Delta Swamp Rock – Sounds From The South: At The Crossroads Of Rock, Country And Soul
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£27.99
Cat:SJRLP520C Barcode:5026328205205
2LP Gold Coloured Vinyl
Long out of print (10 years!), this new edition of Soul Jazz Records’ classic Delta Swamp Rock, features a killer all-star line-up of seminal artists who all first blended rock, soul and country together to create a stunning new sound of southern American music in the 1970s …
Record Label: Soul Jazz Records
Format: Album
Genre: Country / Americana, Rock
Release Date: 09/06/2023
Long out of print (10 years!), this new edition of Soul Jazz Records’ classic Delta Swamp Rock, features a killer all-star line-up of seminal artists who all first blended rock, soul and country together to create a stunning new sound of southern American music in the 1970s.
Featuring the Allman Brothers, Dan Penn, Leon Russell, Tony Joe White, Johnny Cash, Bobbie Gentry, Big Star, Link Wray, Area Code 615 and loads more!
This album comes as a superb limited-edition gold vinyl double vinyl release complete with extensive original sleevenotes, interviews and exclusive photography, all spread over a 12-page full-size magazine and two bespoke inner sleeves. The works!
Delta Swamp Rock is an interstate southern road-trip through the United States of America where country, rock and soul met at the crossroads – an exploration of the musical and cultural links between the cities of Memphis, Muscle Shoals and Nashville in the 1960s and 70s.
At the start of the 1970s, a new type of music emerged out of the southern states of Alabama, Tennessee, Georgia, Mississippi and Florida. Southern rock, the creation of young blue-collar white Americans, blended rock, soul, country and blues music together to present a new vision of the south – a post-civil rights southern identity complete with a celebration of the regions natural landscape and its way of life.
The Allman Brothers and Lynyrd Skynyrd epitomised the definitive southern rock groups – a mixture of blues-rock and country with a southern rebelliousness and attitude. Unfortunately both The Allman Brothers and Lynyrd Skynyrd were to be struck by tragedy, which would affect the movement’s rise and fall.
The backstory to southern rock is the fact that a number of the people involved in its creation had been central to the production of southern soul music in the 1960s mainly in Memphis, Tennessee, and the small town of Muscle Shoals (population around 10,000) deep within the bible-belt, liquor-free, deeply segregated state of Alabama, creating 100s of R&B hits on an almost daily basis.
Here in Muscle Shoals, with its proximity to Memphis and Nashville, an all-white group of in-house musicians, (famously referred to by Lynyrd Skynyrd in the song ‘Sweet Home Alabama’ as the ‘Swampers’), created countless classic soul records for the likes of Aretha Franklin, Wilson Pickett, Etta James, Clarence Carter and more during the 1960s.
This album charts the rise and fall of southern rock from its funky swamp roots in southern soul to its phenomenal success in the first-half of the 1970s, including its influence on Nashville’s ‘outlaw’ country and tracing it right back to the arrival of rock and roll in the 1950s – the first meeting of black and white American music at the crossroads.
Side A
- Lynyrd Skynyrd – The Seasons (4.09)
- Barefoot Jerry – Smokies (2.14)
- Joe South – Hush (3.47)
- Bobbie Gentry – Papa, Won’t You Let Me Go To Town With You (2.34)
- Area Code 615 – Stone Fox Chase (3.17)
- Cher – I Walk On Guilded Splinters (2.32)
Side B
- Cowboy – Please Be With Me (3.48)
- The Allman Brothers – Ain’t Wastin’ Time No More (3.40)
- Link Wray – Be What You Want To (4.29)
- Boz Scaggs – I’ll Be Long Gone (4.08)
- Lynyrd Skynyrd – Comin’ Home (5.29)
Side C
- Bobbie Gentry – Seasons Come, Seasons Go (2.52)
- Leon Russell – Out In The Woods (3.37)
- Tony Joe White – Polk Salad Annie (3.42)
- Barefoot Jerry – Come To Me Tonight (4.43)
- Dan Penn – If Love Was Money (3.29)
- Linda Ronstadt – I Won’t Be Hangin’ ‘Round (2.59)
Side D
- Waylon Jennings – Big D (2.30)
- Big Star – Thirteen (2.37)
- Bobbie Gentry – Mississippi Delta (3.06)
- Travis Wammack – I Forgot To Remember To Forget (2.54)
- Johnny Cash & June Carter – If I Were A Carpenter (3.01)
- Billy Vera – I’m Leavin’ Here Tomorrow, Mama (