Tammy Wynette - Greatest Hits (1969)
Artist: Tammy Wynette
Title: Greatest Hits
Year Of Release: 1969
Label: Epic
Genre: Country
Quality: FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 46:34
Total Size: 273 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:Title: Greatest Hits
Year Of Release: 1969
Label: Epic
Genre: Country
Quality: FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 46:34
Total Size: 273 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
1. I Don't Wanna Play House (Album Version) (02:35)
2. Take Me to Your World (Album Version) (02:47)
3. D-I-V-O-R-C-E (Single Version) (02:56)
4. Stand By Your Man (02:39)
5. The Ways to Love a Man (02:26)
6. He Loves Me All the Way (02:36)
7. Run, Woman, Run (Album Version) (02:26)
8. Bedtime Story (Album Version) (04:14)
9. My Man (Understands) (Album Version) (02:50)
10. 'Til I Get It Right (Album Version) (02:38)
11. Kids Say the Darndest Things (02:53)
12. 'Til I Can Make It On My Own (Album Version) (03:01)
13. You and Me (03:19)
14. Starting Over (03:06)
15. Cowboys Don't Shoot Straight (Like They Used To) (02:55)
16. Crying In the Rain (03:06)
During her heyday of the late '60s and '70s, Tammy Wynette was called "The First Lady of Country Music," an honorarium that spoke to both her elegance and popularity. Wynette dominated the country charts starting in 1967, when "Your Good Girl's Gonna Go Bad" rocketed into the country Top Ten, quickly followed by the number one David Houston duet "My Elusive Dreams," and ending in the '70s, when the Top Tens slowly faded away. Over the course of that decade, she recorded hit after hit with Billy Sherrill, a producer who cannily steered her toward writing and singing material that played upon country tradition while addressing modern issues. "I Don't Wanna Play House" and "D-I-V-O-R-C-E" were heartbreak songs that tapped into the shifting society of the late '60s, a situation her signature song "Stand by Your Man" also tacitly addressed by reasserting old-fashioned values in a time of change. At the height of her stardom, Wynette entered into a star-crossed romance with George Jones, a relationship that turned professional with the release of the 1971 single "Take Me." Wynette's and Jones' union was turbulent and their work as a duo often referred to their troubles; even after the pair divorced in 1975, they continued to reunite, singing songs that acknowledged their potent chemistry. Wynette's career slowed in the '80s due to a combination of health problems and changing fashions, but prior to her premature death at the age of 55 in 1998, she scored one last surprise hit as the vocalist for the KLF on the electronic duo's 1991 international blockbuster "Justified & Ancient."