Author Archives: hyperbolium

Jefferson Airplane: Setlist – The Very Best Of

Live Airplane flights from 1966 to 1972

The Legacy division of Sony continues to explore new ways to keep the CD relevant. Their Playlist series was the first out of the gate with eco-friendly packaging that used 100% recycled cardboard, no plastic, and on-disc PDFs in place of paper booklets. Their new Setlist series follows the same path of a single disc that provides an aficionado’s snapshot of an artist’s catalog. In this case the anthologies turn from the studio to the stage, pulling together tracks from an artist’s live repertoire, generally all previously released, but in a few cases adding previously unreleased items. As with the Playlist collections, the Setlist discs aren’t greatest hits packages; instead, they forgo some obvious catalog highlights to give listeners a chance to hear great, lesser-known songs from the artist’s stage act.

Jefferson Airplane was a band that truly came alive in live performance. Their studio albums remain lauded, but it was the experience of their shows, stretching the studio tracks into acid-drenched ballroom jams, that minted their San Francisco Sound legend. Their live sound has been documented on numerous official releases, four of which are sampled here (Bless its Pointed Little Head, Thirty Seconds Over Winterland, and Sweeping Up the Spotlight), highlighting performances from the group’s home courts (the Fillmore Auditorium, Fillmore West and Winterland) and favorite tour cities Chicago and New York. This set also pulls in a few tracks that were included on the compilation Jefferson Airplane Loves You, as well as previously unreleased (at least officially) Fillmore performances of “White Rabbit” (11/26/66) and “It’s No Secret” (2/6/67, late show).

The dozen tracks gathered here span nearly the full length of the Airplane’s history, sans the group’s original female lead singer, Signe Anderson. This set’s timeline starts with a concise, but thrilling, November 1966 performance of “White Rabbit” recorded only a month after Grace Slick replace Anderson, and concludes in the Fall of 1972 with tracks from the band’s last tour. By ’72 Marty Balin had left the lineup, Papa John Creach had been added (along with John Barbata and David Freiberg), and Jorma Kaukonen and Jack Casady were getting deeper and deeper into their side project, Hot Tuna. The band still jammed to the end, as evidenced by the superb eleven minute rendition of Kaukonen’s “Feel So Good,” but the unity heard on the earlier tracks seemed to be fraying. The version of “Crown of Creation” offered here, for example, is often more cacophonous than musical.

This isn’t a bad place to get an overview of the Airplane’s journey as a live band. In contrast to the earlier live albums, you get a broader timeline of material and a view of the band’s evolution as writers and performers over the bulk of their existence. Fans who have already absorbed the available material will likely want to opt for the four live releases being issued in October 2010 by Collectors’ Choice. These sets document San Francisco dates (10/15/66, 10/16/66, 11/25,27/66, and 2/1/68) that include Anderson’s last show, Slick’s first two, and the emotional return of the Airplane to the Matrix. If you weren’t there, and only know the Airplane from their studio hits (or, worse, the Starship’s), you really owe it to yourself to hear what all the fuss was about. [©2010 hyperbolium dot com]

Brett Shady: The Devil to Pay

Tuneful singer-songwriter indie pop, folk and Americana sounds

The opening track of singer-songwriter Brett Shady’s solo debut is very good (especially for the terrific lyric “For every somebody somewhere in love / there’s somebody else”), but it’s the defeated loneliness of the second track, “Jerome, AZ” that sets the album’s emotional hook. Shady sings of giving up on his big city dream and heading for open skies. But even though he didn’t give up on his own big city dream, his initial discontent with Los Angeles, born of the dislocation and culture shock felt by a gold country immigrant provides much of the album’s emotional fuel.

Shady seems to have finally made himself at home in Southern California, but at the time he wrote these songs, his lack of connection became the locus of his songwriting. Like many lovelorn pop songwriters, he balances himself on the edge of self-pity and self-strength, wallowing in the darkness but mindful that the sun still shines on the other side of his drawn curtains. Shady follows in a long line of rock musicians whose later years led them away from the outward-bound excess of rock and punk to the introspective songwriting of folk and Americana. Dana Gumbiner’s production nicely balances a minimum of studio decorations with Shady’s simple combo of guitar, bass, drums, and banjo, leaving room for the lyrics to be heard and felt.

