Dick Curless - Tombstone Every Mile (1965)

  • 15 Dec, 14:01
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Artist:
Title: Tombstone Every Mile
Year Of Release: 1965
Label: EMI Music Nashville (ERN)
Genre: Country
Quality: flac lossless (tracks)
Total Time: 00:31:58
Total Size: 99 mb
WebSite:

Tracklist

01. A Tombstone Every Mile
02. Streets Of Laredo
03. King Of The Road
04. Uncle Tom
05. China Nights (Shina No Yoru)
06. Cupid's Arrow
07. Six Times A Day (The Trains Came Down)
08. Teardrops In My Heart
09. Down By The Old River
10. Nine Pound Hammer
11. Sunny Side Of The Mountain
12. Heart Talk

Anchored by the number five country hit title track, Dick Curless' first album for Tower also included his Top 20 country follow-up, "Six Times a Day (The Trains Came Down)," which like "Tombstone Every Mile" was written by Dan Fulkerson. The trucker disaster song "A Tombstone Every Mile" might be what Curless is best known for, but this LP isn't built around trucking songs, as were the albums of the time by Red Simpson (who covered "A Tombstone Every Mile," as it happens). Instead, it's a fairly versatile, hard to categorize set of an enjoyable journeyman who mixed country-pop with a folksy all-around entertainer approach. Curless can sound a little like (or, at least, certainly influenced by) Johnny Cash on the more hard-charging numbers, yet the way his voice is apt to lapse into a low, slightly hammy bass vibrato puts a nod in the direction of Tennessee Ernie Ford as well. Covers of some familiar narrative-style songs ("Streets of Laredo," "King of the Road," "Nine Pound Hammer") fill out an album with just three Curless originals, with some of the tracks so under-produced they almost sound like demos for final versions with additional instrumentation, though they don't suffer for their simplicity.

  • whiskers
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