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Steve Forbert - Jackrabbit Slim/Alive On Arrival 40th (Aniv)

Details

Format: CD
Label: ROLLING TIDE RECORDS
Rel. Date: 08/14/2026
UPC: 840526512393

Jackrabbit Slim/Alive On Arrival 40th (Aniv)
Artist: Steve Forbert
Format: CD
New: Available $24.98
Wish

Formats and Editions

DISC: 1

1. Disc 1 Goin' Down to Laurel
2. Steve Forbert's Midsummer Night's Toast
3. Thinkin'
4. What Kinda Guy?
5. It Isn't Gonna Be That Way
6. Big City Cat
7. Grand Central Station, March 18, 1977
8. Tonight, I Feel So Far Away from Home
9. Settle Down
10. You Cannot Win If You Do Not Play
11. It's Been a Long Time
12. House of Cards
13. Song for the South (Time's Gonna Take Me Back)
14. Steve Forbert's Moon River
15. Lonesome Cowboy Bill's Song
16. Disc 2 Romeo's Tune
17. The Sweet Love That You Give
18. I'm in Love with You
19. Say Goodbye to Little Jo
20. Wait
21. Make It All So Real
22. Baby
23. Complications
24. Sadly Sorta Like a Soap Opera
25. January 23-30, 1978
26. The Oil Song
27. Witch Blues
28. Oh Camile
29. Smoky Windows
30. Poor Boy
31. Romeo's Tune (Recorded Live at the Palladium, NYC, November 1979)

More Info:

2020 two disc set with Alive on Arrival and Jackrabbit Slim, plus bonus tracks on each disc. "Released in 1979, Jackrabbit Slim, Forbert's follow-up to his 1978 debut Alive On Arrival, was the album that introduced the Mississippi-born performer to a wide audience. "Romeo's Tune," provided the impetus for that. In an era which tended to favor New Wave sounds, Forbert's eloquently romantic song managed to break through for a #11 spot on the pop charts. That brought people to the rest of Jackrabbit Slim, earning Forbert a loyal following among fans of intelligent, heartfelt singer-songwriter output." - American Songwriter "Listening to the earnest folksiness of his debut, it's hard to imagine Forbert tramping about the mean streets of New York City and dropping in to play at CBGB. Steve Burgh's production adds welcome punch to the recordings, but Forbert's guitar, harmonica and vocals retain a folk-singer's intimacy in front of the guitar, bass, drums, piano and organ. Incredibly, both albums were recorded live-in-the-studio with no overdubs, an impressive feat for a road-seasoned band, but even more so for a young artist's initial studio work. The recording method pays additional dividends in the completeness of the bonus tracks; as complete as the original albums have always felt, the bonus tracks assimilate easily and must have been tough to omit at the time." - No Depression
        
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