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Rumble in the Jungle

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Download links and information about Rumble in the Jungle by Wild Wax Combo. This album was released in 2006 and it belongs to Rock, Rockabilly genres. It contains 14 tracks with total duration of 34:24 minutes.

Artist: Wild Wax Combo
Release date: 2006
Genre: Rock, Rockabilly
Tracks: 14
Duration: 34:24
Buy on iTunes $9.99

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Hot Rod Racer 2:46
2. Mad Dog Mama 1:51
3. Phone Call 2:56
4. Rumble in the Jungle 2:06
5. Choo Choo Train 3:37
6. Gettin' Down 2:02
7. Sentimental Fool 2:43
8. Call Me Up 2:06
9. Miss Betty 2:13
10. Susie Q 2:08
11. Baby Lou 2:56
12. Big Beautiful Eyes 2:32
13. Miss Froggie 2:37
14. Mad Dog Mama (Primitive Version) 1:51

Details

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The Danish trio Wild Wax Combo have come a long way from their 1999 debut album Jungle Fever. That set was a statement of intent, an exhilarating trawl through rockabilly's past, with the band barreling across a stream of rockabilly and R&B covers with positive panache. Seven years on, and the Combo are back with Rumble in the Jungle, their fourth set, and arguably their best to date. Now, of course, the originals far outnumber the covers, although the latter are just as sizzling: check out their inspired version of "Susie Q" for proof. There's also a rip-roaring take on "Miss Froggie," where guitarist Andre goes head to head with guesting pianist Thomas Heed, as well as an emotive cover of "Phone Call." The band get the party started by revving up their "Hot Rod Racer," then tear up the place with the urgent "Call Me Up." They swing their girls 'round the tropics on the title track, and power down the tracks on a driving "Choo Choo Train," and "Gettin' Down" with a steam-rolling rhythm. But it's not all storming R&B and brusque rockabilly. "Sentimental Fool," for instance, is insistent, but with a brightness and a touch of elegance that shifts deftly into big-band style swing (albeit in a truncated trio form). "Big Beautiful Eyes" is equally agile, again big-band style, but also surf-tinged, while "Miss Betty" blurs the edges between rockabilly and C&W. An electrifying album, but with plenty of diversity in style, this Rumble should be shaking up the rockabilly scene for the foreseeable future.