Jimmy Dean - Big Bad John (1993)

  • 13 Dec, 06:59
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Artist:
Title: Big Bad John
Year Of Release: 1993
Label: Bear Family Records
Genre: Country
Quality: FLAC (tracks+.cue, log)
Total Time: 1:18:29
Total Size: 431 MB
WebSite:

Tracklist:

01. Big Bad John (3:04)
02. I Won't Go Huntin' with You Jake (2:52)
03. Smoke, Smoke, Smoke That Cigarette (2:48)
04. Dear Ivan (3:53)
05. To a Sleeping Beauty (5:17)
06. The Cajun Queen (2:41)
07. P.T. 109 (3:15)
08. Walk On Boy (2:46)
09. Little Bitty Big John (3:39)
10. Steel Men (2:46)
11. Little Black Book (2:28)
12. Please Pass the Biscuits (2:59)
13. Gonna Raise a Ruckus Tonight (2:55)
14. A Day That Changed the World (3:22)
15. Gotta Travel On (2:22)
16. Sixteen Tons (2:43)
17. Oklahoma Bill (3:44)
18. Night Train to Memphis (2:31)
19. Make the Waterwheel Roll (1:59)
20. Lonesome Road (3:41)
21. Grasshopper Mac Clain (3:19)
22. Old Pappy's New Banjo (3:12)
23. You're Nobody Till Somebody Loves You (3:00)
24. Cajun Joe (2:00)
25. Nobody (2:55)
26. Kentucky Means Paradise (2:20)

This 26-song single disc collection covers the highlights of Jimmy Dean's 1961-1962 recordings for Columbia Records; not everything, but most everything that counts. The sheer diversity of material demonstrates some of the problems that Dean had finding and following up on hits; he was a passable singer and likable personality, but he would follow up a pop/rock piece like "Little Black Book" with a blues piece such as "Gonna Raise a Ruckus Tonight." But apart from the hokiest of these tracks ("A Day That Changed the World"), it all holds up, including the title track; the freewheeling "Smoke, Smoke, Smoke That Cigarette"; the weirdly topical "Dear Ivan"; his cover of Merle Travis' "Sixteen Tons"; the sentimental father-to-daughter soliloquy "To a Sleeping Beauty"; the rough-hewn "Big Bad John" follow-up "The Cajun Queen"; the delightful sequel to both songs, "Little Bitty Big John"; "P.T. 109," a tribute to John Kennedy's World War II exploits written in the same vein as Johnny Horton's "Sink the Bismarck"; the wryly cynical "Walk on Boy"; the workers' anthem "Steel Men"; the pop/rock ballad "Little Black Book"; the old Texas blues "Gonna Raise a Ruckus Tonight"; the strange D-day remembrance "A Day That Changed the World"; the breezily folky "Gotta Travel On"; the sad dog (and war) song "Oklahoma Bill"; the effective sub-Elvis "Night Train to Memphis"; and two previously unissued numbers, the slow blues "Lonesome Road" and the swamp ballad "Cajun Joe."


  • whiskers
  •  13:20
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Many Thanks
  • mufty77
  •  16:33
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Many thanks for Flac.