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GOIN' SOUTH

 
Description: Goin' South has compiled over two hours of music containing 35 of the greatest southern rock hits of all time!

Reviews (15):


    The Way the Music Died,
Reviewer: Dave Goldberg       04-07-2001
It's rare that an anthology sold on late night television is definitive, but this one is. It leaves out only a couple of significant groups from this genre _ the Amazing Rhythm Aces and the Atlanta Rhythm Section. More important, it demonstrates how basic this genre is to the roots of American music. It's now been divided into blues, country, rock, and what have you. A lot of good music has been lost because the industry decided to split the market into subcategories.

Example: The Band was never considered southern rock (four of its five members were Canadians.) But the group's music was pure Americana. "Black Betty'' sounds like the North Mississippi All Stars and is 180 degrees from Marshall Tucker and Charlie Daniels. But it fits.

One other note: Lynrd Skynrd was usually dissed by highbrow reviewers despite its wonderful rythymic innovation, particularly in "Sweet Home Alabama.'' The Allmans were beloved. Why? They're very similar.

The music industry again?

I digress.

Buy this. It's far more varied than the theme suggests.

PS _ If they used The Band, they also could have used any one of a number of Grateful Dead Cuts.

Yes, a very diverse genre.




    Southern Rock Extravaganza
Reviewer: Russell Diederich   Littleton, CO    05-08-2003
You can't get any further south than "Goin' South". Seventeen tracks of classic hits from the greatest Southern Rockers found anywhere. The gang is all here, Marshall Tucker, Molly Hatchet, Georgia Satellites, Little Feet, The Allman Brothers, Lynard Skynyrd, and the Charlie Daniels Band. This is one of the better Southern Rock collections that I've seen. The music is good, even though I would have picked a few different songs to represent the bands on this album. Overall, I like the songs, and the bands. This is one of those CDs you plug in and let it rip for a good ol' time. This is a good compilation, no doubt. You'll be in the south in no time.




    THIS CD SOUTHERN ROCKS!
Reviewer: lotlizard_524   Lapeer, Michigan    01-10-2003


This cd is sweet as hell. I bought the two disk-set, which has more songs, but the songs on the one disk set are enough. I live in Michigan, but the first time I heard of this cd I was in the south watching TV. Later that year, I said I gotta get that. It is perfect for driving down south in a car trip. You really get in a mood. Every song is awesome, my favorites are "Sweet Home Alabama", "Devil Went Down To Georgia" "Amie" and Pretty Much everything. if you don't have this cd, I am crying for you.



    Love the CD
Reviewer: Anonymous       08-05-2002
Probably would have like the 2CD set from the tv commerical better but I just love most of the songs. Good rock



     GREAT SOUTHERN ROCK HITS-HOW ABOUT MORE VOLUMES SOON?
Reviewer: Kim K.   Bayonne, New Jersey    05-31-2002
If you really enjoy classic southern rock tunes such as in this fun collection-then I'm sure you will agree with me that there's enough great material left over from not only the bands listed here but from many others as well. I hope someday in the very near future to find at least 3 or 4 more volumes. Whether at home, at the office, in the car or at your next party, this is one CD that once you put it on you & your friends will enjoy. Very highly recommended.



    Cross-over Country Rock, this is the Goods!
Reviewer: Mary Gollihugh   North East, PA    05-04-2002
One of my all time favorite musical forms has been what we term as "Acceleration Music"; and this is it! Very few to skip over, if any.
If you just like music that you can't identify as being in either Rock or Country, this CD is for you, as its follow-up!
Aces! ~ Mariance



    rockin roll at its best
Reviewer: mark newman   Kansas City, KS    09-18-2001

this is a great cd of different artists if you like bands like lynyrd skynyrd to the Band or the Allman Brothers. i would recommend this cd to all you rockers out there.



    Bad music!
Reviewer: Anonymous       06-05-2001
This is the armpit of American music. The only good things on this cd are "Ramblin Man" and the woman on the cover.



    Hayride Down Southern Rock Streets On Classic Compilation
Reviewer: Anthony G Pizza   Florida    04-18-2001
Smartly compiled by Razor & Tie Records (aka "The 70s Preservation Society") and recently certified gold, "Goin' South" is a first-rate drinkin' or driving (not together!) Southern-fried rock compilation. Seven of its 17 tunes rest-stopped Top 10, five in the Top 5. It peeks along the way into the Southern psyche musically and culturally even when its artists aren't all Southern regionally.
It matters little that the Band were Canadians, Joe Walsh was from Ohio (by way of Kansas), or that George Thorogood leads the "Delaware" Destroyers. Songs like "The Night They Drove Old Dixie Down," the Doobie Brothers #1 "Black Water" and the now-cliched "Bad To The Bone" draw from a Southern music and folklore well stretching from Harriet Beecher Stowe and Margaret Mitchell to Robert Johnson's blues and Burt Reynolds' black Trans Am.

