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Everybody's Rockin' But Me! CD (2011)
Bobby Lord albums Bobby Lord slipped through the cracks. He was a regular on Nashville TV and he parlayed that into a recording career for Columbia, cutting a series of singles between 1956 and 1960, few of which made a real impact: "No More! No More! No More!" wound up acclaimed among rockabilly aficionados who were the only ones who ...
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Rice Records Story: Bobby Lord Vol. 1 (2011)
Bobby Lord music CDs Track Listing of songs: You And Me Against The World; Detroit City; Your Song; Heartaches By The Number; Lookin For A Cold Lonely Winter; Unchained Melody; Hawkeye; Look Of Love;
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Rice Records Story: Bobby Lord Vol. 2 (2011)
Bobby Lord discography Track Listing of songs: Got Yourself Somethin'; Good Ole Song; There Goes My Everything; Hello Wine; I've Had You; Freedom; Fall Away; Lord's Prayer;
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Rainbow Mist CD (1992)
Bobby Lord discography This 1944 session is a hallmark album in jazz, considered by many to be the very first bebop recording. Most critics site the second track, "Woody'n You." For the first time, we hear Dizzy Gillespie in full bloom (not merely a disciple of Roy Eldridge). Indeed, there is a whiff of something new emanating from this music, ...
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Jump, Georgie, Jump CD (1996)
Bobby Lord CD discography This CD features the talented but underrated saxophonist Georgie Auld (heard on tenor, alto and soprano) during three different periods. When Artie Shaw temporarily fled from success to Mexico in late 1939, Auld took over his big band and tried his best to keep it together. In Jan. and Feb. 1940, the remnants of the Shaw Orchestra ...
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Easter Bunny Meets The Zombie (2013)
Bobby Lord albums Track Listing of songs: Easter Bunny Meets The Zombie; Fire Of Love;
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Ain't I'm A Dog: 25 More Rockabilly Rave-Ups CD (2000)
Bobby Lord music CDs Rockabilly music remains one of the most primitive forms of rock & roll. From originals such as Elvis Presley and Carl Perkins at their beginnings, to more recent contenders such as Big Sandy & The Fly-Rite Boys, the Stray Cats, and the Cramps, this wild and feral music has been the let's-get-real-gone soundtrack of choice. Here Sony Legacy reaches into its vaults and comes up with some scorching sounds from rockabilly's heyday, between 1954 and 1959.
Better known figures here include Link Wray (not strictly rockabilly, although he did invent heavy-metal guitar in the'50s), the sweet and sassy brother-and-sister duo The Collins Kids, and Marty Robbins, who went on to mainstream country and pop success. It's the lesser-known performers who make this set worthwhile: the Delta blues-drenched wail of Commonwealth Jones ("Who's Been Here"), the daffy elegance of Derrell Felts ("It's a Great Big Day"), and the jiving Western swing/blues of Charlie Adams (the ribald, after-hours swaggering hillbilly-meets-uptown "Sugar Diet"). With hot guitar licks, defiant live-for-tonight attitude, and a beat that's part ...
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 Bobby Lord Songs
Popular or famous Bobby Lord music songs: Everybody's Rockin' But Me, Hawkeye, Fire of Love, Party Pooper, I'd Rather Be Blue, Too Many Miles. More music songs Beautiful Baby, Sack, What a Thrill, Why should I cry, So Doggone Lonesome, No More, No More, No More, Just Wonderful. More music songs Am I a Fool, I Know It Was You, High Voltage, Run Honey Run, Swamp Fox, Ain't Cha Ever Gonna?. More music songs I Can't Do Without You Anymore. See All Songs
 Bobby Lord songs Worked With
Coleman Hawkins, Georgie Auld
 Bobby Lord CD discography More Music Artists
Sunshone Still, Hugh EMC, Alicia Carroll
Bobby Lord Songs Page
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