Live From Austin, TX (John Mayall Album) - Track Listing

Track Listing

  1. "I Want to Go" (Lenoir) 3:51
  2. "Ain't That Lovin' You Baby" (Reed) 6:46
  3. "Maydell" (Haynes, Neel) 4:05
  4. "Wake Up Call" (Egan, Lewis) 5:04
  5. "I'm a Sucker for Love" (Mayall) 7:13
  6. "Nature's Disappearing" (Mayall) 5:38
  7. "I Could Cry" (Blakemore) 7:13
  8. "The Bear" (Mayall) 7:39
  9. "Mail Order Mystics (Smither) 8:25
John Mayall & the Bluesbreakers
  • John Mayall
  • Eric Clapton
  • Jack Bruce
  • Peter Green
  • John McVie
  • Mick Fleetwood
  • Hughie Flint
  • Mick Taylor
  • Colin Allen
  • Don "Sugarcane" Harris
  • Harvey Mandel
  • Larry Taylor
  • Aynsley Dunbar
  • Dick Heckstall-Smith
  • Andy Fraser
  • Roger Dean
  • Alan Skidmore
  • Keef Hartley
  • Jon Hiseman
  • Henry Lowther
  • Tony Reeves
  • Rocky Athas
  • Jay Davenport
  • Greg Rzab
Studio albums
  • Blues Breakers with Eric Clapton (1966)
  • A Hard Road (1967)
  • Crusade (1967)
  • Bare Wires (1968)
John Mayall solo
  • The Blues Alone (1967)
  • Blues from Laurel Canyon (1968)
  • Empty Rooms (1969)
  • USA Union (1970)
  • Back to the Roots (1971)
  • Ten Years Are Gone (1973)
Live and compilation albums
  • John Mayall Plays John Mayall (1965)
  • Looking Back (1969)
  • The Turning Point (1969)
  • Jazz Blues Fusion (1972)
  • Moving On (1973)
  • The 1982 Reunion Concert (1994)
  • 70th Birthday Concert (2003)
  • Road Dogs (2005)
  • Live from Austin, TX (2007)
Production
  • Tony Clarke
  • Jimmy Page
  • Mike Vernon
  • Gus Dudgeon
  • Eddie Kramer
  • Eddy Offord
  • John Judnich
  • Don Nix
Record labels
  • Decca
  • Deram
  • London
  • Ace of Clubs
  • Polydor
  • Eagle
Related artists
  • Cream
  • Fleetwood Mac
  • Canned Heat
  • Free
  • Mark-Almond
  • Book
  • Category

Read more about this topic:  Live From Austin, TX (John Mayall Album)

Famous quotes containing the word track:

    If you are ambitious of climbing up to the difficult, and in a manner inaccessible, summit of the Temple of Fame, your surest way is to leave on one hand the narrow path of Poetry, and follow the narrower track of Knight-Errantry, which in a trice may raise you to an imperial throne.
    Miguel De Cervantes (1547–1616)