Shady first latched onto music as a child, and looking back to acts from the ‘50s and early ‘60s in the craft of “Darling.” He suggests the song is seeded in Ivory Joe Hunter’s “Since I Met You Baby,” which you can certainly hear in the piano figure, but the vocal seems more heavily influenced by doo-wop crooning. Winningly, the production gives the whole song an indie-pop feel, which makes the ‘50s influences play more like ghosts. Shady’s country antecedents can be heard in the shuffle beat of “Red House Plea,” but here again the song takes off in an original direction with strummed guitars, a meandering banjo and an imploring vocal whose high tone suggests Don McLean and the Avett Brothers.

What’s immediately apparent in listening to these performances is the difference between a band album and a songwriter’s album with a band. There’s a singleness of tone here that you don’t often find in collaboratively written material. There’s also a sensibility in the combination of disparate musical influences – waltzing country, folk strumming, pop melodies, 50s balladry, indie-pop – that could only come from a single head full music listening. It all tumbles out so seamlessly as to make it look simple; but making music that’s both familiar and new – catchy to the ear on first spin but without feeling like a rehash of something you’ve heard before – is a nearly impossible trick, and one that Shady has managed on his first solo outing. [©2010 hyperbolium dot com]

MP3 | Somebody Else
Stream The Devil to Pay
Brett Shady’s MySpace Page

Charlie Louvin Benefit

PRESS RELEASE

BELL BUCKLE, TENN. — Country Music Hall of Fame and Grand Ole Opry member Charlie Louvin of the legendary Louvin Brothers is fighting pancreatic cancer.

In an effort to help defray Louvin’s astronomical medical costs, the Bell Buckle Banquet Hall in historic Bell Buckle, Tenn., is hosting a benefit concert and auction Saturday, Oct. 30, 2010 from noon to 9 p.m.   The event will be hosted by Louvin and Valerie Smith & Liberty Pike.

“Charlie Louvin is a significant treasure to American music and a dear friend,” said Smith.  “His music has brightened the lives of so many of us.  It’s an honor to be able to give something back.”

Confirmed performers include: Ed Bruce, writer of the hit song “Mama’s, Don’t Let Your Babies Grow Up To Be Cowboys” and the actor who played the sheriff on the popular TV program Maverick; and Indiana bluegrass music legends the Wildwood Valley Boys.  The complete schedule will be announced soon at BellBuckleBanquetHall.com.

The auction will be from 2 to 5 p.m. and will be conducted by Jerry Shelton, Johnny Foster and Tom Waynick from Shelton Auction & Realty of Shelbyville, Tenn.  Louvin has donated a guitar and autographed posters to the auction.

Thanks to the following businesses for donating items to the auction:  From Shelbyville:  Kincaid’s; Celebration Travel; Christopher Equipment; Discount Arts and Frames; Shelbyville Record Shop; Barr’s; Hoover Paint; Smith Country Ham; New Covenant Bookstore; Badcock’s; Victory Nissan; Heritage Jewelers; J. Jordan Boutique; Haynes Lumber; and First Community Bank.  From Wartrace, Tenn.:  Gallagher Guitars.  From Manchester, Tenn.:  Hoover’s Jewelers; Smoots Flowers & Gifts; Home Depot; Russell Stover Candies and Foothills Crafts.  From Bell Buckle, Tenn.:  Vera’s Pearls; The Cat’s Meow; and Phillips General Store.

We would like to extend a special thanks to Dan Hays and the International Bluegrass Music Association (IBMA) of Nashville, Tenn., for donating two VIP packages to next year’s IBMA awards show at the Ryman Auditorium and two VIP passes to the IBMA FanFest, which is held annually at the Nashville Convention Center.

More items are being added to the auction daily.  To donate, call Martha Akers of the Bell Buckle Banquet Hall at (931) 389-0223.

Tickets are $10 and available at the world-famous Bell Buckle Cafe in Bell Buckle, Tenn., or by calling the Bell Buckle Banquet Hall at (931) 389-0223.

Food will be available for sale from the the world-famous Bell Buckle Cafe in downtown Bell Buckle, Tenn., with all proceeds going to the Louvin family.

Seven-time IBMA “Female Vocalist of the Year” Rhonda Vincent is hosting a silent auction on her website, with all proceeds going to the Louvin family.  Items include a Martin guitar signed by Vincent as well as autographed posters and Martha White memorabilia as well as an autographed copy of Vincent’s brand new album Taken.

