Gene Autry That Silver Haired Daddy Of Mine (9-CD Deluxe Box Set)

Gene Autry: That Silver Haired Daddy Of Mine (9-CD Deluxe Box Set)
Very few people know that Gene Autry... America’s beloved Singing Cowboy, began his career as the writer and performer of authentic white country blues. While working as a telegrapher for the St. Louis and San Francisco Railroad—the Frisco Line—he used a railroad pass to travel to New York in 1929, hoping to follow his dream of competing with the top pop singers of the day. Instead, on the advice of Frankie and Johnny Marvin, and legendary producer Arthur Satherley, Autry used his talent to emulate Jimmie Rodgers. No other performer caught the essence of Jimmie Rodgers as Autry did. He could match Rodgers' yodel, Mississippi dialect and guitar runs so closely that it was often hard to tell the two apart. Yet, as he performed more and more original songs in the Rodgers style, he began to develop a sound of his own.
Producing records for a variety of labels such as Gennett, Victor, and Columbia, as well as various low budget labels ('dime-store platters') owned by ARC, Gene sold lots of records during the Depression when people could least afford to buy them. In the early 1930s, Gene with the guidance of his mentor Jimmy Long and Art Satherley, moved from blues to the more traditional hillbilly music of the time. His duet with Long on the mountain balladThat Silver Haired Daddy Of Mine, recorded in October of 1931, became a million-selling record. Quickly following that success with other songs, such as
My Old Pal Of Yesterday, Missouri Is Calling, The Little Ranch House On The Old Circle B. and Louisiana Moon, Gene went on to transform himself into America’s preeminent singing cowboy.
With the 226 songs on this 9 CD box, Bear Family Records brings together all of the surviving recordings from 1929 – 1933 for the first time ever. Most of these songs have never been on CD, and many have not been available in any form since their original release 75 years ago, including more than 20 songs that are issued here for the first time.
The hardcover book contains an essay by Packy Smith, a discography by Tony Russell, and many rare pictures and illustrations.
Article properties:Gene Autry: That Silver Haired Daddy Of Mine (9-CD Deluxe Box Set)
Interpret: Gene Autry
Album titlle: That Silver Haired Daddy Of Mine (9-CD Deluxe Box Set)
Genre Country
Label Bear Family Records
- Edition 2 Deluxe Edition
- Preiscode IL
Artikelart Box set
EAN: 4000127159441
- weight in Kg 2.2
Autry, Gene - That Silver Haired Daddy Of Mine (9-CD Deluxe Box Set) Box set 1 | ||||
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01 | My Dreaming Of You | Gene Autry | ||
02 | My Alabama Home | Gene Autry | ||
03 | Stay Away From My Chicken House | Gene Autry | ||
04 | My Oklahoma Home | Gene Autry | ||
05 | I'll Be Thinking Of You Little Gal | Gene Autry | ||
06 | I'll Be Thinking Of You Little Gal | Gene Autry | ||
07 | Cowboy Yodel | Gene Autry | ||
08 | Why Don't You Come Back To Me | Gene Autry | ||
09 | No One To Call Me Darling | Gene Autry | ||
10 | Living In The Mountains | Gene Autry | ||
11 | Yodelin' Gene | Gene Autry | ||
12 | Blue Yodel No.5 | Gene Autry | ||
13 | Left My Gal In The Mountains | Gene Autry | ||
14 | Why Don't You Come Back To Me | Gene Autry | ||
15 | Hobo Yodel | Gene Autry | ||
16 | Dust Pan Blues | Gene Autry | ||
