Create account Log in

Lonnie Donegan Jubilee Concert

[Edit]

Download links and information about Lonnie Donegan Jubilee Concert by Lonnie Donegan. This album was released in 1981 and it belongs to Jazz, Rock, World Music, Rockabilly, Songwriter/Lyricist genres. It contains 15 tracks with total duration of 56:50 minutes.

Artist: Lonnie Donegan
Release date: 1981
Genre: Jazz, Rock, World Music, Rockabilly, Songwriter/Lyricist
Tracks: 15
Duration: 56:50
Buy on iTunes $9.99
Buy on Amazon $8.99

Tracks

[Edit]
No. Title Length
1. Lonnie Introduction (featuring The Lonnie Donegan Band) 1:00
2. Ace In the Hole (featuring The Lonnie Donegan Band) 3:51
3. Isle of Capri (featuring The Lonnie Donegan Band) 7:36
4. Going Home (featuring The Lonnie Donegan Band) 5:40
5. Shine (featuring The Lonnie Donegan Band) 6:02
6. Jenny's Ball (featuring The Lonnie Donegan Band) 3:34
7. One Sweet Letter from You (featuring The Lonnie Donegan Band) 7:07
8. Hush-a-Bye (featuring The Lonnie Donegan Band) 3:35
9. Bugle Boy March (featuring The Lonnie Donegan Band) 3:32
10. Chris Barber Chat (featuring The Lonnie Donegan Band) 0:35
11. Ice Cream (featuring The Lonnie Donegan Band) 5:28
12. Lonnie Introduction Skiffle Band (featuring Lonnie Donegan'S Skiffle Group) 2:07
13. John Henry (featuring Lonnie Donegan'S Skiffle Group) 2:42
14. Take This Hammer (featuring Lonnie Donegan'S Skiffle Group) 2:08
15. Railroad Bill (featuring Lonnie Donegan'S Skiffle Group) 1:53

Details

[Edit]

Recorded live in 1981, Lonnie Donegan's Jubilee Concert marked the 25th anniversary of his first hit single, "Rock Island Line," and sought to replicate, therefore, the mood and magic of a classic Donegan show from back in the day. The guest list was phenomenal, as Chris Barber, Ken Colyer, and Monty Sunshine, the very cream of the 1950s British trad jazz scene, stepped out to pay their own musical respects to the King. The 23-song set, meanwhile, covered most of the essential bases in Donegan's musical career, perhaps eschewing some of the more blatant novelty numbers in the catalog (no "My Old Man's a Dustman," for example) but making up for that with the sheer passion and energy that marked out "John Henry," "Tom Dooley," "Grand Coulee Dam," and so forth. Besides, a raucous "Does Your Chewing Gum Lose Its Flavour on the Bedpost Overnight" surely sates any listener's desire for vaudevillian madness. Of course, Jubilee Concert is not a patch on a true vintage Donegan concert recording — no one should buy this in preference to the Conway Hall collection, for example. But, if you require proof that "old skifflers never die, they just keep on getting better" — it's a hard set to ignore.