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Music CD - John Fogerty: The Long Road Home: The Ultimate John Fogerty/Creedence Collection

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Music CD: The Long Road Home: The Ultimate John Fogerty/Creedence Collection Artist: John Fogerty
List Price: $18.98
Our Price: $6.68
Your Save: $ 12.30 ( 65% )
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Manufacturer: Fantasy
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Average Customer Rating:     

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Tracks:
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1. Born On The Bayou 2. Bad Moon Rising 3. Centerfield 4. Who'll Stop The Rain 5. Rambunctious Boy 6. Fortunate Son 7. Lookin' Out My Back Door 8. Up Around The Bend 9. Almost Saturday Night (live) 10. Down On The Corner 11. Bootleg (live) 12. Have You Ever Seen The Rain? 13. Sweet Hitch-Hiker 14. Hey Tonight (live) 15. The Old Man Down The Road 16. Rockin' All Over The World (live) 17. Lodi 18. Keep On Chooglin' (live) 19. Green River 20. Déjà Vu (All Over Again) 21. Run Through The Jungle 22. Hot Rod Heart 23. Travelin' Band 24. Proud Mary 25. Fortunate Son (live)
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Binding: Audio CD EAN: 0025218968928 Format: Original recording remastered Label: Fantasy Manufacturer: Fantasy Number Of Discs: 1 Publisher: Fantasy Release Date: 2005-11-01 Studio: Fantasy
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Spotlight customer reviews:
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Customer Rating:      Summary: IT SKIPS Comment: SORRY, BUT THIS IS THE FIRST PRODUCT PURCHASES FROM AMAZON THAT IS DEFECTIVE. IT SKIPS, NEED I SAY MORE. OF COURSE I DID NOT REALIZE IT UNTIL I OPENED IT AND PUT IT ON MY IPOD.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Nice Remastring Job Comment: Probably no mainstream artist for the last 30+ years has been screwed over by the music business more than John Fogerty. Now that the mess with Fantasy Records is behind him, he cooperated on the release of his first comprehensive retrospective of his career. A couple of things are worthy of note. First, the remastering of the CCR tunes on this release is excellent and surpasses the 2000 remasters of the CCR catalogue. Second, besides his work with Creedence Clearwater Revival, there wasn't a whole lot of material to choose from. I was glad that the 1985 "comeback" album 'Centerfield' was represented by two cuts, though I might have suggested the addition of "Rock and Roll Girl" which was issued as a single. And others have mentioned that "Almost Saturday Night" included here is not the version from the 1975 'John Fogerty' album, which would have been the recommended choice. My choice for biggest oversight, however, is "Jambalaya (On The Bayou)" from the often-overlooked 1973 'Blue Ridge Rangers' LP which was also released as a single. This is a rare gem that sounds very much like a CCR song. While I liked the selection of the CCR songs here for the most part, I would have disposed of some like the overplayed "Travelin' Band" in favor of "Jambalaya" and would dump the mediocre live version of "Hey Tonight" included here for the CCR studio version or another song such as "Don't Look Now"; "Wrote A Song For Everyone"; or "Someday Never Comes."
Customer Rating:      Summary: Good Music, Yes. "Ultimate?" Hardly. Comment: With so much music over such a long time span, why only a single disc? John Fogerty/CCR could have easily fleshed out two or even three CD's of material, so "The Long Road Home" feels more like a short path to nowhere.
First, the positives: For the first time, John has allowed his Creedence material to exist on a record next to his solo work. The remastered CCR songs sound terrific. There's a consistency here that rivals modern greats like Bruce Springsteen, John Mellencamp, Bob Seger and The Eagles for sound and the thematic nature of the songwriting. (It's no accident that Saul Zaentz wanted to claim "The Old Man Down The Road" plagiarized "Run Through The Jungle.") Finally, Fogerty's voice is a slice of America that has become instantly recognizable for good reason - his rock and roll baritone is like no-one else in modern rock times.
The minuses. This could have easily been split between a CCR disc and a solo Fogerty disc instead of just single CD. Why no songs from Eye of the Zombie or The Blue Ridge Rangers? The live CCR cuts really should have been the studio versions. (You want this live? Get Premonition.) Two versions of "Fortunate Son?" Not necessary. The sequencing leaves a lot to be desired (again, begging the single instead of double CD issue). And no oddities/rarities/B-Sides.
While this serves as an OK primer for Fogerty's career, he has been delivering the goods consistently ever since Centerfield re-ignited his career. Leaving out so much makes it far from "Ultimate," and does Fogerty something of a disservice.
Customer Rating:      Summary: John Fogerty +The Long Road" Comment: Good collection! Recording quality very good. I bought the CD because I did'nt have a copy of "Center Field" and some other of Fogerty's stuff that he did on his own.
Customer Rating:      Summary: THE LONG ROAD HOME Comment: JOHN FOGERTY HAS MATURED IN VOICE AND IT'S GREAT TO HEAR HIM BE ABLE TO SING CREEDENCE AGAIN. THIS ALBUM IS OUTSTANDING
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Editorial Reviews:
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They were together just five years, and between the potent era of 1969-`71, Creedence Clearwater Revival reached the Top 10 with nine different singles, an accomplishment the band's architect John Fogerty has cracked just once ("The Old Man Down the Road") since CCR's demise in 1972. And now that the three-decade battle between Fogerty and the Fantasy label has ended, the man-and-band reunion comes full circle with a 25-song compilation that packages many of CCR's made-for-radio hits with a sprinkling of solo numbers and live recordings from recent Fogerty tours. Fogerty hasn't penned a whole lot of clunkers, and his CCR catalog sparkles with modernly remastered chooglin' classics like "Bad Moon Rising," "Travelin' Band," "Fortunate Son," "Lookin' Out My Backdoor" and "Have You Ever Seen the Rain." But the non-chronological sequencing is unpredictable, and far too many Creedence gems were left on the cutting room floor to call this package "The Ultimate." --Scott Holter
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