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DAY 27.
The Everly Brothers...........A Date With The Everly Brothers (1960)
That 28 minutes just flew by, their close, two-part harmonies I don't think have been rivalled by many stars even to this day.
They were said to have had a big influence on Simon & Garfunkel, The Beach Boys and The Beatles, and I can see that.
The album itself was enjoyable, I liked all of the tracks and you wouldn't have thought there was any sign of the sibling rivalry, that would rear its ugly head in years to come.
All in all a good listen, but not an album I would play too often, so wont be going in my collection.
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DAY 28.
Jimmy Smith..... Back At The Chicken Ranch (1960)
Redolent of church pews and skating rink, the organ was once relegated to hip-free zones, a square cousin to the autoharp and according. And then along came Jimmy Smith, who turned his attention to the instrument in 1954 just as the Hammond company was unveiling it's relatively compact new B3 model
He spawned a new form of music -soul jazz- and a host of disciples who took up the Hammond B3 and formed combos.
Last edited by arabchanter (03/6/2018 6:15 pm)
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Just catching up: I like Elvis songs, but not always with Elvis singing them. Mind when he died, Johnny Rotten paying him a tribute "Fuckin' good riddance to bad rubbish", and stating he was a good dancer.
Sad story that Miriam Makeba has, and a wee bit different from what has gone before musically (in the list to date).
Really like the Everly Brothers, great songwriters, huge contribution to the music that followed. Even although they had rich voices, the producer used to double track each of them to make the vocals even bulkier.
I'll have to give Jimmy Smith a listen, know nothing about him.
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That Jimmy Smith stuff is good, laid back, cool stuff, maybe a wee bit 'jazzy': most of it sounded in the same key, which was a bit odd. I like the sound of the Hammond organ.
One of the better items this far, for me. More like early soul instrumental music to my uneducated ear.
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Sorry to anyone who may be looking in, but my PC died on me just after I'd uploaded the album cover, I couldn't log in on my other devices as it wouldn't accept what I thought was my password ( it was saved on PC )
A big thank you to Tek who sorted it out for me, unfortunately for anyone who reads this you're stuck with me for a bit longer.
I've put a little bit about Jimmy Smith on my last post, but will listen to the album and post early tomorrow
Cheers
And thanks once again Tek.
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DAY 28.
Jimmy Smith..... Back At The Chicken Ranch (1960)
Seemingly jazz-soul/jazz-funk, really not my cup of tea, too repetitive for me in fact a few times it seemed like the stream was jumping, so summing up it's a no from me for this particular album.
Just found out he had a few tracks played a Northern Soul Nights, will put one of them up for you perusal.
Smith made a living playing piano in R&B bands around Philadelphia, and worked regularly with local bandleader Don Gardner - but it was in 1953, after hearing the Chicago-based swing organist Wild Bill Davis, that he switched. Davis had exploited the Hammond's colourful textures (enhanced by the exaggerated tremolo of the rotating Leslie loudspeaker) and sustained chord effects as an ensemble stimulant to other soloists, and he loosened the static qualities of earlier Hammond experimenters with a more flexible, advanced-swing approach to rhythm. It was Davis who also developed the format of the classic Hammond organ trio in 1951 - organ, guitar and drums, using the pedals to create a bass line.
Expanding on the methods of Davis and Milt Buckner, Smith boldly combined church organ sounds, Davis's and Buckner's R&B leanings and the fast linear phrasing of bebop. He created arresting combinations of the Hammond's thunderously sustained lower register and the dramatic effects of its revolutionary "percussion stop", a device that banished an organ's smudgy sound.He also evolved an astonishing foot-pedalling technique enabling him to sustain a propulsive even-fours bass walk.
Smith thus invented himself as a one-man bop soloist and rhythm section combined. The jazz world woke up to the fact when he left Pennsylvania to play at Smalls Paradise on New York's 7th Avenue (where he was heard in January 1956 by Blue Note Records' Francis Wolff), and then at the city's Cafe Bohemia and the 1957 Newport Jazz Festival, opportunities that ignited his career.