17 | No One To Call Me Darling | Gene Autry | ||
18 | Frankie And Johnny | Gene Autry | ||
19 | Railroad Boomer | Gene Autry | ||
20 | My Alabama Home | Gene Autry | ||
21 | Slue-Foot Lue | Gene Autry | ||
22 | Stay Away From My Chicken House | Gene Autry | ||
23 | Waiting For A Train | Gene Autry | ||
24 | Lullaby Yodel | Gene Autry | ||
25 | California Blues (Blue Yodel No.4) | Gene Autry | ||
26 | Daddy And Home | Gene Autry |
Autry, Gene - That Silver Haired Daddy Of Mine (9-CD Deluxe Box Set) Box set 2 | ||||
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01 | That's Why I Left The Mountains | Gene Autry | ||
02 | Cowboy Yodel | Gene Autry | ||
03 | I'll Be Thinking Of You Little Gal | Gene Autry | ||
04 | My Rough And Rowdy Ways | Gene Autry | ||
05 | I'll Be Thinking Of You Little Gal | Gene Autry | ||
06 | Cowboy Yodel | Gene Autry | ||
07 | Whisper Your Mother's Name | Gene Autry | ||
08 | The Girl I Left Behind | Gene Autry | ||
09 | I'll Be Thinking Of You Little Gal | Gene Autry | ||
10 | Cowboy Yodel | Gene Autry | ||
11 | In The Shadow Of The Pine | Gene Autry | ||
12 | Hobo Yodel | Gene Autry | ||
13 | They Cut Down The Old Pine Tree | Gene Autry | ||
14 | Texas Blues | Gene Autry | ||
15 | Hobo Bill's Last Ride | Gene Autry | ||
16 | Dust Pan Blues | Gene Autry | ||
17 | My Carolina Sunshine Girl | Gene Autry | ||
18 | Train Whistle Blues | Gene Autry | ||
19 | Anniversary Blue Yodel No.7 | Gene Autry | ||
20 | In The Jailhouse Now No.2 | Gene Autry | ||
21 | The Yodeling Hobo | Gene Autry | ||
22 | Pictures Of My Mother | Gene Autry | ||
23 | Blue Days | Gene Autry | ||
24 | He's In The Jail House No.2 | Gene Autry | ||
25 | Cowboy's Yodel | Gene Autry | ||
26 | Dad In The Hills | Gene Autry |
Autry, Gene - That Silver Haired Daddy Of Mine (9-CD Deluxe Box Set) Box set 3 | ||||
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01 | High Powered Mama | Gene Autry | ||
02 | The Yodeling Hobo | Gene Autry | ||
03 | Mean Mama Blues | Gene Autry | ||
04 | Blue Yodel No.8 | Gene Autry | ||
05 | Pistol Packin' Papa | Gene Autry | ||
06 | Dad In The Hills | Gene Autry | ||
07 | Pictures Of My Mother | Gene Autry | ||
08 | Any Old Time | Gene Autry | ||
09 | Money Ain't No Use Anyway | Gene Autry | ||
10 | Blue Days | Gene Autry | ||
11 | A Gangster's Warning | Gene Autry | ||
12 | Pictures Of My Mother | Gene Autry | ||
13 | That's How I Got My Start | Gene Autry | ||
14 | True Blue Bill | Gene Autry | ||
15 | Do Right Daddy Blues | Gene Autry | ||
16 | Do Right Daddy Blues | Gene Autry | ||
17 | Money Ain't No Use Anyway | Gene Autry | ||
18 | Money Ain't No Use Anyway | Gene Autry | ||
19 | That's How I Got My Start | Gene Autry | ||
20 | That's How I Got My Start | Gene Autry | ||
21 | Bear Cat Papa Blues | Gene Autry | ||
22 | Bear Cat Papa Blues | Gene Autry | ||
23 | True Blue Bill | Gene Autry | ||
24 | A Gangster's Warning | Gene Autry | ||
25 | A Gangster's Warning | Gene Autry | ||
26 | I'll Always Be A Rambler | Gene Autry |
Autry, Gene - That Silver Haired Daddy Of Mine (9-CD Deluxe Box Set) Box set 4 | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
01 | The Death Of Mother Jones | Gene Autry | ||
02 | The Death Of Mother Jones | Gene Autry | ||
03 | Bear Cat Papa Blues | Gene Autry | ||
04 | High Steppin' Mama | Gene Autry | ||
05 | High Steppin' Mama Blues | Gene Autry | ||
