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Rock / Blues

J.J. Cale - Cocaine mp3

J.J. Cale - Cocaine mp3

Performer: J.J. Cale
Title: Cocaine
Country: Germany
Catalog Number: 11 662 AT
Label: Shelter Records
Released: Jan 1977
Style: Blues Rock, Country Rock
Rating: 4.4
Votes: 957

Tracklist

1Cocaine2:51
2Hey Baby3:16

Versions

CategoryArtistTitle (Format)LabelCategoryCountryYear
SR-62002J.J. Cale Hey Baby ‎(7", Single)Shelter RecordsSR-62002US1976
11 662 ATJ.J. Cale Cocaine ‎(7", Single)Shelter Records11 662 ATSwitzerland1977
K-6629J.J. Cale Hey Baby ‎(7")Shelter RecordsK-6629Australia1976
R-62002J.J. Cale Cocaine ‎(7", Single)Shelter RecordsR-62002US1976
K-6629J.J. Cale Cocaine ‎(7", Single, RE)Shelter RecordsK-6629Australia1976

Credits

  • ProducerAudie Ashworth
  • Written-ByJ. J. Cale

Notes

℗ 1976 Shelter Recording Co., Inc.
Audigram Music (BMI)
Ariola - Eurodisc GmbH., München

Barcodes

  • Rights Society: GEMA
  • Label Code: LC 1766
  • Matrix / Runout (Runout A): 11662 A-1/77S
  • Matrix / Runout (Runout B): 11662 B-1/77S

Companies

  • Record Company – Ariola Eurodisc GmbH
  • Phonographic Copyright (p) – Shelter Recording Company Inc.
  • Published By – Audigram Music
  • Pressed By – Sonopress

Video

Album

Cocaine is a song written and recorded in 1976 by singer-songwriter J. The song was popularized by Eric Clapton after his cover version was released on the 1977 album Slowhand. Cale's version of Cocaine was a number one hit in New Zealand for a single week and became the seventh best-selling single of 1977. Glyn Johns produced the Clapton recording, which was released on the 1977 album Slowhand. A live version of Cocaine from the album Just One Night charted on the Billboard Hot. Текст песни: If you want to hang out you gotta take her out Cocaine. If you want to get the video for Cocaine from J. Cale's Troubadour for free, and see the artwork, lyrics and similar artists. Cale was one of the originators of the Tulsa Sound, a loose genre drawing on blues, rockabilly, country, and jazz influences. Cale's personal style has often been described as laid back. His songs have been performed by a number of other musicians including After Midnight and Cocaine by Eric Clapton,Cajun Moon by Randy Crawford, Clyde and Louisiana Women by read more. John Weldon Cale 5 December 1938 26 July 2013, known as JJ Cale or J. Cale, was a Grammy Award-winning American singer-songwriter and musician. UMG от лица компании Universal International Music B. LatinAutor - PeerMusic, ARESA, CMRRA, BMG Rights Management US, LLC, LatinAutor, Muserk Rights Management, AMRA и другие авторские общества 11. Cocaine chords. by J. Album version in C with precise timing. Album: Troubadour 1976. x stands for a dead note. C C B C x B C C B C x B C C B C x B C C B C x B. Lyrics J. Cale - Cocaine. Cocaine If you want to hang out, you've got to take her out, cocaine If you want to get down, get down on the ground, cocaine She don't lie, she don't lie, she don't lie, cocaine If you got bad news, you want to kick them blues, cocaine When your day is done and you got to run, cocaine. She don't lie, she don't lie, she don't lie, cocaine If your thing is gone and you want to ride on, cocaine Don't forget this fact, you can't get it back, cocaine She don't lie, she don't lie, she don't lie, coca. JJ Cale - Cocaine Опыт Рока. Год 1976, Nazareth - Cocaine, Cocaine cover , Eric Clapton & - Cocaine и другие скачать в mp3 и слушать музыку онлайн бесплатно. Cocaine J. Cale cover - Spiral 3. Cale cover - Nazareth. Cocaine JJ Cale Cover, 1977 - Eric Clapton. Produced by Audie Ashworth. Album Troubadour. Cocaine Lyrics. If you want to hang out You've got to take her out Cocaine If you want to get down Down on the ground Cocaine. She don't lie She don't lie She don't lie Cocaine. If you got bad news You want to kick them blues Cocaine When your day is done Want to run Cocaine. Cocaine was released as a single in 1977, before the best-known version was recorded later that year by Eric Clapton. Cocaine Track Info. Written By J. Cover By. Cocaine by Eric Clapton. Cale John Weldon Cale Cocaine lyrics: If you want to hang out, you've got to take her out, cocaine, If you w. Artist: J. Cale John Weldon Cale. Translations: Finnish, Turkish. A A. If you want to hang out, you've got to take her out, cocaine. If you want to get down, get down on the ground, cocaine. She don't lie, she don't lie, she don't lie, cocaine. If you got bad news, you want to kick them blues, cocaine. When your day is done and you got to run, cocaine. If your thing is gone and you want to ride on, cocaine. Cocaine from J. Cale 1976 7inch. And other albums from J. Cale are available on sale at Recordsale. More music by J

