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Mad Dog Days

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Download links and information about Mad Dog Days by John Martyn. This album was released in 2004 and it belongs to Rock, Folk Rock, World Music, Songwriter/Lyricist, Psychedelic, Contemporary Folk genres. It contains 25 tracks with total duration of 02:15:21 minutes.

Artist: John Martyn
Release date: 2004
Genre: Rock, Folk Rock, World Music, Songwriter/Lyricist, Psychedelic, Contemporary Folk
Tracks: 25
Duration: 02:15:21
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Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Big Muff 8:22
2. Look At That Girl 4:30
3. Fine Lines 4:17
4. Lookin' On 10:32
5. Head And Heart 3:56
6. Johnny Too Bad 6:41
7. The Moment 3:41
8. Bless The Weather 4:36
9. Mad Dog Days 5:31
10. Pascanel 4:24
11. Ways To Cry 4:58
12. Couldn't Love You More 5:12
13. Never Let Me Go 4:12
14. One Day Without You 4:43
15. Outside In 18:18
16. I'd Rather Be The Devil 8:02
17. Man In The Station 3:22
18. My Baby Girl 2:38
19. Make No Mistake 4:01
20. Over The Hill 3:07
21. Easy Blues 2:49
22. Dealer 3:56
23. You Can Discover 3:51
24. Spencer The Rover 3:58
25. Black Man At Your Shoulder 5:44

Details

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A three-disc box set (two CDs and a DVD), Mad Dog Days is a spotty, seemingly random compilation of live and studio recordings. A rehash of John Martyn's late-'70s and '80s live recordings previously released by the Voiceprint and Artful labels, larded with four studio tracks from 1993's No Little Boy (itself a collection of re-recordings of older material with guest spots from famous fans Phil Collins and David Gilmour), there is no rare material here for the avid collector, and newcomers would not be well served by this mishmash of minor live tracks and remakes that includes none of the singer/songwriter's most essential work. However, just to make the package attractive for fans, the DVD is an utterly charming July 2003 interview (recorded in a pub, appropriately enough) in which Martyn, in failing health but fine spirits, looks over his career with quiet pride and good humor. This hourlong disc is almost worth the budget-line price of the set by itself, which is good, because the CDs themselves don't do Martyn many favors.