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Live Tonite... Plus!

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Download links and information about Live Tonite... Plus! by Eric Bell. This album was released in 2001 and it belongs to Blues, Rock, Blues Rock, Rock & Roll genres. It contains 13 tracks with total duration of 01:15:12 minutes.

Artist: Eric Bell
Release date: 2001
Genre: Blues, Rock, Blues Rock, Rock & Roll
Tracks: 13
Duration: 01:15:12
Buy on iTunes $7.99
Buy on iTunes $7.99

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. The Stumble (Live) 3:24
2. Oh Pretty Woman (Live) 5:24
3. The Things I Used to Do (Live) 5:29
4. Baby Please Don't Go (Live) 6:21
5. Madame George (Live) 6:01
6. Walk On Water (Live) 6:39
7. Three O'Clock Blues (Live) 4:59
8. Hold That Plane (Live) 5:12
9. Whiskey In the Jar (Live) 10:54
10. The Rocker (Live) 5:07
11. Just Get By (Bonus Track) [Live] 5:14
12. Two Ships (Bonus Track) [Live] 5:00
13. Gloria (Bonus Track) [Live] 5:28

Details

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Thin Lizzy's forgotten guitar hero returns in a bare-bones blues trio format, taped before an appreciative crowd. Curiously, the venue isn't listed, although the album's Swedish-only release in 1996 most likely points there. Angel Air's reissue sweetens the pot with three tracks not on the original release. Straight-ahead blues is the game here. The gig opens with a rampage through "The Stumble," whose 1966 recording featured Eric Clapton on guitar. Bell's style is scrappier, but no less spirited, as he demonstrates on brisk strides through standards like "Baby Please Don't Go," "Oh Pretty Woman," and "Things I Used to Do." Being an Irishman also enables Bell to explore his own roots, as evidenced by a show-stopping slow burn through Van Morrison's epic ballad, "Madame George." Naturally, Bell revisits his Thin Lizzy days with a fiery demolition of the late Phil Lynott's swaggering macho anthem "The Rocker." Bell makes room for Lizzy's rearrangement of the traditional "Whiskey in the Jar" — a song so radical it didn't include a bass part, yet still graced the U.K. Top Ten in 1973, and soars just as highly here. The real surprise is why Bell includes just three originals, including the lovelorn lament of "Two Ships" and "Just to Get By," a world-weary tally of life's ups and downs. That neither track made the original cut is amazing. But that's a minor point, especially since the music here is so crisp. Bell's guitar is succinct and to the point, while bassist Tony Wooton and drummer Romek Parol lend appropriately unobtrusive support. (The Bell-written anecdotes, "Just a Belfast Boy," are also delightful.) Pure blues fans and Lizzy devotees should find plenty to satisfy them here.