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The Essential Jerry Lee Lewis: The Sun Sessions

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Download links and information about The Essential Jerry Lee Lewis: The Sun Sessions by Jerry Lee Lewis. This album was released in 2013 and it belongs to Rock, Rock & Roll, Country, Rockabilly genres. It contains 40 tracks with total duration of 01:32:48 minutes.

Artist: Jerry Lee Lewis
Release date: 2013
Genre: Rock, Rock & Roll, Country, Rockabilly
Tracks: 40
Duration: 01:32:48
Buy on iTunes $14.99

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Crazy Arms 2:43
2. End of the Road 1:47
3. Goodnight Irene 2:53
4. Hand Me Down My Walking Cane 2:17
5. Sixty Minute Man 1:48
6. Whole Lotta Shakin' Goin' On 2:52
7. It'll Be Me 2:44
8. Lewis Boogie 1:59
9. When the Saints Go Marching In 2:09
10. Drinking Wine Spo-Dee-O-Dee 2:33
11. Ubangi Stomp 1:45
12. You Win Again 2:54
13. Mean Woman Blues 2:24
14. Great Balls of Fire 1:51
15. Milkshake Mademoiselle 2:01
16. Breathless 2:42
17. Good Rockin' Tonight 2:41
18. Jailhouse Rock 1:56
19. Jambalaya (On the Bayou) 1:58
20. Big Legged Woman 2:25
21. Hello, Hello Baby 3:21
22. Fools Like Me 2:50
23. Put Me Down 2:07
24. High School Confidential 2:29
25. Wild One (Real Wild Child) 1:54
26. Break Up 2:37
27. Big Blon' Baby 1:39
28. Lovin' Up a Storm 1:50
29. Hillbilly Fever 2:06
30. Let's Talk About Us 2:07
31. Old Black Joe 2:04
32. What'd I Say 2:24
33. It Won't Happen With Me 2:58
34. Cold, Cold Heart 3:04
35. Waiting for a Train 1:39
36. One Minute Past Eternity 2:03
37. Invitation to Your Party 1:54
38. I Can't Seem to Say Goodbye 2:33
39. Will the Circle Be Unbroken 2:22
40. Setting the Woods On Fire 2:25

Details

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RCA/Legacy's 2013 collection The Essential Jerry Lee Lewis: The Sun Sessions digs deep into the Killer's earliest years, offering 40 peerless sides from his time at Sam Phillips' legendary Memphis studio. Anybody just looking for the hits — "Crazy Arms," "Whole Lot of Shakin' Going On," "Great Balls of Fire," "Breathless," "High School Confidential" — will find this to be too much, but their needs are well-served elsewhere in the countless compilations of these basics. This does something better: it offers a detailed portrait of Jerry Lee's immense talents as an interpreter and song stylist, illustrating how he could bend country, gospel, blues, R&B, and even Elvis tunes to sound like he was the guy who sang the song first. Yes, this could be heard on Bear Family's seminal 1989 box Classic, but that eight-disc box demands effort. At 40 songs and two discs, The Essential Jerry Lee Lewis speeds on by, dazzling listeners with the depth and breadth of the Killer's classic work. This doesn't tell his whole story — his Smash/Mercury sides are wonderful in a very different way — but there was a real need for a collection that explored the Sun sessions in a thorough yet invigorating fashion, which this essential Essential surely does.