Goldie Hill - Country Hits (1967)

  • 17 Aug, 10:03
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Artist:
Title: Country Hits
Year Of Release: 2010
Label: Goldenlane Records
Genre: Country, Honky Tonk
Quality: FLAC (tracks+.cue, log)
Total Time: 01:00:39
Total Size: 152 MB
WebSite:

Tracklist:

1. Say Big Boy (03:01)
2. Why Don't You Let Me Go (02:25)
3. Young At Heart (02:10)
4. Call Off The Wedding (02:23)
5. Let Me Be The One (02:29)
6. My Love Is Aflame (02:39)
7. I'm Yesterday's Girl (03:00)
8. Liquor & Women (02:59)
9. I Let The Stars Get In My Eyes (02:37)
10. Why Talk To My Heart (02:18)
11. Waiting For A Letter (02:34)
12. Cry, Cry, Darling (02:38)
13. Fickle Heart (02:38)
14. Am I Still Your Baby (02:08)
15. I'm The Loneliest Gal In Town (02:40)
16. Don't Send No More Roses (02:37)
17. Looking Back To See (02:21)
18. Please Don't Betray Me (02:36)
19. Ain't Gonna Wash My Face For A Month (02:14)
20. I Miss You So (02:17)
21. Make Love To Me (02:41)
22. I'm Yvonne Of The Bayou (02:21)
23. Treat Me Kind (02:25)
24. Sure Fire Kisses (02:28)

Country singer Goldie Hill, younger sister of Tommy Hill, was born in 1933 in Karnes County, TX. Music played a huge part in the Hill family. The radio was one way to block out the daily backbreaking work of picking cotton. Goldie soaked up the popular country music of the era and developed a talent for singing. Early on, Goldie's older brothers Tommy and Ken left a life of cotton picking determined to make a name for themselves in country music. Within a few years, they were backing up Hank Williams, Johnny Horton, and Webb Pierce. Sister Goldie officially got her start on the Louisiana Hayride in 1953 as part of Tommy's band. Billed as "the Golden Hillbilly," she scored a number one hit in 1953 with her second single, "I Let the Stars Get in My Eyes," originally written by Tommy for Kitty Wells. Among her other charting tunes were several duets with either Ernest Tubb's son Justin Tubb or Red Sovine, including the big hit "Yankee Go Home." In 1957 she married country singer Carl Smith following his divorce from June Carter. In the late '60s she made a short-lived comeback as Goldie Hill Smith, without much fanfare. Following Carl Smith's retirement from music in the late '70s, he and Goldie lived on their horse farm outside of Franklin, TN, and the two began to show horses professionally during the course of the decade.


  • Downtown4
  •  17:34
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Very low Flac rate.