Create account Log in

Rumble & Roll

[Edit]

Download links and information about Rumble & Roll by Link Wray. This album was released in 2014 and it belongs to Rock, Rock & Roll genres. It contains 16 tracks with total duration of 43:34 minutes.

Artist: Link Wray
Release date: 2014
Genre: Rock, Rock & Roll
Tracks: 16
Duration: 43:34
Buy on iTunes $9.99
Buy on Amazon $8.99

Tracks

[Edit]
No. Title Length
1. Rippin Em Off In the Name of Love (featuring Joey Welz) 2:50
2. Turn You On To Sunshine (featuring Joey Welz) 2:20
3. Let the Good Times Roll (featuring Joey Welz) 1:56
4. Rumble 69 (featuring Joey Welz) 2:20
5. Fire and Brimstone (featuring Joey Welz) 3:14
6. Dark Was the Color of Her Hair (featuring Joey Welz) 2:26
7. I Remember Her Love (but I Forgot Her Name) (featuring Joey Welz) 2:24
8. Listen To the Voices That Want To Be Free (featuring Joey Welz) 2:52
9. Im from the World (Im from the Earth) (featuring Joey Welz) 2:28
10. Peace Is the Freedome (featuring Joey Welz) 3:18
11. Jesus, Be My Friend (featuring Joey Welz) 2:28
12. Searchin for Me (so I Can Find You) (featuring Joey Welz) 3:35
13. Its Too Late (featuring Joey Welz) 2:25
14. Love Is a Moment (featuring Joey Welz) 3:04
15. Goin Home (featuring Joey Welz) 2:56
16. Voices In the Sky (featuring Joey Welz) 2:58

Details

[Edit]

In 1970, legendary rock guitarist Link Wray was recruited by veteran rockabilly singer and lyricist Joey Welz to collaborate on an album called Listen to the Voices That Want to Be Free, which also featured Link's brothers and longtime musical partners Vernon Wray (bass, rhythm guitar) and Doug Wray (drums). The original release was credited to Joey Welz, with the Wray brothers listed as session players, but in 2005, the material from the Listen to the Voices sessions was reissued by Welz under the title Brothers and Legends: Listen to the Voices That Want to Be Free, now credited to Joey Welz and Link Wray. In 2013, the recordings surfaced again as Rumble & Roll, with the billing changed to "Link Wray with Joey Welz." This music recalls the laid-back stomp of Wray's early-'70s work for Polydor rather than the feral guitar workouts of his classic '50s sides (though Wray does amble through a remake of "Rumble"), and Welz's lyrics are back-to-the-land country-rock fare, except for a few tunes that recall his '50s roots.