06 | She Wouldn't Do It | Gene Autry | ||
07 | Don't Do Me That Way | Gene Autry | ||
08 | Don't Do Me That Way | Gene Autry | ||
09 | High Steppin' Mama Blues | Gene Autry | ||
10 | She Wouldn't Do It | Gene Autry | ||
11 | Do Right Daddy Blues | Gene Autry | ||
12 | T.B. Blues | Gene Autry | ||
13 | Jimmie The Kid | Gene Autry | ||
14 | Travelin' Blues | Gene Autry | ||
15 | There's A Good Gal In The Mountains | Gene Autry | ||
16 | There's A Good Gal In The Mountains | Gene Autry | ||
17 | She's A Low Down Mama | Gene Autry | ||
18 | She's A Low Down Mama/She's A Low Down Mama | Gene Autry | ||
19 | The Old Woman And The Cow | Gene Autry | ||
20 | The Old Woman And The Cow | Gene Autry | ||
21 | Bear Cat Mama From Horner's Corners | Gene Autry | ||
22 | She's A Hum Dum Dinger | Gene Autry | ||
23 | Old Man Duff | Gene Autry | ||
24 | Old Man Duff | Gene Autry |
Autry, Gene - That Silver Haired Daddy Of Mine (9-CD Deluxe Box Set) Box set 5 | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
01 | I'm A Truthful Fellow (True Blue Bill) | Gene Autry | ||
02 | I'm A Truthful Fellow (True Blue Bill) | Gene Autry | ||
03 | Valley In The Hills | Gene Autry | ||
04 | Valley In The Hills | Gene Autry | ||
05 | Valley In The Hills | Gene Autry | ||
06 | She's Just That Kind | Gene Autry | ||
07 | She's Always On My Mind | Gene Autry | ||
08 | She's Always On My Mind | Gene Autry | ||
09 | I'm Blue And Lonesome | Gene Autry | ||
10 | I'm Blue And Lonesome | Gene Autry | ||
11 | Pistol Packin' Papa | Gene Autry | ||
12 | Jail House Blues | Gene Autry | ||
13 | That's How I Got My Start | Gene Autry | ||
14 | Methodist Pie | Gene Autry | ||
15 | Do Right Daddy Blues | Gene Autry | ||
16 | Money Ain't No Use Anyhow | Gene Autry | ||
17 | Money Ain't No Use Anyhow | Gene Autry | ||
18 | I'll Be Thinking Of You Little Gal | Gene Autry | ||
19 | Dallas County Jail Blues | Gene Autry | ||
20 | She Wouldn't Do It | Gene Autry | ||
21 | T.B. Blues | Gene Autry | ||
22 | T.B. Blues | Gene Autry | ||
23 | True Blue Bill | Gene Autry | ||
24 | That's How I Got My Start | Gene Autry | ||
25 | I'll Always Be A Rambler | Gene Autry | ||
26 | Bear Cat Papa Blues | Gene Autry | ||
27 | I've Got The Jail House Blues | Gene Autry |
Autry, Gene - That Silver Haired Daddy Of Mine (9-CD Deluxe Box Set) Box set 6 | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
01 | Rheumatism Blues | Gene Autry | ||
02 | I'm Atlanta Bound | Gene Autry | ||
03 | High Steppin' Mama Blues | Gene Autry | ||
04 | That Silver Haired Daddy Of Mine | Gene Autry | ||
05 | Missouri I'm Calling | Gene Autry | ||
06 | Missouri I'm Calling | Gene Autry | ||
07 | My Alabama Home | Gene Autry | ||
08 | Mississippi Valley | Gene Autry | ||
09 | My Old Pal Of Yesterday | Gene Autry | ||
10 | Missouri I'm Calling | Gene Autry | ||
11 | Cross-Eyed Gal That Lived Upon The Hill | Gene Autry | ||
12 | I'm Always Dreaming Of You | Gene Autry | ||
13 | Why Don't You Come Back To Me | Gene Autry | ||
14 | Jailhouse Blues | Gene Autry | ||
15 | Rheumatism Blues | Gene Autry | ||
16 | I'm Atlanta Bound | Gene Autry | ||
17 | Wildcat Mama | Gene Autry | ||
18 | Mississippi Valley Blues | Gene Autry | ||
19 | My Old Pal Of Yesterday | Gene Autry | ||
20 | My Cross-Eyed Girl | Gene Autry | ||
21 | Birmingham Daddy | Gene Autry | ||
22 | Why Don't You Come Back To Me | Gene Autry | ||
