va - Ernie's Record Mart (1998)

  • 16 Jan, 13:50
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Artist:
Title: Ernie's Record Mart
Year Of Release: 1998
Label: Ace – CDCHD 684
Genre: Louisiana Blues
Quality: FLAC (tracks+.cue, log, artwork)
Total Time: 61:27
Total Size: 185 MB
WebSite:

Tracklist:

01. John R - John R. Theme (0:35)
02. Lillian Offitt - Miss You So (2:12)
03. Louis Brooks & His Hi-Toppers with Earl Gaines - It's Love Baby (24 Hours A Day) (2:41)
04. The Solotones - Pork And Beans (2:52)
05. The Solotones - Front Page Blues (2:41)
06. Kid King's Combo with Good Rockin' Sam - Now Listen Baby (2:38)
07. Ted Jarrett - Love, Love, Love (2:32)
08. Larry Birdsong - Pleadin' For Love (2:35)
09. Rudy Green - My Mumblin' Baby (2:21)
10. Rudy Green - Cool, Cool Mama (2:52)
11. Arthur Gunter - Hear My Plea Baby (2:38)
12. Guitar Red - The Hot Potato (2:34)
13. Sugar And Sweet - I'll Be Good (2:34)
14. Jerry McCain & His Upstarts - My Next Door Neighbor (2:11)
15. Arthur Gunter - We're Gonna Shake (1:57)
16. Eddie Williams - It's Love Pretty Baby (3:04)
17. Ralph Harris with Skippy Brooks - Slim Lizard (2:40)
18. Jimmie Birdsong - Oh How I Tried (2:18)
19. Chuck Brown (King Karl) - Out Of Darkness (2:57)
20. Al Garner - You Must Be Crazy (2:22)
21. Eddie Williams - Have You Ever (2:44)
22. Lattimore Brown - Got Plenty Troubles (2:22)
23. Lattimore Brown - It Hurts Me So (2:17)
24. Al Garner - Gonna Stop My Drinkin' (2:21)
25. Lattimore Brown - Somebody's Gonna Miss Me (2:40)

Continuing with its in-depth re-examination of the long-neglected Nashville R&B scene, Ace Records presents ERNIE'S RECORD MART-.-a 24-track compilation paying tribute to the famous mail order enterprise of that name and original home of Excello Records. As the sponsor of Ernie's Record Parade, a blues programme broadcast over the powerhouse Nashville station WLAC, Ernie's Record Mart rocked at the centre of an R&B broadcast firestorm begun in the late 1940s in a town better known for country music. Host of Ernie's Record Parade was the illustrious disc jockey John Richbourg (John R). Along with fellow WLAC jocks Gene Nobles, Herman Grizzard, and Bill "Hoss" Allen, Richbourg helped revolutionise American radio by broadcasting gutbucket rhythm & blues at a time when Alan Freed was still spinning longhair music. Transmitted nightly on a 50,000-watt skip channel (meaning the signal literally "skipped" along the atmosphere), WLAC blanketed half the United States and, on a good night, shook the airwaves to points overseas with post-war boogie and blues.


va - Ernie's Record Mart (1998)


  • mufty77
  •  00:23
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Many thanks.
  • Kolomito
  •  10:05
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Many thanks