Create account Log in

Standing On The Shoulders Of Giants

[Edit]

Download links and information about Standing On The Shoulders Of Giants by Bill Lloyd. This album was released in 1999 and it belongs to Rock, Hard Rock, Heavy Metal, Pop, Alternative genres. It contains 14 tracks with total duration of 56:38 minutes.

Artist: Bill Lloyd
Release date: 1999
Genre: Rock, Hard Rock, Heavy Metal, Pop, Alternative
Tracks: 14
Duration: 56:38
Buy on iTunes $9.99
Buy on Amazon $8.99

Tracks

[Edit]
No. Title Length
1. Standing On The Shoulders Of Giants 3:36
2. Cool And Gone 3:47
3. Sweet Virginia 3:56
4. Dr. Roberts Second Opinion 5:08
5. Holding Back The Waterfall 4:44
6. (Who You Gonna) Run To Now 3:49
7. Complaints 1:45
8. Don’t Kid Yourself 3:08
9. This Is The Way 3:04
10. She Won’t Be Back 3:45
11. Box Of Snakes 4:42
12. So You Won’t Have To 4:00
13. Years Away From Here 3:30
14. Turn Me On Dead Man 7:44

Details

[Edit]

Bill Lloyd makes no bones about his interest in mid-'60s, Beatles-style pop/rock, especially on this, his third solo album, the title of which describes his posture exactly. If you think 1965 and 1966 were the greatest years in human history, when sainted young men with jangly guitars sang melodic three-minute songs about love over peppy beats, this is music for you. Many of the basslines and guitar solos will be familiar, and, like the album title, many of the songs specifically refer to earlier music, especially the Beatles on titles like "Dr. Roberts Second Opinion" and "Turn Me on Dead Man." (Remember the "Paul is dead" rumor?) Lloyd assembles a cast of like-minded friends for these frisky goings-on, including ex-NRBQ guitarist Al Anderson, Cindy Bullens, Marshall Crenshaw, Smithereens drummer Dennis Diken, Henry Gross, Al Kooper, Cheap Trick bassist Tom Peterson, Greg Trooper, and Poco steel guitarist Rusty Young. But he actually plays most of the instruments himself, and the guests never get in the way. There are songs here that would fit seamlessly onto Nuggets, not to mention the Beatles' Yesterday...and Today, and that's a high compliment. Of course, the music has nothing to do with the contemporary country music scene where Lloyd made his mark, or with much of contemporary pop music. But, hey, it sounds really cool, and we're not complaining.