23 | Why Don't You Come Back To Me | Gene Autry | ||
24 | She's A Low Down Mama | Gene Autry |
Autry, Gene - That Silver Haired Daddy Of Mine (9-CD Deluxe Box Set) Box set 7 | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
01 | I'm A Railroad Man (Waitin' On A Weary Train) | Gene Autry | ||
02 | Under The Old Apple Tree | Gene Autry | ||
03 | Wild Cat Mama Blues | Gene Autry | ||
04 | There's A Good Girl In The Mountains | Gene Autry | ||
05 | That Ramshackle Shack | Gene Autry | ||
06 | Back To Old Smoky Mountain | Gene Autry | ||
07 | Back To Old Smoky Mountain | Gene Autry | ||
08 | Back Home In The Blue Ridge Mountains | Gene Autry | ||
09 | The Crime I Didn't Do | Gene Autry | ||
10 | Kentucky Lullaby | Gene Autry | ||
11 | Alone With My Sorrows | Gene Autry | ||
12 | I'm Always Dreaming Of You | Gene Autry | ||
13 | Morning And Skies | Gene Autry | ||
14 | Returning To My Cabin Home | Gene Autry | ||
15 | In The Cradle Of My Dreams | Gene Autry | ||
16 | My Carolina Mountain Rose | Gene Autry | ||
17 | Have You Found Someone Else | Gene Autry | ||
18 | In The Hills Of Carolina | Gene Autry | ||
19 | A Gangster's Warning | Gene Autry | ||
20 | Back To Old Smokey Mountain | Gene Autry | ||
21 | Back Home In The Blue Ridge Mountains | Gene Autry | ||
22 | That Ramshackle Shack | Gene Autry | ||
23 | Black Bottom Blues | Gene Autry | ||
24 | Kentucky Lullaby | Gene Autry | ||
25 | Kentucky Lullaby | Gene Autry |
Autry, Gene - That Silver Haired Daddy Of Mine (9-CD Deluxe Box Set) Box set 8 | ||||
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01 | Cowboy's Heaven | Gene Autry | ||
02 | The Little Ranch House On The Old Circle B | Gene Autry | ||
03 | The Yellow Rose Of Texas | Gene Autry | ||
04 | Your Voice Is Ringing | Gene Autry | ||
05 | Louisiana Moon | Gene Autry | ||
06 | Louisiana Moon | Gene Autry | ||
07 | Louisiana Moon | Gene Autry | ||
08 | Cowboy's Heaven | Gene Autry | ||
09 | Cowboy's Heaven | Gene Autry | ||
10 | The Little Ranch House On The Old Circle B | Gene Autry | ||
11 | If I Could Bring Back My Buddy | Gene Autry | ||
12 | If I Could Bring Back My Buddy | Gene Autry | ||
13 | The Old Folks Back Home | Gene Autry | ||
14 | The Old Folks Back Home | Gene Autry | ||
15 | The Yellow Rose Of Texas | Gene Autry | ||
16 | The Yellow Rose Of Texas/The Yellow Rose Of.. | Gene Autry | ||
17 | Gosh! I Miss You All The Time | Gene Autry | ||
18 | The Answer To 21 Years | Gene Autry | ||
19 | The Answer To 21 Years | Gene Autry | ||
20 | When It's Lamp Lightin' Time In The Valley | Gene Autry | ||
21 | When It's Lamp Lightin' Time In The Valley | Gene Autry | ||
22 | Watching The Clouds Roll By | Gene Autry |
Autry, Gene - That Silver Haired Daddy Of Mine (9-CD Deluxe Box Set) Box set 9 | ||||
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01 | Don't Take Me Back To The Chain Gang | Gene Autry | ||
02 | Don't Take Me Back To The Chain Gang | Gene Autry | ||
03 | In The Valley Of The Moon | Gene Autry | ||
04 | In The Valley Of The Moon | Gene Autry | ||
05 | When The Mailman Says No Mail Today | Gene Autry | ||
06 | When The Humming Birds Are Humming | Gene Autry | ||
07 | When The Humming Birds Are Humming | Gene Autry | ||
08 | Roll Along Kentucky Moon | Gene Autry | ||
09 | That Mother And Daddy Of Mine | Gene Autry | ||
10 | Way Out West In Texas | Gene Autry | ||
11 | The Dying Cowgirl | Gene Autry | ||
