John FogertyBest John Fogerty Albums Ranked
7.5
Avg Score
10
Opinions
8
Albums
3
Reviewers
Summary from 10 ratings
On Wavelength, fans have rated John Fogerty's catalog across 8 albums from 10 opinions, with an overall average of 7.5/10. The top-rated John Fogerty album is Centerfield (25th Anniversary) (1985) with a 9.5/10 average from 1 rating, followed by Revival and Blue Moon Swamp. The discography on Wavelength spans 1985 to 2025.
Wrote a Song for Everyone
“In the late Sixties and early Seventies, John Fogerty was rock & roll's Voice of America. On the five Top 10 LPs and seven straight Top Five singles that he wrote, sang and produced with Creedence Clearwater Revival from late 1968 to 1971, Fogerty recharged the scruffy, fundamental poetry of folk, country, blues and rockabilly with shredded-vocal passion, searing-guitar hooks and taut, incisive ob”
Blue Moon Swamp
“It ain’t easy being a classic rocker. No self-respecting artists ever want to admit that they’re no longer able to scale their creative peak, no pop stars want to admit to losing touch with the youth of today (they say it’s inevitable when you grow teenagers), and no singers want to go gently into the […]”
The Blue Ridge Rangers Rides Again
“In Creedence Clearwater Revival, John Fogerty often sounded like acountry singer hiding out in a rock band, and he proved it on his first solo album, the 1973 covers disc The Blue Ridge Rangers. This long-delayedfollow-up finds him backed by fiddles, mandolins, dobros and pedal steelguitar — not to mention guests like Don Henley and […]”
Revival
“John Fogerty’s first album of new songs since he resolved his long emotional and legal war with his past in Creedence Clearwater Revival is essentially history repeated, and not just in the no-frills drive and corroded-treble guitar breaks. Fogerty wrote his greatest Creedence hits about a broken America polarized by income, war and moral arrogance, […]”
Deja Vu (All Over Again)
“Clocking in at a terse thirty-four minutes, Deja Vu All Over Again lives up to its title. It plays like a brisk spin through John Fogerty’s personal jukebox, but just when you’re settling in, it’s over. Then there’s nothing to do but start it up again. Still, it’s a quick, energizing ride. The echoes in […]”
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