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Sister Rosetta Tharpe - Gospel Train (Expanded Edition) (2018)

Sister Rosetta Tharpe - Gospel Train (Expanded Edition) (2018)
  • Title: Gospel Train (Expanded Edition)
  • Year Of Release: 1956/2018
  • Label: Verve Records
  • Genre: Soul, Blues, Gospel
  • Quality: 320 kbps | FLAC (tracks)
  • Total Time: 00:38:47
  • Total Size: 90 mb | 218 mb
  • WebSite:
Tracklist:

01. Don't Take Everybody To Be Your Friend
02. Jonah feat. The Sammy Price Trio
03. Jesus Is Here Today
04. My Journey To The Sky
05. Down By The Riverside feat. The Sammy Price Trio
06. Up Above My Head I Hear Music In The Air feat. The Sammy Price Trio
07. Strange Things Happen Everyday feat. The Sammy Price Trio
08. How Far From God
09. This Train
10. Were You There When They Crucified My Lord?
11. Didn't It Rain feat. The Sammy Price Trio
12. When I Move To The Sky
13. I Can Hear The Angels
14. Father Prepare Me

The album was released in 1956 and consists of twelve flawless tracks. The album’s first and last songs, “Jericho” and “99 ½ Won’t Do,” are traditional tunes, and everything else, with the exception of Hanighen’s “Two Little Fishes, Five Loaves of Bread,” was written by Tharpe.

The woman is a powerhouse of talent. Her vocals seem to anticipate artists like Aretha Franklin and Billie Holiday, and sadly, her guitar playing ability seems to always be underappreciated. She is the only woman that I’ve seen play an electric guitar back in the 40s and 50s. She probably wasn’t the only one, but she was the most famous and certainly the most talented.

Tharpe, like many great artists of her time, combined jazz, swing, and blues together. My first introduction to Tharpe’s music was a video of her singing “Up Above My Head There’s Music in the Air.” A piano plays in the background while Tharpe effortlessly belts the lyrics and puts any other blues guitar players to shame. An enormous choir stands behind her and only claps – they aren’t needed for anything else.

Tharpe is part of a huge collection of artists that played jazz and blues, artists that sang gospel, and artists that, as a woman and an African American, went against the grain. But, she’s the only one that pretty much did it all.

Gospel Train is great because it doesn’t attempt to alter Tharpe or polish her into a gospel gem. The songs are raw representations of musical conviction, and I think that it is impossible to listen to the album without feeling something stir inside.


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  • User offline
  • bundy
  •  wrote in 15:23
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    • 1
NONE of the songs in this description is on whatever release this is.. this might be Rosetta Tharp but this is NOT Gospel Train.

THIS is:

https://www.allmusic.com/album/gospel-train-mw0000222259
  • Reply to bundy
  •  wrote in 17:42
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    • 0
Quote: bundy
NONE of the songs in this description is on whatever release this is.. this might be Rosetta Tharp but this is NOT Gospel Train.

THIS is:

https://www.allmusic.com/album/gospel-train-mw0000222259


Also, 3 tracks are "introduced" by some announcements/commercials, I think in Dutch. So this is a recording from a radio feature? Who knows, but as 'bundy' said, it is NOT what it claims to be
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  • qwes2000
  •  wrote in 01:33
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    • 0
Thanks M8!!
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  • mufty77
  •  wrote in 02:11
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    • 0
Many thanks for lossless.
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  • lapiedra52
  •  wrote in 20:24
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    • 2
The worst are not the commercials that can be edited and cut, but these 3 tracks (2, 8 and 14)end abruptely before the real end and that has no solution..... People.....

The album is a 1958 Decca release, different of the Mercury of the same title refered in the post comments. See on Discogs.