The Louvin Brothers (Charlie and Ira) had a string of country hits throughout the 1950s and early ’60s including “When I Stop Dreamin’, “I Don’t Believe You Met My Baby,” and “My Baby’s Gone.”  Their music heavily influenced such groups as the Everly Brothers, the Byrds and even the Beatles.

After Ira’s tragic death in an auto accident, Charlie Louvin continued on in his solo career until the present day, regularly hosting the Grand Ole Opry and the Ernest Tubb Midnight Jamboree on WSM 650 AM as well as touring throughout the country and around the world.

The Louvin Brothers are members of the Country Music Hall of Fame as well as the Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame and the Alabama Music Hall of Fame.

Blue Oyster Cult: Setlist – The Very Best Of

Live tracks from 1974-1981 with one previously unreleased

The Legacy division of Sony continues to explore new ways to keep the CD relevant. Their Playlist series was the first out of the gate with eco-friendly packaging that used 100% recycled cardboard, no plastic, and on-disc PDFs in place of paper booklets. Their new Setlist series follows the same path of a single disc that provides an aficionado’s snapshot of an artist’s catalog. In this case the anthologies turn from the studio to the stage, pulling together tracks from an artist’s live repertoire, generally all previously released, but in a few cases adding previously unreleased items. As with the Playlist collections, the Setlist discs aren’t greatest hits packages; instead, they forgo some obvious catalog highlights to give listeners a chance to hear great, lesser-known songs from the artist’s stage act.

Inexplicably, Blue Oyster Cult’s entry in the series doesn’t include the booklet on disc. Instead, the cardboard slipcase provides a URL from which the booklet (as a PDF) can be viewed and downloaded. Once retrieved it provides liner notes from Lenny Kaye and detailed credits of the tracks’ origins. Many are pulled from the group’s previous live albums, On Your Feet Or On Your Knees, Some Enchanted Evening, Extraterrestrial Live, but the set also includes a promo-only version of “Godzilla” recorded in 1977, a 1981 take of “Flaming Telepaths” that was available on a British 12-inch single, and a previously unreleased 1979 version of “The Vigil” recorded in Berkeley, California. Taken together they provide a good view of the band’s live sound from their key years of 1974 through 1981.

BOC is a classic album-oriented rock band, placing only two singles on the Top 40 while scoring gold albums, minting FM turntable hits and turning itself into a solid arena draw. Their biggest single, “(Don’t Fear) The Reaper” is included here in a 1981 performance, but it’s the album tracks and the hard-charging jams that really excite the crowd. Their music reflects a number of improvisational threads, including San Francisco and Southern rock, but with a touch of prog-rock changes and a heavy metallic edge. Fans of the band’s carefully crafted studio albums may find themselves bewildered by these elongated versions (there are some Tap-like moments here), but if the live rock album boom of the 1970s is your cup of tea, this is a good sampler of BOC’s stage charms. [©2010 hyperbolium dot com]

Jump Back Jake: Call Me Your Man

Rock ‘n’ roll from a Brooklyn transplant in Memphis

Jump Back Jake is a group headed up by guitarist Jake Rabinbach of Francis and the Lights. Their 2008 debut Brooklyn Hustle / Memphis Muscle combined the rock ‘n’ roll of Rabinbach’s native Brooklyn with the soul, horns and funk of his adopted Memphis. The band’s latest EP drops the horns and follows in the footsteps of melodic New York rock ‘n’ rollers like Willie Nile and the Del Lords. There’s a lot of variety packed into these five tracks, including the power-pop “Tara” and rampaging blues-rockabilly “If I Ever Go Back.”  The dramatic “Rose Colored Coffin” threatens a ‘70s rock odyssey with its opening riff, but settles into a more tractable heavy electric blues. The title track is performed twice, first as rock ‘n’ soul and at EP’s end as a solo acoustic folk-blues. Rabinbach comes alive on the rock tunes, cutting scorching riffs on his guitar and allowing a touch of rasp into his voice, charting a new direction for his band that doesn’t miss the horns at all. [©2010 hyperbolium dot com]

