It’s time to settle this God issue once and for all.
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Duration : 0:3:9
It’s time to settle this God issue once and for all.
The music is http://preview.tinyurl.com/nca2ce
http://twitter.com/ZJemptv
http://www.facebook.com/pages/ZJ/70874246213
http://myspace.com/zjemptv
Duration : 0:3:9
Q.C.T CHILLEN WIT LOUSIANA CA$H AKA MR. WALK WIT A DIP
FOLLOW Q.C.T ON HTTP://WWW.TWITTER.COM/OFFICIALQCT
HTTP://WWW.MYSPACE.COM/QCTONLINE
Duration : 0:2:16
JUST POSTED! NIGHT TIME IS THE RIGHT TIME
Recorded Live at Woodstock check out my videos for it!
This is truly a Rare Video. CCR at WOODSTOCK Scheduled for Saturday August 16, 1969 and yes folks this is the real deal. John Fogerty never wanted this footage shown because of the sound quality that morning at Woodstock. They had just played behind The Grateful Dead, Some of the audience was silent and asleep. This is a classic. Leave a comment please.
SONG LIST:
1. Born On The Bayou
2. Green River (3:06)
3. Ninety-Nine And A Half (Won’t Do) (3:41)
4. Commotion (2:45)
5. Bootleg
6. Bad Moon Rising
7. Proud Mary
8. I Put A Spell On You (4:34)
9. Night Time Is The Right Time
10. Keep On Choogin
11. Suzy Q
Janis Joplin was on after CCR, Then Sly and the Family Stone, The Who and Jefferson Airplane Last on Saturday.
I have the entire line up of bands in order with song list, send me an email if you want it.
Before Creedence: 1959-1967
John Fogerty, Doug Clifford, and Stu Cook (all born 1945) met at senior high school in El Cerrito, California and began playing instrumentals and “juke box standards” together under the name The Blue Velvets. The trio also backed singer Tom Fogerty— John’s older brother by three years—at live gigs and in the recording studio. By 1964, the band had signed to Fantasy Records, an independent jazz label based in San Francisco at the time.
During this period, band roles underwent some changes. Stu Cook had gone from piano to bass guitar and Tom Fogerty became the band’s rhythm guitarist. John Fogerty also began to write much of the band’s material. Most notably, the young guitarist had taken over lead vocal duty. As Tom would later say, “I could sing, but John had a sound.”
In 1967, Saul Zaentz purchased Fantasy Records from Weiss and offered the band a chance to record a full-length album, but only if the group changed its name. Never having liked The Golliwogs, the foursome readily agreed. Zaentz and the band agreed to come up with ten suggestions each, but he enthusiastically agreed to their first: Creedence Clearwater Revival. The band took the three elements from Creedence Nuball, a friend of Tom Fogerty; “clear water”, from a TV commercial for Olympia beer; and revival, which spoke to the four members’ renewed commitment to their band. (Other contenders were Muddy Rabbit, Gossamer Wump, and Creedence Nuball and the Ruby.) Unlike many other rock artists of the day, they eschewed drug use.
More importantly, AM radio programmers around the United States took note when a song from the LP, “Suzie Q”, received substantial airplay in the San Francisco Bay Area as well as on Chicago’s WLS. Blues aficionados doubtless appreciated the similarities between CCR’s tough style and R&B artists on the Chess and Vee-Jay labels.
Peak success: 1969-70
Only weeks later, in March 1969, “Bad Moon Rising” backed with “Lodi” was released and peaked at #2 on the charts. The band’s third album, Green River, followed in August and quickly went gold along with the single “Green River”, which again reached #2 on the Billboard charts. The B-side of “Green River”, “Commotion”—a one-chord two-step about the perils of city life—peaked at #30. The bar-band story of “Lodi” became a popular staple on then-emerging FM radio.[citation needed] The band’s emphasis on remakes of their old favorites continued with “The Night Time Is the Right Time”, which found its way into the band’s live set as a crowd sing-along.
Creedence continued to tour heavily including performances at the Atlanta Pop Festival and Woodstock. Their set was not included in the Woodstock film or its original soundtrack because Fogerty felt the band’s performance was subpar. (Several CCR tracks from the event were eventually included in the 1994 commemorative box set.) The band also complained that they had to take the stage at three in the morning because The Grateful Dead had jammed far past their scheduled set time. By the time Creedence began playing—”the hottest shot on Earth at that moment”, said Fogerty—many in the audience had gone to sleep.
Woodstock didn’t matter. Creedence was busy honing material for a fourth album, Willy and the Poor Boys, released in November 1969. “Down on the Corner”, a good-time street-corner number, and the famously militant “Fortunate Son” climbed to #3 and #14, respectively, by year’s end. The album was Creedence in its standard form, featuring Fogerty originals and two reworked Leadbelly covers, “Cotton Fields” and “Midnight Special”. Both the latter songs also had been performed by actor Harry Dean Stanton in the movie Cool Hand Luke, suggesting a subtle non-conformist theme to an apparently tradition-oriented album.
Duration : 0:5:22
Lyrics –
Now, when I was just a little boy,
Standin’ to my Daddy’s knee,
My poppa said, “;Son, don’t let the man get you
Do what he done to me.”;
‘Cause he’ll get you,
‘Cause he’ll get you now, now.
And I can remember the fourth of July,
Runnin’ through the backwood, bare.
And I can still hear my old hound dog barkin’,
Chasin’ down a hoodoo there.
Chasin’ down a hoodoo there.
CHORUS:
Born On The Bayou;
Born On The Bayou;
Born On The Bayou.
Wish I was back on the Bayou.
Rollin’ with some Cajun Queen.
Wishin’ I were a fast freight train,
Just a chooglin’ on down to New Orleans.
CHORUS
Do it, do it, do it, do it. Oh, Lord.
Oh get back boy.
I can remember the fourth of July,
Runnin’ through the backwood bare.
And I can still hear my old hound dog barkin’,
Chasin’ down a hoodoo there.
Chasin’ down a hoodoo there.
CHORUS
All right! Do, do, do, do.
Mmmmmmm, oh.
Duration : 0:5:14
Hank Williams Sr. Singing Jambalaya On the Bayou.
Goodbye Joe me gotta go me oh my oh
Me gotta go pole the pirogue down the bayou
My Yvonne the sweetest one me oh my oh
Son of a gun we’ll have big fun on the bayou
Jambalaya and a crawfish pie and file gumbo
Cause tonight I’m gonna see my ma cher amio
Pick guitar fill fruit jar and be gay-o
Son of a gun we’ll have big fun on the bayou
[ fiddle ]
Thibodaux Fontaineaux the place is buzzin’
Kinfolk come to see Yvonne by the dozen
Dress in style and go hog wild me oh my oh
Son of a gun we’ll have big fun on the bayou
Settle down far from town get me a pirogue
And I’ll catch all the fish in the bayou
Jambalaya and a crawfish pie…
[ fiddle ]
Later on, swap my mon, get me a pirogue
and I’ll catch all the fish on the bayou
Swap my mon, to buy Yvonne what she need-oh
Son of a gun we’ll have big fun on the bayou
Jambalaya and a crawfish pie…
Duration : 0:2:56