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George Thorogood & The Destroyers - The Hard Stuff (2006)

George Thorogood & The Destroyers - The Hard Stuff (2006)
  • Title: The Hard Stuff
  • Year Of Release: 2006
  • Label: earMUSIC Classics
  • Genre: Blues Rock
  • Quality: flac lossless (tracks)
  • Total Time: 00:57:12
  • Total Size: 403 mb
  • WebSite:
Tracklist

01. The Hard Stuff
02. Hello Josephine
03. Moving
04. I Got My Eyes on You
05. I Didn't Know
06. Any Town USA
07. Little Rain
08. Cool It
09. Love Doctor
10. Dynaflow Blues
11. Rock Party
12. Drifter's Escape
13. Give Me Back My Wig
14. Taking Care of Business
15. Huckle up Baby


There isn't much mystery involved with a George Thorogood record -- you know you're going to get some raunchy slide guitar, growled vocals, barroom ready rockers and loads of rough and ready blues & roll. The only real question is will Thorogood and his group deliver the real deal Thorogood of the past or a watered-down imitation. His 2006 album The Hard Stuff delivers the hard stuff in a way Thorogood hasn't for awhile. The title track serves notice right away that Thorogood's heart and soul are in all the way. It rips and hollers like classic Destroyers; Thorogood evens sounds passionate and angry for a change. The rest of the record struggles a bit to keep up but is varied and exciting enough to sound like the soundtrack to a wild night at the local old-timers bar. There's some New Orleans R&B (a cover of "Hello, Josephine") jumpy blues ("Moving, Love Doctor," a faithful and raucous cover of the great Hound Dog Taylor's "Give Me Back My Wig"), hard driving, generic (in a good way) rockers ("I Got My Eyes on You," "Any Town USA," "Rock Party") and a John Lee Hooker cover ("Huckle Up Baby"). All of which are pretty standard for Thorogood but the fire with which he runs through his usual paces on The Hard Stuff adds enough vigor to make it an impressive addition to the man's catalog. To his credit, there are some welcome surprises that liven things up immeasurably: the tender and sweet late night ballad ("Little Rain") which shows admirable restraint and sports a gloriously clichéd and perfect sax solo, a rollicking acoustic slide workout on Johnny Shines' "Dynaflow Blues," and most surprising of all, a jangling and reverent cover of Bob Dylan's "Drifter's Tale." While the record doesn't exactly capture the loose, rock hard feel of albums he cut in his glory days, it is no patch on them and should remind people that Thorogood is a master of good time rockin' blues.

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  • User offline
  • mufty77
  •  wrote in 19:54
    • Like
    • 1
Many thanks for lossless.
  • User offline
  • whiskers
  •  wrote in 22:16
    • Like
    • 1
Many thanks