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1991: Greg & Steve Live! in Concert; 1993: Greg and Steve Musical Adventures (music video compilation) 1994: We All Live Together, Vol. 5; 1995: Rockin' Down the Road; 1997: Big Fun (which won a Children's Music Web Award in 1998) 2000: Kids in Action; 2002: Fun & Games; 2004: Ready Set Move; 2006: Shake, Rattle & Rock; 2006: Greg & Steve: Live ...
Although it was not released as a single A-side, "Rockin' Down the Highway" became a popular album-oriented rock radio song. [7] [8] [9] [10]Writing for Rolling Stone in 1972, Steve Ditlea praised the "piano-driven" "Rockin' Down the Highway" as one of multiple "fine songs" that the Doobie Brothers added to the rock genre on Toulouse Street.
Greg Robertson of the Hartford Courant similarly found the song to be in the Doobie Brothers' traditional style, with "fast tempo, multiple drumming, standard guitar riffs and group vocals." [ 3 ] On the other hand, David Guo of the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette remarked that the song's "warbling and syncopated rhythms" were reminiscent of Steely Dan ...
That Christmas, Lee's first as a major superstar, "Rockin' Around the Christmas Tree" finally made it to the Hot 100, going all the way to No. 14. Rick Diamond/Getty Brenda Lee in 2015.
Chaquico's original recording of his jazz track "Sacred Ground" was included on the original Harley Davidson Road Song Collection in 1994, alongside classic rock songs such as "Born to Be Wild", "Rockin' Down the Highway" and a song by his former band, Jefferson Starship, "Ride the Tiger".
A demonic California dad has been arrested for allegedly beheading his 1-year-old son Friday in an early-morning frenzy of violence that also injured his wife and her mother, according to police.
People who took Zepbound, Eli Lilly’s weight loss drug, shed more pounds than those on Novo Nordisk’s Wegovy in a head-to-head clinical trial, Lilly said in a news release Wednesday.
Rockin’ Down the Highway: The Wildlife Concert is the second double live album by American rock band The Doobie Brothers, released in 1996 (see 1996 in music). The concerts were performed to benefit the Wildlife Conservation Society , hence the album's title.