Frogtoon Music

Artist Biography For Creedence Clearwater Revival

Creedence Clearwater Revival Often Referred To As Creedence Or CCR Was An American Rock Band Active In The Late 1960s And Early 1970s Which Consisted Of Lead Vocalist Lead Guitarist And Primary Songwriter John Fogerty His Brother Rhythm Guitarist Tom Fogerty Bassist Stu Cook And Drummer Doug Clifford. These Members Played Together Since 1959 First As The Blue Velvets Then As The Golliwogs. Their Musical Style Encompassed The Roots Rock Swamp Rock And Blues Rock Genres. They Played In A Southern Rock Style Despite Their San Francisco Bay Area Origin With Lyrics About Bayous Catfish The Mississippi River And Other Popular Elements Of Southern United States Iconography As Well As Political And Socially Conscious Lyrics About Topics Including The Vietnam War. The Band Performed At The 1969 Woodstock Festival In Upstate New York. The Group Disbanded Acrimoniously In Late 1972 After Four Years Of Chart-Topping Success. Tom Fogerty Had Officially Left The Previous Year And His Brother John Was At Odds With The Remaining Members Over Matters Of Business And Artistic Control All Of Which Resulted In Subsequent Lawsuits Among The Former Bandmates. Fogerty's Ongoing Disagreements With Fantasy Records Owner Saul Zaentz Created Further Protracted Court Battles And John Fogerty Refused To Perform With The Two Other Surviving Members At CCR's 1993 Induction Into The Rock And Roll Hall Of Fame. Creedence Clearwater Revival's Music Is Still A Staple Of US Radio Airplay The Band Has Sold 26 Million Albums In The United States Alone. Rolling Stone Ranked Them 82nd On Its Rolling Stone's 100 Greatest Artists Of All Time List. John Fogerty Doug Clifford And Stu Cook Met At Portola Junior High School In El Cerrito California. Calling Themselves The Blue Velvets The Trio Began Playing Instrumentals And "juke Box Standards" As Well As Backing Fogerty's Older Brother Tom At Live Gigs And In The Recording Studio. Tom Soon Joined The Band And In 1964 They Signed With Fantasy Records An Independent Jazz Label In San Francisco That Had Released Cast Your Fate To The Wind A National Hit For Jazz Pianist Vince Guaraldi. The Record's Success Was The Subject Of A National Educational Television Special Which Prompted Budding Songwriter John Fogerty To Contact The Label. For The Band's First Release Fantasy Co-Owner Max Weiss Renamed The Group The Golliwogs After The Children's Literary Character Golliwogg . Bandmembers' Roles And The Instruments They Played Changed During This Period. Stu Cook Switched From Piano To Bass Guitar And Tom Fogerty From Lead Vocals To Rhythm Guitar John Became The Band's Lead Vocalist And Primary Songwriter. In Tom Fogerty's Words "I Could Sing But John Had A Sound!".

Frogtoon Music - Song Info: Down on the Corner

"Down On The Corner" Is A Song By The Creedence Clearwater Revival. It Appeared On Their Fourth Studio Album Willy And The Poor Boys 1969 . The Song Peaked At #3 On The Billboard Hot 100 On December 20 1969. The Flip Side "Fortunate Son" Reached #14 On The United States Charts On November 22 1969 The Week Before Billboard Changed Its Methodology On Double-Sided Hits. In Canada The Single Reached #4 In December 1969 And #5 In New Zealand. The Song Performed Better In Much Of Continental Europe Where It Made #2 In Germany #9 In Austria #8 In The Netherlands #17 In Flemish-Speaking Belgium And #6 In French-Speaking Belgium Than In The United Kingdom Where It Stalled At #31. The Song Depicts The Fictional Band Willy And The Poor Boys And How They Play On Street Corners To Cheer People Up And Ask For Nickels. Songwriter John Fogerty Explained How The Lyrics Were Derived "{I} Was Kind Of Inspired By Seeing An Advertisement In The Paper One Day ” He Says. “It Was An Ad From Disney That Said In Great Big Letters ‘Winnie The Pooh’. Something In My Brain Said ‘Winnie The Pooh And The Pooh Boys’. Obviously That Was Close To ‘Willy And The Poor Boys’. As I Began To Develop This Idea It Turned Into Music In That Weird Mystical Almost Uncontrollable Way Music Comes To Songwriters. Winnie The Pooh Is Still My Favorite Character Who I’ve Shared With My Daughter Kelsy Since The Day She Was Born Though She's Growing Out Of It. But I'm Not." The Song Makes Reference To A Harmonica Washboard A Kazoo A Kalamazoo Guitar And A Gut Bass. In A 1969 Appearance On The Music Scene The Band Performed The Song Dressed Up As “Willy And The Poor Boys”. Stu Cook Played A Gut Bass Doug Clifford The Washboard And Tom Fogerty The Kalamazoo Which Mimicked The Appearance Of The Band As They Appear On The Album Cover. Billboard Described The Single As Having "an Infectious Calypso Beat."

50 Similar Tracks:

50 Top Music Tracks For Creedence Clearwater Revival - Frogtoon Music

50 Top Music Lyrics For Creedence Clearwater Revival - Frogtoon Music

HOME PLAYLIST-MIX
POPULAR TRACKS MIXES ALBUMS
Video 1 : 50