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The Howie Brothers - Songs We Sang At Home flac album

The Howie Brothers - Songs We Sang At Home flac album
  • Performer The Howie Brothers
  • Title Songs We Sang At Home
  • Style Country, Folk
  • Other formats AIFF AUD DTS AA DXD WMA AC3
  • Genre World & Folk & Country
  • Size MP3 1667 mb
  • Size FLAC 1926 mb
  • Rating: 4.1
  • Votes: 250

The album featured many songs that Howie co-wrote himself. The first single of the album "100", a dance track was released in the summer of 2011 and received moderate success and airplay primarily in Canada In 2015, while Howie had not announced that he was working on a second solo album some producers have mentioned working with Howie on a new album that is said to be released the same year

The Doobie Brothers is the debut studio album by American rock band The Doobie Brothers. The album was released on April 30, 1971, by Warner Bros. It is their only official studio album to feature original bass player Dave Shogren on all tracks, who left during the recording of their second album. The first single from the album, "Nobody," failed to chart, as did the album itself

The Everly Brothers is the 1958 eponymous debut album of close harmony rock and roll duo The Everly Brothers. The album peaked at No. 16 on Billboard's "pop albums" chart and launched three very successful singles. Originally on the Cadence label, (CLP-3003), the album was re-released on LP in 1988 by EMI and on CD in 2000 by Emporio Records. It was re-released again in 2009 on 180-gram vinyl by Doxy music.

This album is also just barely The Doobie Brothers: there is only one drummer so that element of syncopation is entirely missing. Where it really shines is in Tom and Pat's acoustilectric folksy rock diddys which point directly at the direction which would culminate in TOULOUSE STREET (one of the best albums ever made in my book), but the sound is raw and discoverable. If you were there to hear that and hear Tom sing lead on these two songs, something welled up inside (I know I was thinking I haven't heard From him in years and now he's finishing it off and sounded great, just like always, my final thought was, "How can this band sounding this great, Break Up" and at the end. and final note I was extremely sad, because I thought we'd never see the band together again.

The Doobie Brothers are a band that came together in the early '70s and went on to rack up numerous hits during that decade and the '80s as well. The band has the distinction of being one of only a few acts that had continued success after their main vocalist/songwriter left the band and was replaced by another frontman with a very different voice and musical style. Guitarist and vocalist Tom Johnston sang lead on and wrote The Doobies' first hits like the iconic "Listen to the Music" and "China Grove. He left the band in 1975. Taken from the Doobie Brothers album Minute by Minute, it was also a number one single in 1979. The keyboard pattern that weaves through the song has been much borrowed over the years, and McDonald's evocative vocal performance on the record is the very definition of the soulful pop sound of this version of the band.

The Doobie Brothers are really two different bands - three, if you count the group that's soldiered on without Michael McDonald since the late '80s. The first were sort of a post-Woodstock group of long-haired jam freaks that played a mix of Dead-inspired roots music, twangy country rock, biker boogie and old-fashioned three-chord guitar rock. Our list of the Top 10 Doobie Brothers Songs covers both. 10. 'It Keeps You Runnin''. From: 'Takin' It to the Streets' (1976). After 1977's somewhat disappointing 'Livin' on the Fault Line,' McDonald's second album with the group, the Doobies returned a year later with the biggest record of their career. McDonald is featured on the LP's best cuts (see Nos. 5 and 1 on our list of the Top 10 Doobie Brothers Songs), but this Top 30 single, co-written by McDonald, features founding member Patrick Simmons on vocals. 8. 'Take Me in Your Arms (Rock Me)'.

Tracklist Hide Credits

A1 Galway Bay
Arranged By – Graeme Howie, John Howie Written-By – Traditional
3:26
A2 Beautiful Brown Eyes
Written-By – Alton Delmore, Arthur Smith
3:12
A3 Rockin' Alone In An Old Rockin' Chair
Written-By – Bob Miller
3:08
A4 Danny Boy
Arranged By – Graeme Howie, John Howie Written-By – Traditional
3:42
A5 The Rose Of Tralee
Arranged By – Graeme Howie, John Howie Written-By – Traditional
2:41
A6 I Dream Of Jeannie With The Light Brown Hair
Arranged By – Graeme Howie, John Howie Written-By – Stephen Foster
1:47
A7 Beautiful Dreamer
Arranged By – Graeme Howie, John Howie Written-By – Stephen Foster
2:57
B1 Just For Old Times' Sake
Written-By – Hank Hunter, Jack Keller
2:25
B2 Scarlet Ribbons
Arranged By – Graeme Howie, John Howie Written-By – Evelyn Danzig, Jack Segal
3:03
B3 Remember You're Mine
Written-By – Bernie Lowe, Kal Mann
3:18
B4 Old Shep
Written-By – Clyde Foley
3:25
B5 When It's Lamp Lightin' Time In The Valley
Written-By – Joe Lyons , Sam C. Hart
1:59
B6 The Old Spinning Wheel
Written-By – Billy Hill
2:19
B7 When You Were Sweet Sixteen
Arranged By – Graeme Howie, John Howie Written By – James Thornton
4:26

Companies, etc.

  • Recorded At – Sully Music, Albert Park

Credits

  • Acoustic Guitar, Electric Guitar – Barry Roy
  • Bass, Banjo – Robert Edge
  • Cello – Karoline Von Moller
  • Engineer – Chris Wheatley
  • Producer, Arranged By, Vocals, Piano, Strings – Graeme Howie
  • Sampler, Orchestra – Peter Sullivan
  • Viola – Deirdre Dowling, Shani Williams
  • Violin – Attila Kuti, Camilla Murray, Dougal Scott
  • Vocals, Piano Accordion – John Howie

Barcode and Other Identifiers

  • Barcode: 9 319962 000104