Highway Robbery

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
Fifteen 02:56 Tools
Mystery Rider 03:01 Tools
Lazy Woman 00:00 Tools
Promotion Man 00:00 Tools
All I Need (To Have Is You) 00:00 Tools
I'll Do It All Again 00:00 Tools
Ain't Gonna Take No More 00:00 Tools
Bells 00:00 Tools
Jesus is Patience Still a Virtue 00:00 Tools
Is Patience Still a Virtue (for New York and Texas) 00:00 Tools
Put Yr Head on My Shoulder (for Romy) 00:00 Tools
Put Yr Head on My Shoulder 00:00 Tools
Ain´t Gonna Take No More 00:00 Tools
I´ll Do It All Again 00:00 Tools
Dunya 00:00 Tools
Fifty Yard Lines (for driving the interstate at night) 00:00 Tools
No Time (feat. Joe Blow) 00:00 Tools
Write My Wrongs (feat. Cormega) 00:00 Tools
Suspicious Comforts (for strip mall parking lots) 00:00 Tools
Suspicious Comforts 00:00 Tools
The Remnants Of Meaning 00:00 Tools
Sunnah Boys (feat. Killer Mike) 00:00 Tools
Seven Eleven (for teenagers stuck in small towns) 00:00 Tools
Refining a Blunt Instrument (for those suffering from anxiety disorder) 00:00 Tools
One (feat. Paul Wall, Husalah) 00:00 Tools
Cherry Pie (feat. Freddie Gibbs) 00:00 Tools
The Remnants of Meaning (for American sarcasm) 00:00 Tools
Uh Huh 00:00 Tools
Fifty Yard Lines 00:00 Tools
Refining a Blunt Instrument 00:00 Tools
One More Time 00:00 Tools
Promotion Man (1972) 00:00 Tools
Finding Solace Through Catagorization (for life's often overlooked routines) 00:00 Tools
On My Toes (feat. Dubb 20, fam Syrk) 00:00 Tools
Gun Language (feat. Rydah J Klyde, Blahk Jesus) 00:00 Tools
Secrets of Failure (for watching the film Paris, Texas) 00:00 Tools
We Holdin 00:00 Tools
Shuckin & Jivin (feat. Husalah) 00:00 Tools
The Counterfeiters 00:00 Tools
Road Rage 00:00 Tools
Get Your Shine (feat. London) 00:00 Tools
Dying To Try Me (feat. Ampichino) 00:00 Tools
Just Remain (feat. Trae tha Truth) 00:00 Tools
02 - Fifteen 00:00 Tools
04 Lazy Woman 00:00 Tools
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US rock group comprising Don Francisco (vocals, drums), Michael Stevens (guitar) and John Livingston Tunison (bass), Highway Robbery proved themselves adept musicians and songwriters with the arrival of their 1972 RCA Records debut, For Love Or Money. With the lyrics containing multitudinous references to the 60s, Highway Robbery balanced their hippie idealism with thunderous arrangements redolent of early Black Sabbath. The combination was a winning one, but it served to confuse record purchasers and also their record company, who dropped them shortly after the album’s release. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.