The Blue Ridge Rangers
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Average customer review:Track Listing
- Blue Ridge Mountain Blues
- Somewhere Listening (For My Name)
- You're the Reason
- Jambalaya (On the Bayou)
- She Thinks I Still Care
- California Blues [Blue Yodel No. 4]
- Workin' on a Building
- Please Help Me, I'm Falling
- Have Thine Own Way, Lord
- I Ain't Never
- Hearts of Stone
- Today I Started Loving You Again
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #5509 in Music
- Released on: 2006-03-24
- Number of discs: 1
- Format: Import
- Dimensions: .20 pounds
Customer Reviews
The musical roots of John Fogerty.
Creedence Cearwater Revival, one of the most original groups of the late 60's and early 70's were in truth the showcase for the Swamp-Rock sound of John Fogerty. The Blue Ridge Rangers album is John's homage to the sounds that he grew up with. It is also an explanation of where his Swamp-Rock sound formed. John uses his rich, warm vocals to interperet the music of Hank Williams, Jimmie Rodgers, Merle Haggard and others. Add to that a couple of traditional songs and you have an album to lock yourself away with. It's so good, it must be sinful.
Traditional country from ex-CCR leader
Country music's relationship with pop and rock music has been an uneasy one ever since the dawn of rock'n'roll, itself a mix of R+B and country music. During the sixties, several major pop singers had major hits with pop covers of country songs, Tom Jones and Ray Charles among them. Later, we saw the rise of another hybrid music - country-rock, of which the Eagles were the most successful (though as their music evolved, the country element disappeared). The Nitty Gritty Dirt Band, another country-rock group, surprised everybody by recording a bluegrass album (Will the circle be unbroken), that it now regarded as a classic and rightly so. Meanwhile, John Fogerty, former leader and songwriter of Creedence Clearwater Revival, chose to record an album of traditional country songs, mainly comprising sons that have been frequently covered by country singers. This is that album.
You will probably recognize some of these songs via the original or other cover versions. Of course, I expect that everybody is familiar with Jambalaya, a song that has been recorded by countless singers in several genres of music. John's version made the top twenty in the American singles charts. In Britain, Jambalaya is generally associated with the Carpenters who had a big UK hit with it. Their recording was never released as a single in the USA, presumably because John Fogerty's hit was too recent.
Apart from Jambalaya, country music fans will recognize She thinks I still care (George Jones), California blues (Jimmie Rodgers), Please help me I'm falling (Hank Locklin), I ain't never (Webb Pierce) and Today I started loving you again (Merle Haggard), each given the John Fogerty treatment. There are also a couple of gospel classics (Working on a building, Have thine own way Lord) and some other traditional songs.
Some people may have been surprised by this album but, given that John sang about listening to Buck Owens in one of Creedence Clearwater Revival's big hits, perhaps it should not have done. This is a fascinating album.
The reason for listening
Superb but just listen to two tracks before you play the whole album: You're the Reason and Hearts of Stone. Wow just shows you that there was some great rock'n'roll cut in the 70's and they say this album is country? Well ok and so was Elvis when he sang "Baby Let's Play House"!