12 | The Death Of Jimmie Rodgers | Gene Autry | ||
13 | The Life Of Jimmie Rodgers | Gene Autry | ||
14 | If You'll Let Me Be Your Little Sweetheart | Gene Autry | ||
15 | That Old Feather Bed On The Farm | Gene Autry | ||
16 | There's An Empty Cot In The Bunkhouse Tonight | Gene Autry | ||
17 | A Hill-Billy Wedding In June | Gene Autry | ||
18 | Moonlight Down In Lovers' Lane | Gene Autry | ||
19 | The Last Round-Up | Gene Autry | ||
20 | When Jimmie Rodgers Said Good-bye | Gene Autry | ||
21 | Good Luck Old Pal ('Til We Meet Bye And Bye) | Gene Autry | ||
22 | Bye Bye Boyfriend (Blackbird) | Gene Autry | ||
23 | Frankie And Johnnie | Gene Autry |
Gene Autry
That Silver Haired Daddy Of Mine
A very strong case can be made that Gene Autry is one of the two or three most important performers in the history of country music. He was not the first 'star' of country music, Jimmie Rodgers was. He was not the 'King of Country Music.' That title belonged to Roy Acuff. But Gene Autry was country music's first multi-media star. As a recording artist, he sold millions of records during the Depression years of the 1930s, when people could least afford to buy records, and was easily one of the biggest selling country and western singers of the middle third of the 20th century. As a movie star, he took American country music to the world and, with his cowboy image and his songs, helped create the mythos that characterizes the American West. Through his record sales, personal appearances, radio and television in the '30s, '40s, and '50s, he helped define country music for two generations of Americans.
This American icon was born Orvon Grover (Gene) Autry on September 29, 1907, on a farm at Indian Creek, near Tioga, Texas, the oldest of four children. In his autobiography, 'Back In The Saddle Again,' Gene described his father Delbert as "a livestock dealer, a horse trader, a footloose, aimless man who loved people and animals and the smell of the good earth."His mother, Elnora Ozmont Autry, was a small woman who never enjoyed robust health. Gene's paternal grandfather, William T. Autry, was a Baptist preacher who taught him to sing when he was a young child because he needed the boy to sing in his church choir. Gene's early years were spent with the family moving from one small town to another in north Texas and southern Oklahoma. They finally settled on a farm near Achille, Oklahoma, where he received most of his elementary schooling.
Not a lot is known about Gene's adolescence because, as he said in his book, "There is no point in trying to glorify one's childhood." The result of this philosophy was that Gene gave very few interviews that provided many facts about his formative years. Worse, we are left to speculate as to the music and passions that drove him as a youth. What few facts we do have show a family that was poor, but not deprived. The Autrys were farmers, so it would not have been too difficult, without much cash money, for them to sustain themselves off the land. Delbert Autry was apparently capable of earning good money as a livestock dealer and trader when times were good, and when money was scarce he bartered for chickens, eggs, cloth, leather and any other necessities needed to survive within the extended family. And, like most rural farm families, their social life would have centered on the church and the school.
