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The Excellent Sides of Swamp Dogg, Vol. 3

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Download links and information about The Excellent Sides of Swamp Dogg, Vol. 3 by Swamp Dogg. This album was released in 2008 and it belongs to Hip Hop/R&B, Soul, Blues, Rock, Blues Rock, Funk genres. It contains 18 tracks with total duration of 01:18:39 minutes.

Artist: Swamp Dogg
Release date: 2008
Genre: Hip Hop/R&B, Soul, Blues, Rock, Blues Rock, Funk
Tracks: 18
Duration: 01:18:39
Buy on iTunes $9.99

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. The Mind Does the Dancing While the Body Pulls the Strings 7:07
2. I Wanna Lifetime of Loving You 2:21
3. When He Was No One (I Knew Jesus) 3:15
4. God Ain't Blessing America 4:26
5. Chewed Up Grass 4:30
6. I Wouldn't Leave Here to Go to Heaven 2:37
7. Did I Come Back Too Soon (Or Stay Away Too Long) 3:42
8. M.L.G. (J.A.) 3:46
9. My Hang-Ups Ain't Hung Up No More 3:41
10. I'd Lie to You for Your Love 4:05
11. Come to L.A. 4:39
12. We Need a Revolution 4:50
13. Kiss Me Hit Me Touch Me 7:46
14. Myocardial Infarction (Heartbreak) 4:04
15. Shut Your Mouth 5:40
16. Happy Dog Day 4:18
17. Let the Good Times Roll 3:49
18. 1958 4:03

Details

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Iconoclastic Virginia soul man Swamp Dogg has always been something of an artist out of time. When the loose limbed, fractured rhythms of funk were overtaking black American music, Swamp Dogg was using down-home Southern Soul as a vehicle for political statements every bit as impassioned, and certainly more explicitly radical, than those being made by his more famous contemporaries. The slow-rolling musical backing that Swamp Dogg chose for tracks like “We Need a Revolution” might have seemd anachronistic to most audiences as the disco era dawned, but today the music on the two albums collected on this, the third volume of Swamp Dogg’s comprehensive Excellent Sides of Swamp Dogg series, sounds shockingly vital. This album collects Swamp Dogg’s mid ‘70s records Have You Heard This Story? and I Called For A Rope But They Threw Me A Rock. They are lyrically fierce and musically robust, and compare favorably with the very best of Swamp Dogg’s work.