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Commander Cody And His Lost Planet Airmen ‎- Hot To Trot (2013)⭐

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Commander Cody And His Lost Planet Airmen ‎- Hot To Trot (2013)⭐

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Category: Music
Total size: 339.04 MB
Added: 2025-03-10 23:38:58

Share ratio: 0 seeders, 4 leechers
Info Hash: 3A26A17378030D129F696A521791BF30DC0B065A
Last updated: 1.9 days ago

Description:

Artist: Commander Cody And His Lost Planet Airmen Title: Hot To Trot Year Of Release: 2002/2013 Label: Akarma Genre: Rockabilly, Rock & Roll, Country Rock Quality: Flac (image, .cue, log) Total Time: 56:03 Tracklist: 01. Truck Stop Rock 02. Rip It Up 03. Back To Tennessee 04. Seeds And Stems 05. Lost In The Ozone 06. Hot Rod Lincoin 07. What's The Matter Now ? 08. Beat Me Daddy Eight To The Bar 09. Rock That Boogie 10. Smoke ! Smoke ! Smoke ! (That Cigarette) 11. Sister Sue 12. Down To Seeds And Stems Again Blues 13. Git' It 14. Oh Momma Momma 15. Cryin' Time 16. Riot In Cell Block #9 17. Willin' Long before country acquired an "alt" to distinguish the roots material from the product of Nashville, there was Commander Cody & His Lost Planet Airmen. Long before it became fashionable, they were a bunch of hippies rocking up the honky tonk music. While their audience was mostly the longhair crowd, as evidenced by the pot anthem "Down to Seeds and Stems Again Blues," they could also create some mass appeal, and even scored a hit single with their souped-up version of "Hot Rod Lincoln." Mostly, though, it was about the boogie, whether covering some old jive like "Beat Me Daddy Eight to the Bar" or their own "Truck Stop Rock." Moreover, they could pick like the best players on the country scene, as they show on "Rock That Boogie," or make the tears flow into the beer, as on a wonderful cover of Lowell George's trucking anthem, "Willin'." Successful as they were -- and they were a major draw live, able to whip up a fever in an audience -- they were ahead of their time. Had they arrived in the '90s as fully formed as they were at the beginning of the '70s, they'd have ruled the alt-country scene. This compilation draws from their most glorious years, 1971-1975, and there's simply not a dud to be found here -- no filler, not a second wasted. If you're at all curious as to what the fuss was about and where the hippies and Buck Owens intersected, start here