I started to collect C C R from the very beginning. This was the first album I acquired.
Ihr allererstes Album.
CCR fan Hans
I started collecting and liking CCR with the very first vinyl album,
simlpy called "Creedence Clearwater Revival" including "Suzie Q".
Some more albums followed, for example "Bayou County"
with the wonderful "Proud Mary" and "Cosmo's Factory"
plus a lot of 45 singles.
Then I continued collecting CCR's music on CD's.
A fascinating groovy and mighty kind of music, going deep down..
CCR CHRONICLE 2
In my archives there is some John Fogerty video material from his solo
concerts, mighty fine, but singing together with CCR was better.
My personal favorite: "SWEET HITCH-HIKER".
Creedence Clearwater Revival fand ich vom ersten Moment an gut.
Beim ersten Album, das ich kaufte und das den einfachen Titel "Creedence
Clearwater Revival" trug, es enthielt z.B. "Suzie Q", sprang der Funke über.
CCR CHRONICLE 1
Weitere Alben wie z.B. "Bayou Country" mit dem genialen Song
"Proud Mary" und "Cosmo's Factory" sowie reichlich 45 er
Singles folgten.
C C R
Eine faszinierende mächtige und tiefgehende Musik.
CCR - CREEDENCE COUNTRY
Ich kam auch nicht an "PROUD MARY" und "HEY TONIGHT" vorbei, das sind absolut faszinierende Titel einer Ausnahme - Band, die nur ein Mal alle 50 Jahre auftaucht und abräumt.
CCR - WILLY AND THE POOR BOYS
Irgendwie kamen sie wie ein Unwetter in die Musikszene
Green River - 40th Anniversary Edition, Remastered
Live At Woodstock 16.08.1969, Bootleg
Live In Europe
Mardi Gras
Pendulum
Pendulum - 40th Anniversary Edition, Remastered
Suzie Q
The Best Of (1998)
The Best Of Creedence Clearwater Revival, 1968
The Concert
The Long Road Home - John Fogerty - The Ultima Collection
The Singles Collection, 2 CD
Willy And The Poor Boys
Willy And The Poor Boys - 40th Anniversary Edition, Remastered
At a time when rock was evolving further and further away from the forces that had made the music possible in the first place, Creedence Clearwater Revival brought things back to their roots with their concise synthesis of rockabilly, swamp pop, R&B, and country. Though CCR was very much a group in their tight, punchy arrangements, their vision was very much singer, songwriter, guitarist, and leader John Fogerty's. Fogerty's classic compositions for Creedence both evoked enduring images of Americana and reflected burning social issues of the day. The band's genius was their ability to accomplish this with the economic, primal power of a classic rockabilly ensemble.
The key elements of Creedence had been woodshedding in bar bands for about a decade before their breakthrough to national success in the late '60s. John's older brother Tom formed the Blue Velvets in the late '50s in El Cerrito, CA, a tiny suburb across the bay from San Francisco. By the mid-'60s, with a few hopelessly obscure recordings under their belt, they'd signed to Fantasy, releasing several singles as the Golliwogs that went nowhere. In fact, there's little promise to be found on those early efforts, primarily because Tom, not John, was doing most of the singing. The group only found themselves when John took firm reigns over the band's direction, singing and writing virtually all of their material.
On their first album as Creedence Clearwater Revival in 1968, the group played it both ways, offering extended, quasi-psychedelic workouts of the '50s classics "I Put a Spell on You" and "Suzie Q." The latter song became their first big hit, but the band didn't really bloom until "Proud Mary," a number-two single in early 1969 that demonstrated John's talent at tapping into Southern roots music and imagery with a natural ease. It was the start of a torrent of classic hits from the gritty, Little Richard-inspired singer over the next two years, including "Bad Moon Rising," "Green River," "Down on the Corner," "Travelin' Band," "Who'll Stop the Rain," "Up Around the Bend," and "Lookin' Out My Back Door."
Creedence also made good albums, but their true forte was as a singles band -- their LPs contained some filler, both in the forms of average original material and straightforward covers of rock & roll chestnuts. When the Beatles broke up in early 1970, CCR was the only other act that provided any competition in the fine art of crafting bold, super-catchy artistic statements that soared to the upper reaches of the charts every three or four months. Although they hailed from the San Francisco area, they rarely succumbed to the psychedelic indulgences of the era. John Fogerty also proved adept at voicing the concerns of the working class in songs like "Fortunate Son," as well as partying with as much funk as any white rock band would muster on "Travelin' Band" and "Down on the Corner."
With John Fogerty holding such a strong upper hand, Creedence couldn't be said to have been a democratic unit, and Fogerty's dominance was to sow the seeds of the group's quick dissolution. Tom Fogerty left in 1971 (recording a few unremarkable solo albums of his own), reducing the band to a trio. John allowed drummer Doug Clifford and bassist Stu Cook equal shares of songwriting and vocal time on the group's final album, Mardi Gras (1972), which proved conclusively that Fogerty's songs and singing were necessary to raise CCR above journeyman status.
It was John Fogerty, of course, who produced the only notable work after the quartet broke up. Even his solo outings, though, were erratic and, for nearly ten years, nonexistent as he became embroiled in a web of business disputes with Fantasy Records. His 1984 album Centerfield proved he could still rock in the vintage Creedence mode when the spirit moved him, but Tom Fogerty's death in 1990 ended any hopes of a CCR reunion with the original members intact.