Jimmy Smith really had one song - the churning, exhilarating, backbeat-cracking, riff-shouting organ blues. But he didn't need another, and his glowing audiences didn't expect another.His wife predeceased him. He is survived by two daughters, a son and a stepson.· James Oscar Smith, musician, born December 8 1928; died February 8 2005
Last edited by arabchanter (03/6/2018 6:18 pm)
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DAY 29..........Muddy Waters At Newport (1960)
Muddy Waters spent most of the 1950's on the R&B charts with hits like "Rollin and Tumblin" and "Louisiana Blues", but it was not until 1960 that he introduced himself, and live blues to the white mainstream audience.
After seeing his sales begin to dip towards the twilight of the 1950's, Chess Records decided to market its greatest talent as an album based performer, and subsequently brought a tape recorder to Muddy's perfomance at the 1960 Newport Jazz Festival.
When he took to the stage that afternoon, Waters was about as unfamiliar with his white audience as they were with his countrified brand of Chicago Boogie. The walloping refrain of " Hoochie Coochie Man" and unvarnished wall of " Baby Please Dont Go" were a stark departure from Dizzie Gillespie's chilled trumpet.
But by the close of the set, Muddy's poweful baritone, James Cotton's crying harmonic, and Otis Spann's barroom piano had the hip kids dancing in the aisles on the show-stopping "Got My Mojo Working."
Looking forward to this one!
arabchanter wrote:
DAY 29..........Muddy Waters At Newport (1960)
Muddy Waters spent most of the 1950's on the R&B charts with hits like "Rollin and Tumblin" and "Louisiana Blues", but it was not until 1960 that he introduced himself, and live blues to the white mainstream audience.
After seeing his sales begin to dip towards the twilight of the 1950's, Chess Records decided to market its greatest talent as an album based performer, and subsequently brought a tape recorder to Muddy's perfomance at the 1960 Newport Jazz Festival.
When he took to the stage that afternoon, Waters was about as unfamiliar with his white audience as they were with his countrified brand of Chicago Boogie. The walloping refrain of " Hoochie Coochie Man" and unvarnished wall of " Baby Please Dont Go" were a stark departure from Dizzie Gillespie's chilled trumpet.
But by the close of the set, Muddy's poweful baritone, James Cotton's crying harmonic, and Otis Spann's barroom piano had the hip kids dancing in the aisles on the show-stopping "Got My Mojo Working."
Looking forward to this one!
The wife, wha's a blues singer, described this one as a classic.
Will give it a wee listen myself I think.
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arabchanter wrote:
And thanks once again Tek.
No problem at all Mr Chanter.
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Great album, that Muddy Waters one!
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DAY 29..........Muddy Waters At Newport (1960)
This has got to be one of my favourites so far, what a voice the man had.
Every track was enjoyable, have never been much of a Blues fan, but might just investigate a little further after this album.
Muddy Waters At Newport will be going into my collection.
aters was born McKinley Morganfield in Rolling Fork, Mississippi, in 1915 but grew up in Clarksdale, where his grandmother raised him after his mother died in 1918. His fondness for playing in mud earned him his nickname at an early age. Waters started out on harmonica but by age seventeen he was playing the guitar at parties and fish fries, emulating two blues artists who were extremely popular in the south, Son House and Robert Johnson. “His thick heavy tone, the dark coloration of his voice and his firm almost stolid manner were all clearly derived from House,but the embellishments which he added, the imaginative slide technique and more agile rhythms, were closer to Johnson.
In 1940 Waters moved to St. Louis before playing with Silas Green a year later and returning back to Mississippi. In the early part of the decade he ran a juke house, complete with gambling, moonshine, a jukebox, and live music courtesy of Muddy himself. In the summer of 1941 Alan Lomax came to Stovall, Mississippi, on behalf of the Library of Congress to record various country blues musicians. “He brought his stuff down and recorded me right in my house,” Waters recalled in Rolling Stone, “and when he played back the first song I sounded just like anybody’s records. Man, you don’t know how I felt that Saturday afternoon when I heard that voice and it was my own voice. Later on he sent me two copies of the pressing and a check for twenty bucks, and I carried that record up to the corner and put it on the jukebox. Just played it and played it and said, ’I can do it, I can do it.’