It is easy to imagine what Gene's boyhood would have been like along the Texas-Oklahoma border during and just after World War I. There was likely plenty of time for baseball, a sport Gene loved and was associated with for most of his life. In addition to such leisure-time activities, there would have been work in the form of chores expected of any child of a family scratching its livelihood from the land. Gene talked about feeding livestock and milking cows in the morning before riding horseback over six miles to school. Since money was scarce, Gene would have had to earn his spending money. In his book, he mentioned working as a hired hand for his uncles, Calvin and Homer. He referred to it as "mean work for a wiry boy." Although we don't know the exact dates, we know that Gene worked part time at 'The Dark Feather Theater' in Achille, where he changed the posters and marquee and served as the relief projectionist. He says that at the time he was little impressed with the dramatic and flamboyant exploits of the era's movie cowboys because they bore little relation to life in the cow towns he knew so well.
It seems obvious that music was an important part of the family's life. There were revivals at the churches with religious music for the faithful, and kids would have learned the songs most popular with rural bands and local ensembles that played for square dances at the schoolhouse. Gene said his mother encouraged his interest in music, and we know that from an early age he sang in the church choir for which his mother served as organist. She also played piano and guitar, so it stands to reason that, with Gene showing an early interest in music, he would have learned at least the rudimentary techniques of both instruments. His mother sang to the kids at night, mostly folk songs and hymns. They most likely were exposed to the popular standards of the day through the windup Victrola that was fast becoming a staple in every household. When he was 12, Gene ordered his first guitar through the Sears, Roebuck catalogue, paying eight dollars earned while working on his uncle Calvin's farm, baling and stacking hay to be used to feed cattle in the winter.
When Gene was 15, he returned to Tioga and lived with his uncle Cal's family while he attended high school. As a student, Gene ranged from average to indifferent. He did well with subjects that interested him, math being one at which he excelled, but his grades reflected a lack of enthusiasm for the others. Although Gene often claimed that as a youngster he had no thought of becoming a professional entertainer, the facts contradict that. He said, "I was ambitious to mainly get out of baling hay." That clearly means he had no intentions of being a farmer. The population of Tioga hovered around 800 people in the 1920s, but in spite of its relatively small size the town offered a diverse social life. Farming and ranching predominated, but the famed mineral springs attracted visitors from around the country, and the railroad brought a steady stream of visitors from the big cities. While Gene still worked on his uncle's farm to earn spending money, singing became a more and more important part of his life, and he began to perform wherever he could. He said that by the time he was 15 he knew his way around every stage in town. Accompanied on the piano by Calvin's daughter Louise, he played and sang in local cafés and other venues for tips from appreciative audiences. One summer—probably 1924—he even landed a job singing with the Fields Brothers' Marvelous Medicine Show, earning a handsome $15.00 per week.
Sometime during his senior year, just shy of graduation, Gene quit school and rejoined his family, now living in Ravia, Oklahoma. The Tioga yearbook notes with little sympathy that Gene left because he found his studies too hard.
A much more realistic and logical explanation is that he quit because he was simply bored with school. Gene said his mother had always hoped that he would become a professional man. "But," he later explained, "that dream went against the trend of my time and place. No one I knew as a child went to college. Where I grew up, on the line between Texas and Oklahoma, 'X'…was the legal signature for about a third of the adult population." It's reasonable to assume that Gene was beginning to assess his potential as a performer. After all, by the standard of any teenager at that time, he had earned a fortune the previous summer by singing with the medicine show. So, Gene talked Mr. Picket, Ravia's local railway station agent, into hiring him as a part-time helper for $35 a month. Likely Gene thought that by supplementing the railroad pay with money he earned as a performer, he could live. He had no desire to continue farming under any circumstances.
Gene Autry That Silver Haired Daddy Of Mine (9-CD)
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