Walk the Walk...Talk the Talk

Walk the Walk...Talk the Talk is an album of The Head Cat published in 2011.

Walk the Walk...Talk the Talk
Studio album by
ReleasedJuly 5, 2011
RecordedSage and Sound Studios, June 2010 Hollywood, California
GenreRock N' Roll
Length27:36
LabelNiji Entertainment Group
ProducerCameron Webb
The Head Cat chronology
Fool's Paradise
(2006)
Walk the Walk...Talk the Talk
(2011)
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic[1]

The disc contains notes cover of rockabilly artists of the past but also two completely new songs, "American Beat" and "The Eagle Flies on Friday". It was recorded in four days, in June 2010 in Hollywood.

Track listing

  1. "American Beat" (Lemmy Kilmister, Slim Jim Phantom, Danny B Harvey) – 1:43
  2. "Say Mama" (Gene Vincent & The Blue Caps) (Meeks, Earl) – 2:01
  3. "I Ain't Never" (Mel Tillis, Webb Pierce) – 1:52
  4. "Bad Boy" (Larry Williams) – 1:57
  5. "Shakin' All Over" (Frederick Heath) – 2:33
  6. "Let It Rock" (Chuck Berry) – 2:06
  7. "Something Else" (Sharon Sheeley, Eddie Cochran) – 2:04
  8. "The Eagle Flies on Friday" (Kilmister, Phantom, Harvey) – 3:22
  9. "Trying to Get to You" (Charles Singleton, Rose Marie McCoy) – 2:23
  10. "You Can't Do That" (Lennon–McCartney)– 2:28
  11. "It'll Be Me" (Jerry Lee Lewis) (Clement) – 1:57
  12. "Crossroads" (Robert Johnson) – 3:03

Personnel

gollark: I think it's probably worth it.
gollark: <@651869752012046347> Yes, technology was a mistake. I'm very unhappy that we have much higher life expectancy, quality of life, have reliable clean water and food, can communicate with people remotely really easily, and have much better entertainment than before the industrial era.
gollark: SQLite is a database, just an embedded one.
gollark: I'm going to look into making Node.js use multiple *processes*, and putting SQLite in WAL mode so that it can do multiple reads at once.
gollark: It's SQLite and the application is Node.js. Both of which are totally single-threaded. Which is probably why.

References

  1. Prato, Greg. "Review "Fool's Paradise". Allmusic. Retrieved 2 December 2009.


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.