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Walkin' In the Sun

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Download links and information about Walkin' In the Sun by Glen Campbell. This album was released in 1990 and it belongs to Country genres. It contains 11 tracks with total duration of 30:38 minutes.

Artist: Glen Campbell
Release date: 1990
Genre: Country
Tracks: 11
Duration: 30:38
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Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. She's Gone, Gone, Gone 2:49
2. You Will Not Lose 2:39
3. On a Good Night 3:25
4. If I Could Only Get My Hands On You Now 3:21
5. Walkin' In the Sun 2:31
6. The William Tell Overture (featuring The Royal Philharmonic Orchestra) 2:46
7. Woodcarver 3:23
8. Cheatin' Is 2:17
9. Tied To the Tracks 2:42
10. Somebody's Leaving 2:06
11. Jesus On Your Mind 2:39

Details

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Listening to this album, you may get the feeling of being in a time warp — it's a 1990 release, but parts of it recall Glen Campbell's bluegrass work from the outset of his recording career, nearly 30 years earlier, while other songs echo his country-pop successes of the late 1960s and early 1970s. There's at least one masterpiece here — "Jesus on Your Mind" — and a brace of near-classics, including "Tied to the Tracks" and "Cheatin' Is," and the overall recording is as good as such perennial sellers as Wichita Lineman or Galveston. Campbell and Reggie Young, Billy Joe Walker, Jr., and Pat Flynn turn in impeccable guitar work throughout, and Campbell's voice has aged well across the decades; additionally, he has help from a dozen or so other country stars on "Jesus on Your Mind," including Larry Gatlin, Ricky Skaggs, and Kathy Mattea, while Lacy J. Dalton and Steve Wariner join Campbell in duets on "Woodcarver" and "You Will Not Lose," respectively. The ballads come off well also, and display the same level of virtuosity, and "Woodcarver" is an extraordinary song, with gorgeous singing and playing; but it is the faster numbers — most notably "Walkin' in the Sun," written by Jeff Barry — that come off best here. The multiple guitar workout on the "William Tell Overture" is a lot of fun as well, and it's no surprise that it appeared as a single in its own right, complete with a very humorous promotional video featuring Campbell playing the Lone Ranger.