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Sing and Play the Hits of Nashville

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Download links and information about Sing and Play the Hits of Nashville by Peter & Gordon. This album was released in 1966 and it belongs to Rock, Pop genres. It contains 11 tracks with total duration of 27:05 minutes.

Artist: Peter & Gordon
Release date: 1966
Genre: Rock, Pop
Tracks: 11
Duration: 27:05
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Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. I've Got a Tiger by the Tail 2:10
2. Sweet Dreams 2:36
3. Before You Go 2:09
4. Please Help Me I'm Falling 2:28
5. I'm so Lonesome I Could Cry 2:53
6. The Race Is On 2:08
7. My Heart Skips a Beat 2:10
8. Lonely Street 2:21
9. Send Me the Pillow You Dream On 2:43
10. I Forget More Than You'll Ever Know 2:51
11. Memphis 2:36

Details

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Country-rock is usually thought of as a style that began in the late '60s, when giants such as the Byrds and Bob Dylan devoted much of their LP releases of the time to country material. However, there are numerous far less heralded instances of established rock stars playing country music prior to that era, sometimes over the course of an entire album. Peter & Gordon's 1966 LP Sing & Play the Hits of Nashville is one such example, finding the British Invasion duo devoting more or less an entire record to covers of country songs by the likes of Buck Owens, Hank Locklin, and Hank Williams. The pair's affection for country music was genuine, even if some of it might have been absorbed indirectly through white rock acts who were heavily country-influenced, such as one of the groups that served as their prime inspirations, the Everly Brothers. Still, like some other overlooked pre-late-'60s LPs of rock acts doing country material, Sing & Play the Hits of Nashville doesn't add up to much more than a footnote, as Peter & Gordon's forte was British Invasion pop/rock, not country music. It's a pleasantly competent affair that does use Nashville country-like touches in the arrangements such as steel guitar and barroom piano, though "Please Help Me, I'm Falling" has somewhat out of place bombastic orchestration, and the final track steers them back into rock & roll territory with a cover of Chuck Berry's "Memphis." In all, it sounds kind of like Nashville country as filtered through the Everly Brothers, without the high points of either the Everlys or the Nashville country genre as a whole. It didn't start trends or launch a new direction for the duo either, missing the charts entirely.