Merle Travis - Giving You Country! (Remastered) (2021)

  • 15 Aug, 18:34
  • change text size:

Artist:
Title: Giving You Country! (Remastered)
Year Of Release: 2021
Label: Master Tape Records
Genre: Country
Quality: FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 1:19:09
Total Size: 330 MB
WebSite:

Tracklist:

01. Sixteen Tons (Remastered)
02. Dark as a Dungeon (Remastered)
03. Divorce Me C.O.D. (Remastered)
04. Nine Pound Hammer (Remastered)
05. Cincinnati Lou (Remastered)
06. No Vacancy (Remastered)
07. Missouri (Remastered)
08. So Round! so Firm! so Fully Packed! (Remastered)
09. Steel Guitar Rag (Remastered)
10. Three Times Seven (Remastered)
11. Fat Gal (Remastered)
12. Merle's Boogie Woogie (Remastered)
13. Crazy Boogie (Remastered)
14. What a Shame (Remastered)
15. Sweet Temptation (Remastered)
16. Alimony Bound (Remastered)
17. I'm Sick and Tired of You (Remastered)
18. I Like My Chicken Fryin' Size (Remastered)
19. Kentucky Means Paradise (Remastered)
20. Information Please (Remastered)
21. Kinfolks in Carolina (Remastered)
22. A Too Fast Past (Remastered)
23. Gambler's Guitar (Remastered)
24. John Henry (Remastered)
25. Over by Number Nine (Remastered)
26. That's All (Remastered)
27. Muskrat (Remastered)
28. I Am a Pilgrim (Remastered)

Merle Travis was virtually without peer as a guitarist and songwriter. A unique stylist, he was respected and prominent enough to have an instrumental style ("Travis picking") named after him, and only Chet Atkins even comes close to the influence that Travis had on the way the guitar is understood and played in country music. (Indeed, Atkins was initially signed to RCA to be that label's Merle Travis.) As a songwriter, he wasn't far behind, with originals such as "Sixteen Tons" crossing over as popular standards in the hands of other artists. He even played two different vital and indirect roles in the development of rock & roll, and was no slouch as a recording artist, with his own share of chart hits and novelty songs.

Merle Robert Travis was born on November 29, 1917, in Rosewood, Kentucky. His father was a coal miner, and the family lived on the bare edge of poverty; eventually this experience, coupled with a phrase that Travis' father used to describe their lives, became the basis for the song "Sixteen Tons." His very first instrument was a five-string banjo, but when he was 12 years old his older brother gave him a homemade guitar. Travis was lucky enough to have as neighbors Ike Everly, later the father of Don and Phil, and Mose Rager, who played in a unique three-finger guitar style that had developed in that area of Kentucky. Travis learned this approach as a teenager and grew astonishingly proficient in a repertory that included blues, ragtime, and popular tunes. It wasn't enough to earn a living, and he survived by working in the Civilian Conservation Corps as a teenager.



  • whiskers
  •  19:47
  • Пользователь offline
    • Нравится
    • 0
Many Thanks
  • mufty77
  •  00:43
  • Пользователь offline
    • Нравится
    • 0
Many thanks for lossless.