Create account Log in

End Of The World

[Edit]

Download links and information about End Of The World by Skeeter Davis. This album was released in 1972 and it belongs to Rock, Country, Pop genres. It contains 19 tracks with total duration of 57:58 minutes.

Artist: Skeeter Davis
Release date: 1972
Genre: Rock, Country, Pop
Tracks: 19
Duration: 57:58
Buy on iTunes $9.99
Buy on Amazon $19.99

Tracks

[Edit]
No. Title Length
1. How Could I Make You Love Me 2:49
2. Aint Nobody 4:18
3. Rocky Top 2:32
4. The End Of The World 2:45
5. Love Me So Good 2:40
6. Thats Alright 3:18
7. Crying Time 2:30
8. Sweet Dreams 2:47
9. Im A Country Girl But (I Love To Rock Nroll) 3:09
10. You Dont Have To Be A Baby To Cry 2:16
11. Just When I Needed You Most 4:04
12. Gonna Find Me A Bluebird 3:38
13. Blue Kentucky Girl 3:29
14. Rock A Bye Boogie 2:40
15. Somebody To Love 2:55
16. Love Me Tender 2:51
17. Hopelessly Devoted To You 3:09
18. I Aint Never 2:17
19. Take It Easy 3:51

Details

[Edit]

RCA's budget Camden label put out a bunch of Skeeter Davis albums that, in keeping with the company's general approach, were thrown-together compilations of material from various eras. This is no exception, the nine songs roughly spanning the entire 1960s, from her early RCA singles "Am I That Easy to Forget?," "I Forgot More Than You'll Ever Know," and "The End of the World" to a bunch of covers from late-'60s LPs ("Daddy Sang Bass," "Son-of-a Preacher Man," "Little Arrows," "Angel of the Morning," "Hold Me Tight"). Along the way we also get "My Coloring Book," which appeared on a 1963 LP also, confusingly, called The End of the World, which is naturally an entirely different release altogether than this 1973 Camden album that happens to use the same title. There's some good country-pop music here, particularly on those early RCA singles. But this scattershot way of assembling it is not the best manner, or a particularly good manner, in which to experience it. The late-'60s covers ain't so hot either, though they're not embarrassing, even if Davis climbs to the most awkward, child-like extremes of her high range in "Little Arrows."