push your navel and wait for the tone

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what the heck

sunnybc_83

man i didnt want this how do you work this thing

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They Say All Music Guide

It could be argued that Creedence Clearwater Revival were the greatest American rock & roll band, and one convincing argument would be that no other of their peers had such a commanding grasp on a variety of American music and could synthesize them in such a bracingly original fashion. It’s that synthesis that makes a genre-specific compilation like Creedence Country so difficult to pull off — it’s hard to single out one strand from that mix, particularly since CCR didn’t so much perform country as absorb its influence. In fact, only a handful of songs could be appropriately classified as “country” — the slow-crawling opener “Lookin’ for a Reason,” the peerless lament “Lodi,” the similarly heartbroken “Wrote a Song for Everyone,” maybe the bouncy “Lookin’ Out My Back Door,” which can sound like the streets of Bakersfield, and perhaps their driving cover of Leadbelly’s “Cotton Fields,” which winds up as rock & roll. The rest of it is either flat-out rockabilly, whether it’s a cover of “My Baby Left Me” or John Fogerty’s “Don’t Look Now,” or flat-out rock & roll like “Cross-Tie Walker” — and it’s hard to believe that anybody could call the elongated, menacing jam of “Ramble Tamble” country. That said, it’s a thoroughly enjoyable listen, since nearly all the music is excellent, but it doesn’t really present any insight into the band — it’s just a good mixtape. – Stephen Thomas Erlewine

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