• logo

Gene Vincent - Gene Vincent Rocks! And the Blue Caps Roll (Reissue) (1999)

Gene Vincent - Gene Vincent Rocks! And the Blue Caps Roll (Reissue) (1999)

BAND/ARTIST: Gene Vincent

  • Title: Gene Vincent Rocks! And the Blue Caps Roll
  • Year Of Release: 1999
  • Label: Vivid Sound Corporation / Magic Records
  • Genre: Rock & Roll, Rockabilly
  • Quality: Mp3 320 / Flac (image, .cue, log)
  • Total Time: 51:41
  • Total Size: 130/231 Mb (scans)
  • WebSite:
Gene Vincent - Gene Vincent Rocks! And the Blue Caps Roll (Reissue) (1999)


Tracklist:

01. Brand New Beat
02. By the Light Of The Silvery Moon
03. You'll Never Walk Alone
04. Frankie And Johnnie
05. In My Dreams
06. Flea Brain
07. Rollin' Danny
08. You Belong To Me
09. Your Cheatin' Heart
10. Time Will Bring You Everything
11. Should I Ever Love Again
12. It's No Lie
13. Wear My Ring (Version 5)
14. Lotta Lovin'
15. Dance To The Bop
16. I Got It
17. I Got A Baby
18. Walkin' Home From School (Version 15)
19. Baby Blue (Version 7)
20. True To You (Version 12)
21. Yes I Love You Baby
22. Right Now

By the time of the December 1957 sessions that made up this, his third album, Gene Vincent's band had changed radically from its original lineup, with drummer Dickie Harrell the only original member (and even he wasn't long for the lineup). Johnny Meeks was the lead guitarist, and while he was a good player, he wasn't the kind of wildly inventive talent that Cliff Gallup had been; Meeks also had a cleaner sound, with none of the dark, almost dirty, blues-style licks that Gallup traded in. New rhythm guitarist Max Lipscomb (who later changed his professional name to Scotty McKay) doubled on piano, the first time that instrument was heard on a Gene Vincent record; Bobby Jones played bass, and former rhythm guitarist Paul Peek shifted to backing vocals alongside Tommy Facenda (collectively the two came to be known as the Clapper Boys). The changes resulted in a somewhat less frantic sound. The music was beautifully played and exciting, but a little bit tamer overall; the occasional wild shouts that punctuated the old band's playing were absent, and Vincent was indulging increasingly in softer pop and ballad material, which worked but also served to tone down the impact of the album. The music was still lively, but much more a creation of the studio than an offshoot of intense, raucous stage performances.


As a ISRA.CLOUD's PREMIUM member you will have the following benefits:
  • Unlimited high speed downloads
  • Download directly without waiting time
  • Unlimited parallel downloads
  • Support for download accelerators
  • No advertising
  • Resume broken downloads