Create account Log in

Last of the Rock Stars … and Me and You / Last of the Rock Stars ... and Me and You

[Edit]

Download links and information about Last of the Rock Stars … and Me and You / Last of the Rock Stars ... and Me and You by Elliott Murphy. This album was released in 2001 and it belongs to Rock, Folk Rock, Alternative, Songwriter/Lyricist, Psychedelic genres. It contains 22 tracks with total duration of 02:02:43 minutes.

Artist: Elliott Murphy
Release date: 2001
Genre: Rock, Folk Rock, Alternative, Songwriter/Lyricist, Psychedelic
Tracks: 22
Duration: 02:02:43
Buy on iTunes $17.99

Tracks

[Edit]
No. Title Length
1. Last of the Rock Stars 4:22
2. Little Red Rooster 3:44
3. Take Your Love Away 4:31
4. Hard Core 4:12
5. Drive All Night 5:14
6. Somebodies Anniversary 5:08
7. Caught Short In the Long Run 5:18
8. Diamonds By the Yard 6:15
9. Put It Down 10:24
10. Hollywood 7:18
11. Party Girls and Broken Poets 7:09
12. Thirty Was a Long Time Ago 4:40
13. Last of the Rock Stars 4:24
14. On Elvis Presley's Birthday 5:36
15. I Wish I Was Picasso 3:51
16. Caught Short In the Long Run 4:52
17. Blind Willie McTell 7:29
18. Anastasia 5:23
19. Dusty Roses 4:46
20. Change Will Come 4:40
21. Cortez the Killer 6:09
22. Rock Ballad 7:18

Details

[Edit]

This Spanish tour document isn't the first, second, or even third live album from Elliott Murphy, but it's the best on several counts. For starters, there's simply a lot of it: two long discs, the first devoted to performances by a five-man band, the second to shows where only a guitarist and an accordionist/pianist backed Murphy. And the 22 tracks do a fine job of hitting the high points from the artist's extensive career. The collection opens with the classic "Last of the Rock Stars," the same track that led off Murphy's first album in 1973. It also includes standouts from other early- and mid-career discs; some later winners (notably the epic "Put It Down"); and a trio of well-chosen covers from Dylan, Neil Young, and Willie Dixon. Murphy is in fine voice throughout and the band is easily the strongest he's ever recorded with. The gripes: Two songs appear on both the band and trio CDs, and while the versions differ substantially, you could argue that the space might have been better-used to include even more from Murphy's huge catalog. Also, the singer still hasn't corrected the spelling in the title "Somebodies Anniversary." Oh well. Nobody's perfect — but Murphy comes close with this album.