Keepin' The Horse Between Me And The Ground Seasick Steve

Album info

Album-Release:
2016

HRA-Release:
17.09.2018

Album including Album cover

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  • 1 Keep That Horse Between You And The Ground 05:44
  • 2 Walkin' Blues 04:18
  • 3 Bullseye 03:44
  • 4 Gypsy Blood 03:00
  • 5 Shipwreck Love 05:25
  • 6 Hell 06:11
  • 7 What A Thang 04:27
  • 8 Grass Is Greener 03:31
  • 9 Don't Take It Away 03:35
  • 10 Lonely Road 04:02
  • 11 Hard Knocks 03:50
  • 12 Maybe I Might 04:10
  • 13 Gentle On My Mind 03:46
  • 14 Ride 02:50
  • 15 Everybody's Talkin' At Me 02:55
  • 16 Walkin' Man 02:57
  • 17 Southern Biscuits 02:16
  • 18 Gonna Get There 03:56
  • 19 Signed D.C. 03:04
  • 20 I'm So Lonesome 03:42
  • Total Runtime 01:17:23

Info for Keepin' The Horse Between Me And The Ground



Eighth studio album from Seasick Steve, a blues musician from Oakland, CA - a great mix of boogie, blues, rock, Americana folk music. It's been 10 years since he first appeared on the BBC as part of Jools Holland's 'Hootenanny,' a legendary performance which turned him into a household name overnight with his debut solo album, Dog House Music.

Seasick Steve, vocals, guitar



Seasick Steve
Wold was born in Oakland, California. When he was four years old, his parents split up. His father played boogie-woogie piano and at five or six years old Wold tried to learn but couldn’t. At age eight, he learned to play the guitar (he later found out that it was blues) from K. C. Douglas, who worked at his grandfather’s garage. Douglas wrote the song “Mercury Blues” and used to play with Tommy Johnson. Would leave home at 13 to avoid abuse at the hands of his stepfather, and lived rough and on the road in Tennessee, Mississippi and elsewhere, until 1973. He would travel long distances by hopping freight trains, looking for work as a farm labourer or in other seasonal jobs, often living as a hobo. At various times, Wold worked as a carnie, cowboy and a migrant worker. ...

This album contains no booklet.

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