1.Lovers curse 2.Come on little mama 3.Woodpecker rock 4.If you want it enough 5.Forty nine women 6.Crazy about you baby 7.Bertha Lou 8.Servant of love 9.The itch 10.Got love if you want it 11.Country cattin' 12.Hip hip baby 13.You can do no wrong 14.Young and wild 15.Please give me something 16.Gotta lotta that 17.Good show but no go 18.That depends on you 19.A six pack to go 20.What a dolly 21.Cool coold daddy 22.Let's have a ball 23.Love is my business 24.Joe 90
Rudy Lacrioux & The All Stars
British Rockabilly band made from the remnants of various other bands like The Bootleggers and Rusti Steel and The Tin Tax.
"This is a disc where the first song makes you second guess if you should have bought this but as soon as Rudy La Crioux starts belting out 'Crazy Little Mama' you know that you did well to get this disc as it is a raging slab of plastic that is simply awesome from tracks 2-24. Rudy possesses great rough vocals that remind me of rockin' old timer Mickey Hawks. Every song is awesome with a good selection of covers. There are nice vocal harmonies where they are needed and steel guitar here and there, adding a hillbilly touch to a few songs. They even do a great version of stroll classic 'Bertha Lou' that would do Johnny Faire proud. This is an extremely talented group of musicians who are able to play these songs just like the original artists did. Totally solid musicianship and singing on each track with good clean recording that showcases every player very well. Rudy and his Allstars pick tunes that represent the hard rockin' side to original rockabilly that people not into this scene wouldn't know about. This is one of those CDs that will stay in your changer for a while because it is so damn good!" The Rockabilly Review
Rudy LaCrioux's first gig was 5 September 1998 at The Bull in Bristol. They gigged steadily through the year, three or four a month, gaining in confidence, improving all the time (so they were told!) and having fun. They had their first big break when they got in on a Cleethorpes weekender 8 October 1999, but unfortunately the promoter saw them back in December 1998 when they hadn't been going long and were fairly commercial and did a lot of rock and roll. Now, ten months later, they were very rockabilly and the commercial stuff had all but gone, so basically they would have been better off at a rockabilly weekender and not a rock'n'roll one..... After that it was back to earth with a bump and gigging as usual. They got to know a couple of DJs, Hound Dog Jim and Wildcat Pete, who thought that they were great. Jim booked them for his club in Bishop Stortford in April and through the bush telegraph they got several gigs in and around the Capital. As well as the gigging, they were also recording our first CD, 'Let's have a ball', which was finished in September and they've been doing their best to promote it. It's been going great guns at the record hops and they've been selling them at gigs. From band bio 2001