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Chronicle, Vol. 2: Twenty Great CCR Classics (Remastered)

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Download links and information about Chronicle, Vol. 2: Twenty Great CCR Classics (Remastered) by Creedence Clearwater Revival. This album was released in 1976 and it belongs to Rock genres. It contains 20 tracks with total duration of 01:14:17 minutes.

Artist: Creedence Clearwater Revival
Release date: 1976
Genre: Rock
Tracks: 20
Duration: 01:14:17
Buy on iTunes $11.99

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Walk On the Water 4:39
2. Susie Q, Pt. 2 4:00
3. Born On the Bayou 5:15
4. Good Golly Miss Molly 2:41
5. Tombstone Shadow 3:37
6. Wrote a Song for Everyone 4:54
7. The Night Time Is the Right Time 3:07
8. Cotton Fields 2:55
9. It Came Out of the Sky 2:54
10. Don't Look Now 2:10
11. The Midnight Special 4:12
12. Before You Accuse Me 3:26
13. My Baby Left Me 2:18
14. Pagan Baby 6:23
15. (Wish I Could) Hideaway 3:47
16. It's Just a Thought 3:55
17. Molina 2:42
18. Born to Move 5:41
19. Lookin' for a Reason 3:27
20. Hello Mary Lou 2:14

Details

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Where Chronicle Vol. 1 wields CCR’s original 19 hits, Vol. 2 cements their staying power with an excellent selection of hit- worthy album cuts. Why “Born On the Bayou” wasn’t initially chosen as a single (it was the B-Side to “Proud Mary”) remains a mystery. The song’s swampy twang is immediately fetching, with that opening guitar-picked hook, the mellow voodoo groove, and one of John Fogerty’s best vocal performances — not to mention, it convinced everyone that four guys from the Oakland suburbs of El Cerrito came from the gator-infested wetlands of Louisiana. And aside from the Little Richard staple, you won’t find a more rocking version of John Marascalo and Bumps Blackwell’s “Good Golly Miss Molly” than the one here. CCR’s gospel-rock take on the old traditional folk song “The Midnight Special” is so good that it inspired a great television musical variety show by the same name in 1973. ” If Vol.1 turned you on to CCR, the tastefully remastered Vol.2 will turn you into the kind of fan that looks for other epic CCR album gems like the strangely absent “Keep On Chooglin’.”