MP3 | Call Me Your Man
Jump Back Jake’s Home Page

Steve Gulley and Tim Stafford: Dogwood Winter

Bluegrass, folk and acoustic country from songwriting pair

Grasstowne’s (and Mountain Heart’s) Steve Gulley and Blue Highway’s Tim Stafford have turned their songwriting partnership into a pleasing musical collaboration. Though songs have been their calling card, their bluegrass-inspired duet singing on the opening “Why Ask Why?” is a welcome revelation. Adam Steffey (mandolin), Ron Stewart (banjo), Justin Moses (dobro) and Dale Ann Bradley (harmony vocals) add zest to Gulley and Stafford’s guitars, but the music on this album is a lot broader than bluegrass. “Nebraska Sky” opens like a James Taylor soft pop tune before the close harmonies bring it back to the mountains; “Torches” maintains the Taylor vibe throughout. There are high-balling banjo romps, acoustic folk harmonies, sad country songs, and fiddle-led waltzes that sing of hard times and wistful memories, difficult relationships, and poignant stories of those on the margins. The closing “Angel on its Way,” sung solo by Gulley to Stafford’s acoustic guitar really shows off the craft of their songwriting. It’s always a treat to hear songwriters perform their own songs, especially when they’re as talented performers as Gulley and Stafford. [©2010 hyperbolium dot com]

Rosehill: White Lines and Stars

Optimistic country, rock and pop from former Texas High Life duo

Rosehill is the new duo formed by the founding members of Texas High Life, Mitch McBain and Blake Myers. Their earlier tavern rock has taken a twangier direction, and Radney Foster’s production gives them a winning polish. The duo writes hummable melodies and lyrics that catch familiar moments such as the togetherness of the title track’s nighttime drive, and the colorful late-night crowd of “Midnight America.” There are college-students fending off hangovers with a plate of scattered-smothered-and-covered, waitresses working the graveyard shift, and truckers catching up on missed miles. The lyrics are rife with optimism, searching out opportunity beyond tough circumstances and finding healing salvation in love. The album’s few notes of pessimism include the alcoholic spiral of “Glass of Whiskey” and the regretful bachelor of “Picassos for Pesos.” Even here there’s a self-awareness that suggests escape routes rather than incurable misery. McBain and Myers celebrate the weekend but never get really rowdy, they enjoy the warmth of love without crowing in excessive celebration, and they see life’s troubles while keeping them in perspective. The music combines twang and rock into something that’s neither Nashville slick nor roots raw; something that would sound at home on country radio without bowing to the Nashville studio sound currently in vogue. [©2010 hyperbolium dot com]

MP3 | Glass of Whiskey
Rosehill’s Home Page

Lucky Peterson: You Can Always Turn Around

Resurgence of a triple-threat bluesman

At the age of 46, Lucky Peterson has already had a forty-year long career. Discovered by Willie Dixon at three-years of age, Peterson was recording and appearing on television by the age of five. His apprenticeships with numerous blues legends led to solo albums on Alligator, Verve and Blue Thumb, culminating in 2003’s Black Midnight Sun for the Birdology label. It was at this point that Peterson’s drug problems began to affect his career, and the next several years were spent making releases on small European labels and, eventually, getting clean. Lucky for Lucky that the blues revere their elder statesman, and at middle-age he’s primed to reintroduce himself to American audiences.

This latest album was waxed with a number of Woodstock-area players, but it’s his triple-threat talents as vocalist, guitarist and organist that provide many of the highlights. The buzz of Peterson’s resonator guitar fills Blind Willie McTell’s “Statesboro Blues” and Robert Johnson’s “I Believe I’ll Dust My Broom,” begging his way inside on the first and forcefully calling out a cheating mate on the second. He turns to his piano for a cover of Ray LaMontagne’s (and Travelers Insurance’s) “Trouble,” giving the song a deep gospel groove steeped in his personal recovery. Salvation is also the theme of Bill Calahan’s “I’m New Here,” a line of which provides the album’s title; Peterson finds room for a new interpretation between the plain folk styling of Smog’s original and the quick-paced cover recently released by Gil-Scott Heron. The music is more lush and Peterson’s connects with the lyrics’ portrayal of physical and spiritual rebirth.

