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I've Got a Tiger By the Tail

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Download links and information about I've Got a Tiger By the Tail by Buck Owens And His Buckaroos. This album was released in 1965 and it belongs to Country genres. It contains 14 tracks with total duration of 32:17 minutes.

Artist: Buck Owens And His Buckaroos
Release date: 1965
Genre: Country
Tracks: 14
Duration: 32:17
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Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. I've Got a Tiger By the Tail 2:13
2. Trouble and Me 1:55
3. Let the Sad Times Roll On 2:15
4. Wham Bam 2:03
5. If You Fall Out of Love With Me 2:17
6. Fallin' for You 2:03
7. We're Gonna Let the Good Times Roll 2:16
8. The Band Keeps Playin' On 3:03
9. Streets of Laredo 2:57
10. Cryin' Time 2:31
11. A Maiden's Prayer 2:34
12. Memphis 2:28
13. This Ol' Heart (Live) [Bonus Track] 1:14
14. Act Naturally (Live) [Bonus Track] 2:28

Details

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Buck Owens had his share of country hits prior to the release of I've Got a Tiger by the Tail and the hit single that spawned it. But "I've Got a Tiger by the Tail" was Owens' national breakthrough, featuring everything right about his Bakersfield honky tonk sound sweated down to a 2:12 single that proved to be a irresistible piece of crossover magic to non-country fans without diluting his basic sound one iota. This 14-track CD reissue brings together the original Capitol tracks from that album (which also included the hit "Cryin' Time," later to be a crossover hit of its own when recorded by Ray Charles), along with two bonus tracks. These are live versions recorded in Bakersfield at the Civic Auditorium in October 1963 of "This Ol' Heart" and "Act Naturally," taken from the Capitol anthology album Country Music Hootenanny. The sound of Don Rich is all over this album, with his signature biting Telecaster guitar style, plus his vocalizing on "Wham Bam" (which features Owens on lead guitar) and a feature with Buck on a duet of Chuck Berry's "Memphis." Bass player Doyle Holly handles the vocal chores on "Streets of Laredo," while Don Rich's fiddle work is highlighted on the instrumental "A Maiden's Prayer." But ultimately it's Owens' show with tracks like "Trouble and Me," "We're Gonna Let the Good Times Roll," "If You Fall Out of Love With Me," "The Band Keeps Playin' On," and the ballad "Let the Sad Times Roll On" being classic examples of Owens' Bakersfield honky tonk sound at the height of its freight-train rumbling powers.