In 1946 Waters recorded some tunes for Mayo Williams at Columbia but they were never released. Later that year he began recording for Aristocrat, a newly-formed label run by two brothers, Leonard and Phil Chess. In 1947 Waters played guitar with Sunnyland Slim on piano on the cuts “Gypsy Woman” and “Little Anna Mae.” These were also shelved, but in 1948 Waters’s “I Can’t Be Satisfied” and “I Feel Like Going Home” became big and his popularity in clubs began to take off. Soon after, Aristocrat changed their name to Chess and Waters’s signature tune, “Rollirï Stone,” became a smash hit.
When R & B began to die down shortly after, Waters switched back to his older style of country blues. His gig at the Newport Folk Festival in 1960 turned on a whole new generation to Waters’s Delta sound. As English rockers like Eric Clapton and the Rolling Stones got hip to the blues, Waters switched back to electric circa 1964. He expressed anger when he realized that members of his own race were turning their backs to the genre while the white kids were showing respect and love for it.
In 1983 Muddy Waters passed away in his sleep. Two years after his death, the city that made Muddy Waters (and vice versa) honored their father by changing the name of 43rd Street to Muddy Waters Drive.
Random facts......
It is stated that this is one of the first live blues albums ever made and it is also said to have influenced artists such as Jimi Hendrix, AC/DC, Rolling Stones (i know Keith Richards was a big Muddy Waters fan) and Led Zeppelin because they were all fans of his electric sound. to have that much influence on what should be considered rock music royalty shows how good Muddy was. despite enjoying Muddy Waters electric sound the album cover might seem confusing where Muddy is pictures holding a semi-acoustic guitar, it is because he left the electric guitar he used for the show on stage (fender telecaster) and the photographer was pressing him for a picture so he just borrowed the guitar in the picture from his friend John Lee Hooker, it wasn’t the guitar he performed the show with.
Muddy appeared on “The Last Waltz,” Scorsese’s famed rocumentary/concert of The Band’s final farewell
Muddy, along with bandmates Pinetop Perkins and Bob Margolin, played “Mannish Boy”, but by what Scorsese called “Dumb Luck”, all but one camera was rolling for the song’s entirety, and the moment almost wasn’t recorded at all. The producers then wanted to cut his part, however, since they were running long. The Band’s, Levon Helm, who was also the brainchild behind the Muddy Waters’ Woodstock Album, protested until Scorsese left it in.
“I seen Muddy Waters playing The Last Waltz,” Dr John told ABS in 2013 about that night. “He played ‘Nine Below Zero’ the night before they filmed it too. I saw every so-called badass guitar player with his jaw droopin’ and saggin’… I wish they’d filmed that… And that’s the kind of things I been blessed to see.
”Muddy helped Chuck Berry get his first recording contract
Born in Saint Louis, Berry traveled to Chicago and met with Muddy Waters, who sent him to audition for Chess. Berry came with a country western tune, “Ida Red”, and Chess was sold — except they renamed the song “Maybellene”.Legend has it that Chess saw a Maybelline brand mascera box in the corner of the studio and, with few better options, suggested they name the girl in the song after it, (changing the spelling slightly from the beauty company to avoid a lawsuit). The song was a hit, and Berry went on to almost singlehandedly define Rock n Roll, many of the biggest hits coming from the Chess studio.
Eric Clapton was best man at Muddy’s wedding to Marva Jean Brooks in 1979
"Muddy was there at a time when, really, the music was getting to me. I was really trying to grasp it and make something out of it,” Clapton told NPR, even writing in his book that Muddy was “the father figure I never really had.” In the last decade of Muddy’s life, he and Clapton had become very close. After he met 19 year old Marva, (about seven years after his wife Geneva passed), Mud asked Eric to be his best man.
The Rolling Stones' Mick Jagger named his band after Waters' song "Rollin' Stone."
Muddy was a major influence on Angus Young of AC/DC
.AC/DC’s monster hit “You Shook Me All Night Long” came from the lyrics of Muddy’s “You Shook Me”, which was written by Willie Dixon. (Fun fact: Led Zeppelin also released a cover of “You Shook Me” as track three on their debut album.)“Because we grew up in Australia,” said Young in an interview with Rolling Stone, “to find information about a lot of blues guys I used to go to the library and find the jazz magazines. They didn’t even sell them at the time in news agents and stuff. So I’d go into the library and read all about where these people were playing, like Muddy Waters and Elmore James.”
