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Don't Forget Me
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Don't Forget Me
Current price: $10.99
Barnes and Noble
Don't Forget Me
Current price: $10.99
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A generous collection of instrumentals, previously unreleased tracks, demo recordings, alternate versions, live performances, and a radio promo spot, this set from
Rockstar Records
isn't a good introduction to
Eddie Cochran
(it doesn't, for instance, have a version of his biggest and most enduring song,
"Summertime Blues"
), but it is a nice second purchase, filling in some of the background on
Cochran
's tragically short career. A fine singer and songwriter,
was also a dynamite guitar player, and instrumental tracks like
"String Fever"
and
"Guitar Blues"
gave him a chance to really cut loose, while the lovely, acoustic instrumental
"Rain"
shows
could do delicate and gentle every bit as much as he could blast loose on the electric. The live cuts, versions of
"Sittin' in the Balcony"
"Twenty Flight Rock,"
have a somewhat muted sound, but demonstrate what an exciting live performer
could be, while the single version of
"Nervous Breakdown"
included here, a song built on the same kinetic template (and chords) as
"Summertime Blues,"
hints at what the music world lost when
died in a car crash in the U.K. in 1960. He was only 21. ~ Steve Leggett
Rockstar Records
isn't a good introduction to
Eddie Cochran
(it doesn't, for instance, have a version of his biggest and most enduring song,
"Summertime Blues"
), but it is a nice second purchase, filling in some of the background on
Cochran
's tragically short career. A fine singer and songwriter,
was also a dynamite guitar player, and instrumental tracks like
"String Fever"
and
"Guitar Blues"
gave him a chance to really cut loose, while the lovely, acoustic instrumental
"Rain"
shows
could do delicate and gentle every bit as much as he could blast loose on the electric. The live cuts, versions of
"Sittin' in the Balcony"
"Twenty Flight Rock,"
have a somewhat muted sound, but demonstrate what an exciting live performer
could be, while the single version of
"Nervous Breakdown"
included here, a song built on the same kinetic template (and chords) as
"Summertime Blues,"
hints at what the music world lost when
died in a car crash in the U.K. in 1960. He was only 21. ~ Steve Leggett