Jerry Lee Lewis - Southern Roots [New CD]

Artist: Jerry Lee Lewis

Title: Southern Roots

Condition:

Format: CD

Release Date: 2013

Label: Bear Family Germany

UPC: 5397102173127

Genre: Oldies

Album Tracks

DISC 1:
1. Meat Man
2. When a Man Loves a Woman
3. Hold on I'm Coming
4. Just a Little Bit
5. Born to Be a Loser
6. Haunted House
7. Blueberry Hill
8. The Revolutionary Man
9. Big Blue Diamonds
10. That Old Bourbon Street Church
11. Silver Threads Among the Gold
12. Hold on I'm Coming [Fast Version] [Version]
13. Take Your Time
14. All Over Hell and Half of Georgia
15. I Sure Miss Those Good Old Times
16. Raining in My Heart
17. Honey Hush
18. Cry
19. Margie

DISC 2:
1. Cry [Alternative 1] [Version]
2. Studio Chatter, Pt. 1
3. Cry [Alternative 2] [Version]
4. Studio Chatter, Pt. 2
5. Margie [Alternative 1] [Version]
6. Margie [Alternative 2] [Version]
7. Studio Chatter, Pt. 3
8. Silver Threads Among the Gold [Alternative 1] [Version]
9. Silver Threads Among the Gold [Alternative 2] [Version]
10. Born to Be a Loser
11. Studio Chatter, Pt. 4
12. When a Man Loves a Woman [Alternative 1] [Version]
13. Studio Chatter, Pt. 5
14. When a Man Loves a Woman [Alternative 2] [Version]
15. Meat Man [Vocal/Piano Mix]
16. Raining in My Heart [Vocal/Piano Mix]
17. Studio Chatter, Pt. 6: Creedence & Cajuns
18. I Sure Do Miss Those Good Old Times [Alternative 1] [Version]
19. I Sure Do Miss Those Good Old Times [Alternative 2] [Version]
20. Studio Chatter, Pt. 8: Polk Salad Annie

The legendary 1974 sessions form the Trans Maximus Studios in Memphis, Tennessee featuring Jerry Lee Lewis - voc/piano, backed by Stax studio catts and members of the Blues Brothers band, and Booker T. & The MGs (Steve Cropper - guitar, Donald 'Duck' Dunn - bass, Al Jackson Jr. - drums), Carl Perkins - guitar, Tony Joe White - guitar, The Memphis Horns, a. m. o. At long last here are the original session tapes that produced Jerry Lee Lewis' 1974 'Southern Roots' LP. Produced by Huey Meaux, a fellow Louisiana wildman, the final results reveal what happens when two fiery, free-spirited forces lock horns in the studio Meaux had just gotten out of prison and had a reputation you wouldn't want in your family tree. Separately, Meaux and Lewis each spelled trouble in a big way and could be impossible to work with. Together? God knows what would happen. The results could be an utter disaster or a stroke of genius. As Meaux later observed, 'I knew Jerry and I would fight, but in the end we'd come out with the record. We fought, but we delivered.' For three days in September, 1973 Jerry Lee Lewis and Huey Meaux went at it, and each other. Listen as Jerry Lee is turned loose in the studio by a producer who did try to rein in Jerry's ego. In fact, Meaux did everything he could to feed it. That ego is nowhere more evident than on Jerry's version of the Percy Sledge 1966 hit, When A Man Loves A Woman, which Jerry turns into a sermon on war between the sexes.

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