You get Paul Bunyanesque humor and macho mythmaking ("Devil Went Down To Georgia," "Tuff Enuff," "Dixie Chicken"), resilient, Confederate-flag waving spirit (Lynyrd Skynyrd's still-fresh "Sweet Home Alabama," Molly Hatchet's boot-tight rock buzzer "Flirtin With Disaster") even relationship restlessness and wanderlust handled poignantly (Marshall Tucker's 1977 "Heard It In A Love Song," "Amie," "Hold On Loosely") and hilariously (Dan Baird having a good ol' boy time yodeling the Georgia Satellites' #2 1986 hit, "Keep Your Hands To Yourself.")

All this is set to some of classic rock's finest intro riffs from genre giants like Walsh, Skynyrd's Ed King, Mountain's Leslie West, Dickie Betts and Les Dudek (trading riffs on "Ramblin' Man"). You'll miss Southern anthems like "Green Grass and High Tides" and "Free Bird," (not to mention Wet Willie's "Keep On Smilin'" and Elvin Bishop's "Fooled Around and Fell In Love" which would have fit here). But they're better saved for the genre's long-overdue box set; besides, no Southern or classic rock LP collection is complete without them. (This set outranks the sadly deleted "South's Greatest Hits" on Phil Walden's even more sadly deleted Capricorn Records.)

Every song here acknowledges Southern blues/country/rock foundation ("Bad To The Bone" is stonewashed Willie Dixon) or taps it directly (Ram Jam's guitar-thick 1977 take on Leadbelly's "Black Betty."). Country stars like Hank Williams Jr., Travis Tritt, and Brooks & Dunn (who recently covered "My Maria") have folded this music back into their styles. So, while not the broadest Southern music map (its hitchhiking, spaghetti-western cover model notwithstanding), "Goin' South" is a fast, fun hayride down dusty, 70s-80s musical side streets. Highly recommended.





    Awesome southern rock!!
Reviewer: Anonymous       04-18-2001
These are the original songs. You'll know and sing along to all of them. Great CD!



    Great collection of songs but poor quality
Reviewer: Sherrill Leslie   Bloomington, Illinois    04-05-2001
Goin' South has a great collection of songs. If you read the list of songs and love this kind of music this is a great CD for you. I love every song on this CD so I snapped up a copy right away. But when I got it home and listened to it I was so disappointed at the production quality. It sounds like they dubbed all these classic rock songs right off an 8-track player. It was so bad I started adjusting the knobs on my stereo thinking something had broken! I switched to another CD just to compare and verified the problem is in the recording. Also, they package this in a cheaper than usual jewel case there is no inside jacket and the cover is printed on cheap paper. I would expect this if it were a... bargain bin special but not at this price!




    classic southern rock collection
Reviewer: Mr. Alan Towne   Douglas, Georgia    01-25-2001
If you want the best of classic southern rock,this is the cd for you.And a great cd to add to any collection from any range of music you might have.



    BEST CD EVER
Reviewer: REBECCA   BALTIMORE    01-23-2001
I LOVE TRIS CD MORE THAN ANYTHING IT IS ALMOST ALL OF MY FAVORITE SONGS ALL PUT TOGETHER.



    Southern stars shine again
Reviewer: Anonymous       01-23-2001

Goin' South is a must-have collection for all southern rock fans. While your average various artist CD will contain several 'hit-and-miss' tracks, every track on this disc is a winner. Opening with George Thorogood's 'Bad to the Bone', you know your on a fun-filled journey, where you'll see the Black Water in Sweet Home Alabama. You'll also see some very lovely ladies, namely 'Amie', 'Black Betty', 'My Maria', and you'll be Flirting With Disaster with the Mississippi Queen. Buy this great 17-track collection today! (But remember, keep your hands to yourself).



    Highway Tunes
Reviewer: Thomas Magnum   New Jersey    01-23-2001
Goin' South is a collection of southern rock songs that contains all the usual supects. "Sweet Home Alabama", "Ramblin' Man", "Dixie Chicken", "Hold On Loosely", "Keep Your Hands To Yourself" and "The Devil Went Down To Georgia" are southern rock staples and anthems. Even though you've probably heard these songs hundreds of times each, they still can excite. I'd have to argue that songs like "Bad To The Bone", "Mississippi Queen", "Rocky Mountain Way" & "The Night They Drove Old Dixie Down" don't really qualify as true southern rock, but they are all great songs. Goin' South is a great cd to pop into the car stereo for a road trip.



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