Peterson stretches out on a pair of contemporary covers, matching Lucinda Williams’ fiery images in “Atonement” with scorching electric guitar, and finding beauty in Tom Waits’ “Trampled Rose” by expanding the melodic hook into an Arabian maqam. Blues and soul still remain the core of his musicality as he hard-strums his resonator guitar and expertly picks his acoustic against funky shuffle rhythms. His guitar sparks with outbursts of emotion on Reverend Gary Davis’ “Death Don’t Have No Mercy” and his vocals (accompanied by wife Tamara) strike a hopeful tone on the civil rights anthem “I Wish I Knew How It Would Feel to Be Free.” Peterson never really disappeared from the blues scene, but his latest album has the feeling of a fresh start, with terrific players helping him realize music with deeply personal roots. [©2010 hyperbolium dot com]

MP3 | Four Little Boys
Lucky Peterson’s MySpace Page

Riley: Grandma’s Roadhouse

Terrific 1971 country-rock obscurity with Gary Stewart

Record thrifters know the thrill of discovering a previously unknown recording that’s both a missing piece of history and worthwhile spin on its musical merits. Crate diggers and vault anthropologists continue to make incredible discoveries, and such is this obscure 1971 album. Pressed by the band in an edition of 500, it was sold at shows in upper Michigan and quickly disappeared into the collections of band members, families, friends and fans. Its claims to fame are several: it’s an early example of country, rock and soul fusion, it was recorded in the famed Bradley’s Barn studio in Nashville, and it marks the recorded debut of then-future country star Gary Stewart.

The group was named for its leader, Riley Watkins, and started out as a late-50s instrumental band backing first generation rockers who toured through Michigan. They relocated to Florida in 1963 to play the beach circuit, and there met the Kentucky-born Stewart. Stewart sat in and eventually joined the band (then called the Imps) for six months of shows in the wintery North. By decade’s end Watkins had formed a new trio with bassist Jim Noveskey and drummer Jim Snead, while Stewart had signed on as a songwriter in Nashville. One of the perks of Stewart’s songwriting gig was a sideline as an engineering assistant for Bradley’s Barn. Thus the connection was made, as Stewart invited Watkins to record tracks at the Barn. Stewart may have thought this an opportunity to put a band behind his songwriting demos, but Watkins jumped on the opportunity to record many of his originals.

Over the course of a year Watkins’ trio would race to Nashville to record their original songs, along with demos of tunes written by Stewart and his partner Bill Eldridge. As in the Florida days, Stewart sat in with the band, adding lead and rhythm guitar and harmonica, and singing lead on a couple of tunes. The band played emotional country rock that mixed elements heard in the Band, Poco, Creedence Clearwater Revival, Moby Grape and the Allman Brothers, as well as the southern soul sounds of Tony Joe White and Joe South. The band distinguished their sound with powerful guitar, bass and drums and strong multipart vocals. Watkins and Stewart sing a duet on the title track, and the harmonies on “Love, Love You Lady” suggest CS&N. Stewart steps to the front for the Creedence-styled “Drinkin’ Them Squeezins,” and the gospel sound and brotherhood-themed lyrics of “Listen to My Song” bring to mind Joe South’s “Walk a Mile in My Shoes.”

The turn from the late ‘60s into the early ‘70s was a special time for pop music, mining the late 60s underground for nuggets of invention while shucking away the ponderous ballroom jamming. The ease with which this band combined rock, country and soul follows the heavier experiments of FM, but the conciseness of their compositions would have sounded at home on AM. It’s a shame these tracks didn’t get into the hands of someone at Capitol, as no one in Nashville at that time could have known what to do with this “headneck” music. Riley and Stewart write of greasy roadhouses and cheating lovers, but also love, brotherhood and fine weed. The entire album feels warm and familiar, as if it’s been sitting on the shelf next to Cosmo’s Factory, Don’t It Make You Wanna Go Home, Black and White and The Allman Brothers Band all these years. [©2010 hyperbolium dot com]

MP3 | Field of Green
Grandma’s Roadhouse’s Facebook Page
Delmore Recordings’ Home Page

Hank Williams: The Complete Mothers’ Best Recordings… Plus!

Astonishing Hank Williams’ vault find – the Mothers’ Best mother lode

In 2008 Time-Life released the brilliant Unreleased Recordings box set. The fifty-four previously unreleased tracks cherry-picked live-in-the-studio recordings from Williams’ 1951 Mothers’ Best radio show. The acetate transcriptions showed off a directness and intensity that wasn’t always found in MGM’s studios, and illuminated a new side of a superstar whose biography had long since transcended to folk lore. At the time of the box set’s release there was debate as to whether it was right to excerpt the musical selections from the original 15-minute radio programs, and there was much clamoring for the original full-length transcriptions. Time Life’s new fifteen CD set presents the original acetates in their full glory – seventy-two programs totaling over eighteen hours, and may remind you to be careful of what you wish for!