Muddy Waters - Got My Mojo Workin' (Newport 1960)
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scarpia wrote:
arabchanter wrote:
DAY 29..........Muddy Waters At Newport (1960)
Muddy Waters spent most of the 1950's on the R&B charts with hits like "Rollin and Tumblin" and "Louisiana Blues", but it was not until 1960 that he introduced himself, and live blues to the white mainstream audience.
After seeing his sales begin to dip towards the twilight of the 1950's, Chess Records decided to market its greatest talent as an album based performer, and subsequently brought a tape recorder to Muddy's perfomance at the 1960 Newport Jazz Festival.
When he took to the stage that afternoon, Waters was about as unfamiliar with his white audience as they were with his countrified brand of Chicago Boogie. The walloping refrain of " Hoochie Coochie Man" and unvarnished wall of " Baby Please Dont Go" were a stark departure from Dizzie Gillespie's chilled trumpet.
But by the close of the set, Muddy's poweful baritone, James Cotton's crying harmonic, and Otis Spann's barroom piano had the hip kids dancing in the aisles on the show-stopping "Got My Mojo Working."
Looking forward to this one!The wife, wha's a blues singer, described this one as a classic.
Will give it a wee listen myself I think.
Tell your other half she's a no' bad judge
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DAY 30.
Bill Evans....Sunday At The Village Vanguard (1961)
One of the most widely influential pianists of the 1960's and 70's, Bill Evans was a seminal force in jazz who seemed to emerge as a fully formed artist in the late 1950's. A ravishingly lyrical player of tremendous hamonic sophistication, he attained a unique, bell-like tone from the piano, which made his long, flowing lines glow with a blue-flame luminescence.
Well I don't know what to make of that, but not filling me with joy but you never know.
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DAY 30.
Bill Evans....Sunday At The Village Vanguard (1961)
Gave it a try, but can't say it was an enjoyable experience.
It really didn't do anything for me, in fact found it rather nauseating to be honest,
So Bill Evans wont be going into my collection (and to think, I thought I was turning a corner with this jazz gear)
Bill Evans, one of the most influential and tragic figures of the post-bop jazz piano, was known for his highly nuanced touch, the clarity of the feeling content of his music and his reform of the chord voicing system pianists used. He recorded over fifty albums as leader and received five Grammy awards. He spawned a school of "Bill Evans style" or "Evans inspired" pianists, who include some of the best known artists of our day, including Michel Petrucciani, Andy Laverne, Richard Beirach, Enrico Pieranunzi and Warren Bernhardt. His inescapable influence on the very sound of jazz piano has touched virtually everybody of prominence in the field after him (as well as most of his contemporaries), and he remains a monumental model for jazz piano students everywhere, even inspiring a newsletter devoted solely to his music and influence.
Yet Bill Evans was a person who was painfully self-effacing, especially in the beginning of his career. Tall and handsome, literate and highly articulate about his art, he had a "confidence problem" as he called it, while at the same time devoted himself fanatically to the minute details of his music. He believed he lacked talent, so had to make up with it by intense work, but to keep the whole churning enterprise afloat he took on a heroin addiction for most of his adult life. The result was sordid living conditions, a brilliant career, two failed marriages (the first ending in a dramatic suicide), and an early death.
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DAY31.
Ray Charles..........Modern Sounds In Country And Western Music (1962)
Hard, perhaps to imagine what a jolt this must have been in 1962, a raw and strung out black R&B singer tackling Hank Williams and Don Gibson 18 months before Martin Luther King had a dream. But while the record's shock value has grown blurry in the last five decades, the quality of Modern Sounds In Country And Western Music is still crystal clear from the first, irresistibly swinging bars of opener "Bye Bye Love."
Sounds more like the Ray I like.
Last edited by arabchanter (10/9/2017 12:20 pm)
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DAY31.
Ray Charles..........Modern Sounds In Country And Western Music (1962)
This post has been put up late because, I couldn't really face the internet last night, for obvious reasons.
Anyway Ray Charles, enjoyed listning to this, he certainly knows how to make a standard his own.
I will be putting this album in my collection if only for this track that I'll put up, not only is it a great version but it tends to sum up my feelings about United at the moment, sorry but still feeling pretty down after yesterday.
For facts about RC, see post #75
Last edited by arabchanter (10/9/2017 2:38 pm)
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DAY 32.
