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Bird Doggin'

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Download links and information about Bird Doggin' by Gene Vincent. This album was released in 1994 and it belongs to Hip Hop/R&B, Soul, Rock, Folk Rock, Rock & Roll, Songwriter/Lyricist, Psychedelic genres. It contains 19 tracks with total duration of 46:15 minutes.

Artist: Gene Vincent
Release date: 1994
Genre: Hip Hop/R&B, Soul, Rock, Folk Rock, Rock & Roll, Songwriter/Lyricist, Psychedelic
Tracks: 19
Duration: 46:15
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Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Be Bop a Lula 2:36
2. Ain't That Too Much 2:56
3. Whole Lotta Shakin' 2:47
4. Baby Blue 2:47
5. Got My Eyes On You 1:55
6. Hi Lilli Hi Low 2:05
7. Hurtin' for You Baby 2:28
8. I'm a Lonesome Fugitive 2:56
9. Story of the Rockers 3:11
10. Poor Man's Prison 2:33
11. Bird Doggin' 2:50
12. Love Is a Bird 2:25
13. Pickin' Poppies 2:13
14. Born to Be a Rolling Stone 2:14
15. Pistol Packin' Mama 1:59
16. Lonely Street 2:10
17. Rocky Road Blues 2:18
18. Say Mama 1:54
19. The Day the World Turned Blue 1:58

Details

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Faced with a career that was going nowhere fast on a treadmill of gigs, booze and oldies, Gene Vincent re-grouped in 1966 and with the help of an all-star team of Southern California studio whizzes, recorded a batch of songs that stand out as some of his best work. Challenge Records assembled some top-notch session cats like Glen Campbell, Al Casey, Jim Seals, Dash Crofts and David Gates, rounded up some good songs, and let Gene loose. The songs aren't rockabilly, though, not even a little. Instead they are solid mid-'60s fare with a folk-rock-meets-garage sound. He is in fine voice throughout, sounding tough and ready on hard rockers like "Bird Doggin'," "Ain't That Too Much" and "Words and Music," sensitive on sweet ballads like "Hi-Lili, Hi-Lo," and heartbroken and blue on desperate songs like "Hurtin' for You Baby" and "Am I That Easy to Forget." He shows off his country side on a rock-solid cover of Merle Haggard's "I'm a Lonesome Fugitive," gets loose and swinging on a boppy "Poor Man's Prison," and on what may be the album's best song, the chiming folk-rocker "Love Is a Bird," which sounds very much like Gene Clark. In fact at times the record (with some 12-string guitar added) sounds like the Byrds, but mostly the results are not too far from what the Everly Brothers were doing around the same time. Sadly, Vincent had even less commercial success than the Brothers, as his Challenge singles sank without a trace and were never collected as an album in the States. In 1994 Fat Boy Records took ten of the Challenge masters, slapped an early photo of Gene on the cover and called it Bird Doggin'. While the ten tracks selected make for some very good listening, the collection is made obsolete by 1994's Ain't That Too Much!: The Complete Challenge Sessions on Sundazed, which has all the tracks Vincent recorded for Challenge plus great liner notes and a handful of outtakes.