Reviews (1)
NI_Rak
As originally envisioned by J.J. Cale, the song “Cocaine,” made famous by the Eric Clapton cover, was to be a jazz based number, though Cale was encouraged by his producer Audie Ashworth to turn it into a rocker. With that in mind, Cale was just unable to stray far from his Oklahoma blues roots, keeping the song simple, unlike the complex chords Clapton washed the song with.

Cale did not see this as an anti-drug or anti-cocaine song in the manner that Clapton did, who said, "It’s no good to write a deliberate anti-drug song and hope that it will catch. Because the general thing is that people will be upset by that. It would disturb them to have someone else shoving something down their throat. So the best thing to do is offer something that seems ambiguous, that on study or on reflection actually can be seen to be “anti" which the song 'Cocaine' is actually an anti-cocaine song. If you study it or look at it with a little bit of thought ... from a distance ... or as it goes by ... it just sounds like a song about cocaine. But actually, it is quite cleverly anti-cocaine."

Cale had something more ambiguous in mind as he brilliantly traces the aspects of getting high on cocaine in this number. The initial lyrics [and most people only know a smattering of words along with the chorus] glamorize the use of the drug, especially in referencing cocaine to that of a woman. There is not a single aspect of the song that resembles anything Eric Clapton maintains, the song is essentially about cocaine and what it does or doesn’t do. The song expresses the notion that if things are great in life, cocaine only makes it better, and if you’re feeling down, cocaine will pick you up, yet as the song does say, “She don’t lie, She don’t lie, cocaine” … which essentially means that cocaine is a short term good time slap on the back that doesn’t promise to last long or change anything, it just is what it is at that moment in time.

Anyone who’s partaken in the substance certainly knows that the first hit is the best, and for as long as the package lasts, you’ll be chasing that first hit for the rest of the night.

Regardless of all of this, the song is stunning in it’s simplicity, it’s ability to move on a jazz, rock or blues level, with lyrics and instrumentation that manage to draw the listener in with an outlaw vibe of righteous indignation, smacking the faces of straight-laced Americans who could not, or would not, open their minds to expansion. Cale’s version of “Cocaine” is just like the white powder itself, it doesn’t promise anything, there are no hidden agendas, it’s just a steady rolling riff that gets under your skin and ignites a mile wide smile … and like cocaine, will have you chasing another listen.

*** The Fun Facts: This wasn’t the first of J.J. Cale’s songs that Eric Clapton covered, bending a fine rendition of “After Midnight.”

Clapton was attempting to kick his heroin habit by using cocaine, but he was just substituting one substance for another, both equally dangerous, so yes, Clapton was viewing the song from an addict’s point of view, failing to realize, or unable to do so, that drugs can be a great deal of fun and a source of inspiration, with the caveat being that while the circus is a fun place to visit, one doesn’t need to live there.

Review by Jenell Kesler

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