As illuminating as were the songs excerpted for the previous box, the intact radio programs add yet another dimension to Williams’ personal and professional personalities. The very circumstance of their recording, waxed for broadcast when his heavy touring schedule prevented him from broadcasting live, speaks to the career peak Williams achieved in 1951. Not only was he selling records and filling seats at concerts, but he was writing some of his most revered original songs. Two of these, “Cold, Cold Heart” and “I Can’t Help it (If I’m Still in Love With You)” even received their public debuts on his radio program. Williams lights up numerous country and western chestnuts, sings hymns and spirituals with his Drifting Cowboys, and gives recitations. There’s a wealth of obscure and rare material among these recordings.

Williams performs with the ease of a seasoned performer rummaging around for something to entertain the folks, enticing them to stay tuned through the commercials and to come out to his live performances. Although recorded for later broadcast on WSM, these performances have the informality and spontaneity of live radio programs. Williams’ asides are clearly unscripted and unrehearsed, and at only twenty-seven (and just a couple of years from his untimely death), he married the fire of youth with the poise of artists decades his senior. The music is an obvious goldmine, but the continuity – the commercials, ad lib asides and joshing with those in the studio – draws a distinct picture of, to quote Hank Jr. “a young man on top of his world.”

A great DJ or radio talk show host can create a personal connection with their listeners, and Williams had the talent. He showed off his quick wit and drew listeners into the party taking place in the studio. But unlike a DJ or talk host, Williams both spoke and sang, seamlessly weaving together his conversations, announcements, introductions and songs into an effortlessly magnetic whole. Even a minor gaffe of live radio, such as an announcer’s momentary forgetfulness, is turned into material as everyone breaks up and the joke is shared with the listeners. Williams’ band is exceptional, responding on a dime as their leader calls out a song, and playing in perfect balance to the microphone. Fiddler Jerry Rivers and steel player Don Helms are real standouts and often featured. Williams’ wife Audrey, who was the motor behind his career, also sings a few, but with more charm than vocal talent.

The transcriptions have some minor audio artifacts and scattered surface noise, but it rarely distracts from the astonishing clarity and presence of these recordings. Engineer Joe Palmaccio has restored these recordings with the deftness of an artisan, and the catalog and performances are beyond compare – even to Williams’ much revered studio catalog. As with the previous box, it boggles the mind that country music’s greatest ever artist should have his music catalog so vastly expanded more than fifty years after his passing. Bonus material includes a 1952 program on which Williams auditions for a show sponsored by Aunt Jemima, a musical-story public service announcement warning of the dangers of venereal disease, and a DVD featuring interviews with Williams band members Don Helms and Bill Lester.

Colin Escott’s liner notes are superb and should net him a Grammy. He provides informative and entertaining context for the songs and performers, and explains many references that would escape modern day listeners. For example, you might know that Pee Wee King was born Julius Kuczynski, but you probably didn’t know he was prone to swearing in Polish when he was mad! The packaging matches the grandness of the recordings, with a 108-page book that includes full-panel vintage photos, reproductions of various ephemera, detailed biographies of the key show participants, an introduction by Hank Jr. and an afterword by Jett Williams. The set is housed in an antique-style radio box that even plays a few audio snippets at the turn of a knob.

This is an astonishing new portrait of an artist most fans thought they already knew intimately, especially after the 2008 release of the shows’ musical elements. What the full radio programs reveal is a completely different side of an artist whose popular image, particularly in historical retrospect, was defined by the tenor of his songs and his singing. What emerges is a preternaturally talented performer who wrote and sang decades beyond his age, and, in contrast to the pain etched into his lyrics, was personally buoyant and friendly and funny. Those who sat by their radio in 1951 may have already known this, but the rest of us are just finding out that Williams’ was more than an iconic singer and songwriter, he was also a crackerjack pitchman and offered his fans a warm, entertaining human presence. [©2010 hyperbolium dot com]

MP3 | On Top of Old Smokey
The Complete Mother’s Best Recordings’ Home Page
Also available from Ernest Tubb’s Record Shop in Nashville
Available from Bear Family in Europe