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The Cate Brothers - Play By The Rules FLAC

The Cate Brothers - Play By The Rules FLAC
Performer:
The Cate Brothers
Album:
Play By The Rules
Style:
Blues Rock
Released:
2004
Country:
US
Label:
Louisiana Red Hot Records
Catalog:
LRHR-1160
FLAC size:
2887 mb
MP3 size:
1041 mb
WMA size:
1873 mb


Tracklist


1The Shape I'm In
2She Don't Play By The Rules
3Back To Memphis
4Let's Start All Over Again
5Out On A Limb
6This Side Of Heaven
7Why Oh Why
8Child Of The Wild Blue Yonder
9Think
10Yield Not To Temptation
11Wake Up Call


Credits


  • ProducerJimmy Thackery


Barcodes


  • Barcode: 6 08691 11602 6


Album


The Cate Brothers - She Don't Play By The Rules. The Cate Brothers - Let's Start All Over Again. The Cate Brothers - Out On A Limb. The Cate Brothers - This Side Of Heaven. The Cate Brothers - Child Of The Wild Blue Yonder. The Cate Brothers - Think. The Cate Brothers - Wake Up Call. The Cate Brothers - The Shape I'm In. The Cate Brothers - Back To Memphis. The Cate Brothers - Why Oh Why. Update Required To play the media you will need to either update your browser to a recent version or update your Flash plugin. Play by the Rules doesn't break any new ground for the duo, but in an age of flash, shock, and glitz, the album's steady, easy professionalism is most welcome, a bit like having an old friend stop by for an evening of conversation. The Cate Brothers are the singer-songwriter-musician duo of Earl and Ernie Cate, twin brothers from Fayetteville, Arkansas, who in the mid 1960s became performers of southern soul music at clubs and dances throughout the regional South of the United States. Both brothers are singers, with Earl on guitar and Ernie on piano. They became prolific recording artists during the mid to late 1970s, and again since the mid 1990s. View wiki. The Cate Brothers are the singer-songwriter-musician duo of Earl and Ernie Cate, twin brothers from Fayetteville, Arkansas, who in the mid 1960s became performers o. The Cate Brothers are the American singer-songwriter-musician duo of Earl and Ernest Ernie Cate born December 26, 1942, twin brothers from Fayetteville, Arkansas. In the mid-1960s, they became performers of country soul music at clubs and dances in Arkansas and elsewhere in the mid-South of the United States. Both brothers are singers, with Earl playing guitar and Ernie playing piano. They were recording artists during the mid- to late-1970s and again from the mid-1990s through the first decade of. Because our MP3s have no DRM, you can play it on any device that supports MP3, even on your iPod KBPS stands for kilobits per second and the number of KBPS represents the audio quality of the MP3s. Here's the range of quality: 128 kbps good, 192 kbps great, 256 kbps awesome and 320 kbps perfect. Please vote. Add album to Cart. The Cate Brothers 2009. The Cate Brothers, who rocketed to fame in 1979 with the rocker Union Man and later teamed with Levon Helm in The Band, have been content the past decade touring from their digs in Arkansas and turning out solid if not noteworthy albums every so often. Play by the Rules dislodges the band from that rut. Behind keyboardist Ernie Cates' sweet, sincere vocals, brother Earl's crisp guitar and stellar songwriting and song selections, Play by the Rules is clearly one of the best blue-eyed soul albums released in several years and contends with any soul album of any color of eye. Play By the Rules. The Cate Brothers Format: Audio CD. I am not as familiar with this cd as I am with another of the Cate Brothers older cd's. I am sure I will grow to love it as much as their original. I am happy to find some of their older music is finally being offered for sale. by The Cate Brothers. Released: April 27, 2004. Track Listing. She Don't Play by the Rules. The Cate Brothers released it on the album Play by the Rules in 2004. It was covered by David Egan and The Cate Brothers. Released on. Play by the Rules Album April 27, 2004. The Cate Brothers are the singer-songwriter-musician duo of Earl and Ernie Cate, twin brothers from Fayetteville, Arkansas, who in the mid-1960s became