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Memphis Wham!

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Download links and information about Memphis Wham! by Lonnie Mack. This album was released in 1999 and it belongs to Hip Hop/R&B, Soul, Blues, Rock, Rock & Roll genres. It contains 24 tracks with total duration of 01:05:22 minutes.

Artist: Lonnie Mack
Release date: 1999
Genre: Hip Hop/R&B, Soul, Blues, Rock, Rock & Roll
Tracks: 24
Duration: 01:05:22
Buy on iTunes $9.99
Buy on Amazon $15.28

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Memphis 2:33
2. Where There's a Will (There's a Way) 4:11
3. Wham! 2:12
4. I'll Keep You Happy 2:33
5. The Bounce 2:07
6. Baby, What's Wrong 3:50
7. Down And Out 2:49
8. Satisfied 2:58
9. Susie Q 2:33
10. Why 4:35
11. Down In the Dumps 2:09
12. Rockin' Pneumonia And the Boogie Woogie Flu 2:21
13. Gee Baby 2:20
14. Chicken Pickin' 2:10
15. Oh, I Apologize 3:05
16. Say Something Nice To Me 3:05
17. From Me To You 2:32
18. Turn On Your Love Light 2:11
19. The Freeze 2:34
20. Farther On Up the Road 2:20
21. Cry, Cry, Cry 2:36
22. Save Your Money 2:43
23. Tension (Part 1) 2:29
24. Tension (Part 2) 2:26

Details

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At first glance, this might seem like nothing more than a retread of the classic The Wham of That Memphis Man, as the disc includes all 14 songs from that album. This is a quality upgrade/supplement to that record, though, adding 11 more tracks of 1963-1967 vintage from both rare singles and previously unreleased outtakes. This is hardly filler that only collectors will care about; it's good stuff, sometimes ace stuff, that's almost all on the same level of The Wham. "Oh, I Apologize," a cover of an obscure Barrett Strong track, is white soul singing on par with Mack's best vocal efforts, while "Cry, Cry, Cry" is a great instrumental version of a Bobby "Blue" Bland number; both of these cuts, unbelievably, were not released prior to this CD. The singles "Say Something Nice to Me" and "Save Your Money" (from 1964 and 1967) are more filet of white soul, and "Tension Pts. 1 & 2" (a 1966 single) another cool roadhouse instrumental. Some of the rare add-ons are less essential than others (like the instrumental reading of the Beatles' "From Me to You"), but taken together it's certainly the best Mack collection, enhanced by Bill Millar's informative liner notes. By the way, in one of those inexplicable occurrences bound to cause collectors to run around in circles, the song titled "Farther on Down the Road" on The Wham of That Memphis Man recording is here titled "Farther on up the Road" and listed as previously unreleased, although in fact it seems to be the same track as the one given a different title on the LP. (To cause further confusion, Mack definitely sings the lyric "Farther on up the road, " not "Farther on down the road, " as it was originally titled.)