VA - Dim Lights Thick Smoke & Hillbilly Music: Country & Western Hit Parade 1961 (2011) Lossless

  • 01 Jun, 15:42
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Title: Dim Lights Thick Smoke & Hillbilly Music: Country & Western Hit Parade 1961
Year Of Release: 2011
Label: Bear Family Records
Genre: Country, Bluegrass, Hillbilly, Progressive Country
Quality: Mp3 320 / Flac (image, .cue, log)
Total Time: 79:57
Total Size: 211/511 Mb
WebSite:

VA - Dim Lights Thick Smoke & Hillbilly Music: Country & Western Hit Parade 1961 (2011) Lossless


Tracklist:

01. Marty Robbins - Don't Worry
02. Don Gibson - Sea Of Heartbreak
03. Patsy Cline - I Fall To Pieces
04. Billy Walker - Funny (How Time Slips Away)
05. Claude Gray - I'll Just Have A Cup Of Coffee (Then I'll Go)
06. Faron Young - Hello Walls
07. Bill Anderson - Po' Folks
08. Johnny Cash - Tennessee Flat Top Box
09. Wanda Jackson - Right Or Wrong
10. Buck Owens - Foolin' Around
11. Rusty and Doug Kershaw - Louisiana Man
12. Porter Wagoner - Your Old Love Letters
13. Jim Reeves - Losing Your Love
14. Bobby Edwards - You're The Reason
15. Jimmy Dean - Big Bad John
16. Claude King - Big River, Big Man
17. Roger Miller - When Two Worlds Collide
18. Leroy Van Dyke - Walk On By
19. George Jones - Tender Years
20. Moon Mullican - Ragged But Right
21. Buck Owens - Under The Influence Of Love
22. Marty Robbins - It's Your World
23. Webb Pierce - Sweet Lips
24. Patsy Cline - Crazy
25. Ray Price - Heart Over Mind
26. Rusty and Doug Kershaw - Diggy Liggy Lo
27. Wynn Stewart - Big, Big Love
28. Kitty Wells - Heartbreak USA
29. Claude Gray - My Ears Should Burn (When Fools Are Talked About)
30. Tex Ritter - I Dreamed Of A Hill-Billy Heaven
31. Gloria Lambert - Each Time I Hear (Don't Worry)

Bear Family's fine ongoing series of country chart hits year by year is not only an eye-opening history of country music's various trends and fashions, it also serves as a reminder of how a pop music genre builds, grows, and evolves while still retaining its commercial viability and audience, and given country's longstanding lip service to tradition, it serves as proof to the old axiom that the more things change, the more they stay the same. This volume takes on 1961, and includes such enduring genre gems from that year as Don Gibson's "Sea of Heartbreak," Rusty and Doug Kershaw's romping "Louisiana Man," Jimmy Dean's "Big Bad John," Marty Robbins' "It's Your World," and Patsy Cline's two biggest and most immortal hits, "Crazy" and "I Fall to Pieces."


  • whiskers
  •  12:18
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Many Thanks
  • angel44
  •  08:57
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Many Thanks
  • cmax
  •  13:19
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Brilliant thank you have you got the year 1951