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Tuesday, October 11, 2022

The Don Harrison Band-The Don Harrison Band (1976)

The Don Harrison Band was a short-lived group popularly known in North America for featuring two of Creedence Clearwater Revival's most famous members: bassist Stu Cook and drummer Doug Clifford. Along with guitarist Don Harrison and fellow guitarist Russell DaShiell, they formed The Don Harrison Band in 1975, releasing the albums "The Don Harrison Band" in 1976 and "Red Hot" the following year, both on Atlantic Records. Their self-titled debut is undoubtedly their best recording, an album that subtly evokes the country rock, swamp rock, and rhythm and blues influences of Creedence Clearwater Revival. On this first album, standout tracks include the swamp rock anthem "Sixteen Tons," undoubtedly the most tangible example of the Creedence sound, along with the fun "Romance," the southern-tinged "Who I Really Am," the rock and roll "Rock and Roll Records," the folky "Fame and Fortune," the blues rock "Sometimes Loving You," and the melodic "Living Another Day." The album's strong commercial reception led to them opening for The Rolling Stones at the 1976 Knebworth Festival. After the second album, the band definitively broke up, with Cook and Clifford joining Southern Pacific, before later reforming their old band as Creedence Clearwater Revisited, but without brothers John and Tom Fogerty.

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