
The Golden Age Of American Popular Music - More Country Hits
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Classic country music that breached the American pop charts.
Aceās flagship āGolden Ageā series continues to be among our best selling and most highly respected releases. After a short hiatus, weāre pleased to announce this new volume featuring 28 country recordings that made the Billboard Hot 100 between 1955 and 1963. As āMore Country Hitsā is in the āGolden Age Of American Popular Musicā series, the content is more melodic overall than a āGolden Age Of American RockānāRollā edition might be. Nevertheless, thereās a generous helping of up-tempo hillbilly and borderline rockabilly among the straight-ahead country to give listeners a bit of light and shade. As usual, the CD comes with a generously illustrated and copiously annotated booklet.
The tracks transport us to a time when State Fairs were more likely to be on a country performerās itinerary than stadiums, and superstardom meant you stayed for an extra hour or two after your show to sign autographs, rather than successfully market your own fragrance range. A promotional campaign might have meant a solitary trade ad in the back of Billboard, while radio airplay was the main way of getting your music heard, rather than streaming. These singles became hits because they sold in their thousands, hundreds of thousands, and occasionally millions. Thatās what it took to get a record into the national charts in the ultra-competitive 50s and 60s.
Just about every big-selling country artist of the era is included. Weāve tried not to always go for an obvious hit, but thereās music here that will be remembered fondly by anyone who was around when these were new records. Many featured tracks have since come to be regarded as genre classics. If you canāt remember Ferlin Huskyās āThe Waltz You Saved For Meā too clearly, tracks such as Marty Robbinsā original of āSinging The Bluesā, Johnny Hortonās āNorth To Alaskaā or Jim Reevesā groundbreaking āFour Wallsā will surely not have slipped your mind.
Tracklist
01 Four Walls - Jim Reeves
02 Chip Off The Old Block - Eddy Arnold
03 Send Me The Pillow You Dream On - Hank Locklin
04 North To Alaska - Johnny Horton
05 I Got Stripes - Johnny Cash
06 Back Track - Faron Young
07 Go On Home - Patti Page
08 Blue Blue Day - Don Gibson
09 Boppin' The Blues - Carl Perkins
10 Who Shot Sam? - George Jones
11 The Auctioneer - Leroy Van Dyke
12 Mary Don't You Weep - Stonewall Jackson
13 Dark Moon - Bonnie Guitar
14 Rockin' Rollin' Ocean - Hank Snow
15 My Shoes Keep Walking Back To You - Ray Price
16 Jenny Lou - Sonny James
17 Big River, Big Man - Claude King
18 I'm Saving My Love - Skeeter Davis
19 Soldier's Joy - Hawkshaw Hawkins
20 500 Miles Away From Home - Bobby Bare
21 I Dreamed Of A Hill-billy Heaven - Tex Ritter
22 Cowboy Boots - Dave Dudley
23 8 x 10 - Bill Anderson
24 Little Black Book - Jimmy Dean
25 Your Name Is Beautiful - Carl Smith
26 I'll Make It All Up To You - Jerry Lee Lewis
27 The Waltz You Saved For Me - Ferlin Husky
28 Singing The Blues - Marty Robbins
Original: $23.10
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Description
More Info
Classic country music that breached the American pop charts.
Aceās flagship āGolden Ageā series continues to be among our best selling and most highly respected releases. After a short hiatus, weāre pleased to announce this new volume featuring 28 country recordings that made the Billboard Hot 100 between 1955 and 1963. As āMore Country Hitsā is in the āGolden Age Of American Popular Musicā series, the content is more melodic overall than a āGolden Age Of American RockānāRollā edition might be. Nevertheless, thereās a generous helping of up-tempo hillbilly and borderline rockabilly among the straight-ahead country to give listeners a bit of light and shade. As usual, the CD comes with a generously illustrated and copiously annotated booklet.
The tracks transport us to a time when State Fairs were more likely to be on a country performerās itinerary than stadiums, and superstardom meant you stayed for an extra hour or two after your show to sign autographs, rather than successfully market your own fragrance range. A promotional campaign might have meant a solitary trade ad in the back of Billboard, while radio airplay was the main way of getting your music heard, rather than streaming. These singles became hits because they sold in their thousands, hundreds of thousands, and occasionally millions. Thatās what it took to get a record into the national charts in the ultra-competitive 50s and 60s.
Just about every big-selling country artist of the era is included. Weāve tried not to always go for an obvious hit, but thereās music here that will be remembered fondly by anyone who was around when these were new records. Many featured tracks have since come to be regarded as genre classics. If you canāt remember Ferlin Huskyās āThe Waltz You Saved For Meā too clearly, tracks such as Marty Robbinsā original of āSinging The Bluesā, Johnny Hortonās āNorth To Alaskaā or Jim Reevesā groundbreaking āFour Wallsā will surely not have slipped your mind.
Tracklist
01 Four Walls - Jim Reeves
02 Chip Off The Old Block - Eddy Arnold
03 Send Me The Pillow You Dream On - Hank Locklin
04 North To Alaska - Johnny Horton
05 I Got Stripes - Johnny Cash
06 Back Track - Faron Young
07 Go On Home - Patti Page
08 Blue Blue Day - Don Gibson
09 Boppin' The Blues - Carl Perkins
10 Who Shot Sam? - George Jones
11 The Auctioneer - Leroy Van Dyke
12 Mary Don't You Weep - Stonewall Jackson
13 Dark Moon - Bonnie Guitar
14 Rockin' Rollin' Ocean - Hank Snow
15 My Shoes Keep Walking Back To You - Ray Price
16 Jenny Lou - Sonny James
17 Big River, Big Man - Claude King
18 I'm Saving My Love - Skeeter Davis
19 Soldier's Joy - Hawkshaw Hawkins
20 500 Miles Away From Home - Bobby Bare
21 I Dreamed Of A Hill-billy Heaven - Tex Ritter
22 Cowboy Boots - Dave Dudley
23 8 x 10 - Bill Anderson
24 Little Black Book - Jimmy Dean
25 Your Name Is Beautiful - Carl Smith
26 I'll Make It All Up To You - Jerry Lee Lewis
27 The Waltz You Saved For Me - Ferlin Husky
28 Singing The Blues - Marty Robbins