Booker T. And The M.G.s......... Green Onions. (1962)
Every few years in the early days of rock an instrumental slipped through the endless ranks of vocal discs and shot to the top---"Bill Doggett's Honky Tonk" in 1956, or The Champs "Tequila" in 1958 for example. In 1962 it was the turn of "Green Onions" an insinuating organ-guitar blues album that reinvented Jimmy Smith's organ jazz for the pop market, highlighted by taut snatches of guitar. Booker T and the M.G.s were the most soulfur bar band in the whole world.
Liked the single "Green Onions" so this could be quite good.
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Best album yet!
A lot of the songs on this were instrumental covers of other artists' hits: this over and above the great title song.
The drummer from this tight Stax outfit was shot and murdered in the seventies.
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DAY 32.
Booker T. And The M.G.s......... Green Onions. (1962)
I was left feeling I should have liked this one more than I did, don't get me wrong I liked most of the the tracks, but their versions of "I Got Woman," "Twist And Shout," and "Stranger On The Shore" I really didn't take to.
It may be because I prefer other peoples take on these tracks as opposed to Booker Ts instrumental versions, so although I enjoyed most of the tracks I wont be adding this one to mycollection.
The Memphis-based quartet Booker T. & the MG's is one of the most important studio bands in the history of American popular music. On their own, the MG's are best known for their 1962 instrumental hit "Green Onions" (Number Three, Pop, Number One, R&B), but the group is remembered more today for its work as the house band at Stax Records, where they played behind a string of hits by heavyweight soul acts including Wilson Pickett, Otis Redding, Sam & Dave and the Staple Singers.The band formed by accident one day in 1962, when seventeen-year-old keyboard player Booker T. Jones was in a Memphis studio waiting for rockabilly singer Billy Lee Riley to arrive to a recording session. He and drummer Al Jackson, bassist Lewie Steinberg and guitarist Steve Cropper began jamming on the melody that would become "Green Onions." Stax Records president Jim Stewart liked the tune so much he decided to record it and put it out as a single. The band needed a name, so Jackson suggested the MG's, for the popular early-sixties sports car. Eventually, MG's came to stand for Memphis Group. The style of the song — a bouncy, organ-driven R&B melody with blasts of trebly, country-rock guitar over a swinging, laid-back bass-and-drums groove — became the signature musical foundation for Southern soul.
As important as their music, Booker T. & the MG's — two black members and two white members — became a symbol of racial integration in the South during the civil rights years. As the individual members began getting session work in other cities, they had less and less time for their work as the MG's, and the group called it quits in 1971. Their final album, released that year, was the aptly named Melting Pot. In 1975, the band had begun work on a reunion album when Al Jackson was shot and killed by a burglar at his home in Memphis. Three years later, Cropper and Dunn backed the Blues Brothers — Saturday Night Live's John Belushi and Dan Aykroyd's semi-serious send-up of an R&B band — for the Number One album Briefcase Full of Blues, which included a cover of the Sam & Dave hit "Soul Man" that reached Number 14 on the Pop chart. The project was so popular that Cropper and Dunn worked with Belushi and Aykroyd on a 1980 film of the same name.
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DAY 33.
Stan Getz And Charlie Bird........ Jazz Samba (1962)
There’s a very good reason this appeared on the list. It was more of a historically important album than a quality one. In 1961, Charlie Byrd visited Brazil while on a tour and discovered the jazz scene there, which is also known as Bossa Nova Jazz. Loving it so much, he took the influence it had on him and brought it over to the US where he wrote music for Stan Getz to play. This album would cement itself in music history as it’s impact would be enough to get the Bossa Nova craze started in the US. Yes, it was this album that did that.
Jazz again, I think they're trying to beat me into submission.
Last edited by arabchanter (03/6/2018 6:26 pm)
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DAY 33.
Stan Getz And Charlie Bird........ Jazz Samba (1962)
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I think they're winning, 'cause I liked this album, I think the trick with jazz is not to listen too intensely and keep it as background at a lower level than you would normally do, that seems to work for me.
I did enjoy "Desinfinado" and "Samba Triste" the latter being written by a Brazilian named Baden Powell, his father was a keen scouting man and named him after the scouts founder.
Bossa Nova it may well be, and although I liked it, it wont be making it's way into my collection.
I thought I'd put this one up, track 2 written by Charlie Bird "Samba Dees Days" never knew he'd been to Dens.
It's actually pretty good imho.
"I'M A Russian Jew," Stan Getz once told me, "and that's the hardest kind." The guitarist Charlie Byrd was to find out just what he meant.
It was Byrd who introduced Getz to Bossa Nova music and together they made the album Jazz Samba, which included the million-selling "Desafinado" amongst its tracks. The album has over subsequent years also sold a million copies.
Getz remarked later that "Desafinado" had paid to put his children through university. Although done under their joint leadership in 1962, Getz took all the benefits in royalties and the credit for the subsequent Grammy award to himself. Getz's life changed immediately and he was from that point on paid as a superstar."I made the big mistake of doing the date and not talking about any deal," said Byrd. "The next thing I knew I was out. I mean, no artist royalty, none at all. Just leader's scale, plus scale for the arrangements, all of which I wrote. All Stan had to do was come in and play. We had the rhythm section and the idea.
"Typically, as the riches from the album accumulated, Getz had never given a second thought to Byrd's position. In fairness to the tenor player it should be noted that the album had been nominated in two Grammy categories - Record of the Year and Best Jazz Solo Performance.
It won the award in the solo category and since Byrd's solo in the LP version had been excised from the hit single, the award inevitably went to Getz.
Byrd took the matter to court and after much acrimony was finally awarded $50,000 and a share of future royalties from the album.
Last edited by arabchanter (03/6/2018 6:27 pm)
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DAY 34.
Ray Price......Night Life (1962)
In the records spoken introduction, Price describes what will follow as, "songs of happiness, sadness and heartbreak,." There is a lot of the latter here, however none of the former.
Dont be fooled by Price's trademark dancefloor shuffle---- Night Life is Nashvilles answer to Sinatra's " In The Wee Small Hours"
Bang goes my happy mood.
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Stan Getz And Charlie Bird plus Ray Price: dismal, summing up our season to date.
C'mon, arabchanter, I cannae be bothered with the football chat any more, so I'm here to be entertained.
Hope the book ups it's game soon.......
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PatReilly wrote:
Stan Getz And Charlie Bird plus Ray Price: dismal, summing up our season to date.
C'mon, arabchanter, I cannae be bothered with the football chat any more, so I'm here to be entertained.
Hope the book ups it's game soon.......
Sorry Pat but the book 's the dj, I'm sure at some point we'll want to "hang the dj" but sometimes, we might think "last night a dj saved my life" but I know for sure I'll be a "wasted little dj" more often than not.
Be patient my friend, it's only a matter of time
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DAY 34.
Ray Price......Night Life (1962)
Ray Price, I'd rather listen to Vincent Price, deary me.
I know country's renowned for morose songs, but this was, put you on a downer type of morose.
The only saving grace for this album for me was "Wild Side Of Life" which an old uncle of mine (god rest his soul) used to sing at new year partys when I was a kid, bringing back fond memories.
Sentiment aside this album wont be coming anywhere near my house.
Ray Price (Noble Ray Price), (born Jan. 12, 1926, Perryville, Texas—died Dec. 16, 2013, Mount Pleasant, Texas), American musician who was at the forefront of country music for more than 20 years, scoring several number one hits in two distinct styles: a honky-tonk shuffle that came to be dubbed the “Ray Price beat” and a more sedate, sophisticated sound called “countrypolitan.”
Price attended North Texas Agricultural College with the intention of becoming a veterinarian, but he dropped out to perform full-time.
While his early style was greatly influenced by his friend Hank Williams, the 1956 honky-tonk hit “Crazy Arms” marked Price’s new direction.
A sharp judge of talent, he recruited future stars such as Willie Nelson and Roger Miller to play in his band, the Cherokee Cowboys.
In the mid-1960s, however, Price changed his style again, adopting lush instrumentation and a more-urbane pop sound that produced such hits as “Danny Boy” (1967) and the Grammy Award-winning “For the Good Times” (1970) but alienated some of his country fans.
Price earned his second Grammy, for best country collaboration with vocals, for “Lost Highway,” a duet with Nelson on the collaborative album Last of the Breed (2007).
Price was elected to the Country Music Hall of Fame in 1996.