Article successfully added.

The Everly Brothers Walk Right Back - The Everly Brothers on Warner Bros 1960-69 (2-CD)

Listen to sample now:
 
0:00
0:00
This article is deleted and can no longer be ordered!
Please inform me as soon as the product is available again.
Please enter the digits and letters in the following text field.

  • CD45164
  • 0.12
P Secure bonuspoints now
(1993/Warner Bros.) 50 tracks with 20 page booklet!more

The Everly Brothers: Walk Right Back - The Everly Brothers on Warner Bros 1960-69 (2-CD)

(1993/Warner Bros.) 50 tracks with 20 page booklet!

Article properties:The Everly Brothers: Walk Right Back - The Everly Brothers on Warner Bros 1960-69 (2-CD)

  • Interpret: The Everly Brothers

  • Album titlle: Walk Right Back - The Everly Brothers on Warner Bros 1960-69 (2-CD)

  • Genre Rock'n'Roll

  • Label WARNER BROTHERS

  • Artikelart CD

  • EAN: 0093624516422

  • weight in Kg 0.12
Everly Brothers, The - Walk Right Back - The Everly Brothers on Warner Bros 1960-69 (2-CD) CD 1
01Cathy's ClownThe Everly Brothers
02So Sad (To Watch Good Love Go Bad)The Everly Brothers
03Walk Right BackThe Everly Brothers
04Love HurtsThe Everly Brothers
05Sleppless NightsThe Everly Brothers
06Nashville BluesThe Everly Brothers
07LucilleThe Everly Brothers
08What Kind Of Girl Are YouThe Everly Brothers
09Made To LoveThe Everly Brothers
10Radio And TVThe Everly Brothers
11Stick With Me BabyThe Everly Brothers
12Always It's YouThe Everly Brothers
13TempatationThe Everly Brothers
14Ebony EyesThe Everly Brothers
15Crying In The RainThe Everly Brothers
16Don't Blame MeThe Everly Brothers
17True LoveThe Everly Brothers
18That's Old FashionedThe Everly Brothers
19Nancy's MinuetThe Everly Brothers
20I'm Not AngryThe Everly Brothers
21How Can I Meet Her?The Everly Brothers
22Burma ShaveThe Everly Brothers
23MuskratThe Everly Brothers
24Just One TimeThe Everly Brothers
25Lonely StreetThe Everly Brothers
26Sweet DreamsThe Everly Brothers
Everly Brothers, The - Walk Right Back - The Everly Brothers on Warner Bros 1960-69 (2-CD) CD 2
01The Price Of LoveThe Everly Brothers
02Man With MoneyThe Everly Brothers
03Love Is StrangeThe Everly Brothers
04Give Me A SweetheartThe Everly Brothers
05You're The One I LoveThe Everly Brothers
06You're My GirlThe Everly Brothers
07Kiss Your Man GoodbyeThe Everly Brothers
08Gone, Gone, GoneThe Everly Brothers
09Don't Let The Whole World KnowThe Everly Brothers
10Don't Forget To CryThe Everly Brothers
11Nothing Matters But YouThe Everly Brothers
12It's All OverThe Everly Brothers
13Empty BoxesThe Everly Brothers
14Bowling GreenThe Everly Brothers
15Love Of The Common PeopleThe Everly Brothers
16(I'd Be) A Legend In My TimeThe Everly Brothers
17I'm Movin' OnThe Everly Brothers
18T For TexasThe Everly Brothers
19I Wonder If I Care As MuchThe Everly Brothers
20Lord Of The ManorThe Everly Brothers
21Sing Me Back HomeThe Everly Brothers
22Shady GroveThe Everly Brothers
23Cuckoo BirdThe Everly Brothers
24I'm On My Way Home AgainThe Everly Brothers
The Everly Brothers Don (February 1, 1937 – †  August 21, 2021)  Phil (January... more
"The Everly Brothers"

The Everly Brothers


Don (February 1, 1937 – †  August 21, 2021) 
Phil (January 19, 1939 – † January 3, 2014 ) 

DON EVERLY OBITUARY

The ethereally beautiful harmonic blend of The Everly Brothers was deeply rooted in the rural country sibling duos that were so prevalent during the ‘30s and ‘40s. In turn, the Everlys were tremendously influential to the more melodic British Invasion aggregations—The Beatles, who seldom failed to cite them as musical heroes, as well as The Hollies, Peter and Gordon, and Chad and Jeremy. Phil Everly’s majestic tenor was permanently stilled in 2014; now his older brother Don is gone too. He died August 21. 2021 in Nashville at age 84.

Don was the older of the two, born February 1, 1937 in Brownie, Kentucky. His father, Ike Everly, holds his own exalted place in musical history; his thumb-picked guitar technique was a primary influence on Merle Travis, though Ike couldn’t parlay his fret mastery into stardom the way Travis did. Phil came along in 1939, after Ike had departed the coal mines of Kentucky to play his guitar on the radio in Chicago (that’s where Phil was born). Another move to Shenandoah, Iowa in 1944, where Ike broadcast over KMA-AM, gave the brothers plenty of local radio exposure after they joined their dad’s program full-time in 1949. They developed into competent rhythm guitarists along the way.

Another relocation to Knoxville with their family in 1953 got the Everlys closer to Nashville. Another of Ike’s admirers was fellow guitar wizard Chet Atkins; he steered one of Don’s early compositions to Kitty Wells in 1954, and it hit. As soon as Don graduated from high school in ’55, he and Phil set out for Nashville. They cut a single for Columbia, Keep A’Lovin’ Me, that stiffed, and the label promptly dropped the young pair. Things got pretty lean until Wesley Rose, head of Acuff-Rose Publishing, took an interest in the Everlys’ songs. He recommended them to Archie Bleyer, the owner of New York-based Cadence Records, who had already turned the Everlys down previously. This time Bleyer brought them aboard.

Rose sent Bleyer a song by married writing duo Boudleaux and Felice Bryant, Bye Bye Love, that had been bouncing around Nashville. Bleyer decided to cut it on the Everlys in March of ’57 with Atkins joining the boys on guitar. Enriched with the Everlys’ high, keening harmonies and a choppy acoustic guitar introduction that Don cadged from his own Give Me A Future, Bye Bye Love topped the C&W hit parade and barely missed doing the same thing on the pop side of the tracks. Atkins’ faith in the duo had been fulfilled, albeit for another label rather than RCA Victor, where he was an A&R director.

The Bryants became the Everlys’ primary source for smashes at Cadence. They came up next with the playful Wake Up Little Susie, which did top both hit lists that autumn despite a bit of blowback regarding the teenaged couple in the song staying out all night. Although it charted, the Everlys’ third Cadence offering, a remake of Ray Charles’ This Little Girl Of Mine, was a relative disappointment commercially. Not so the breathtaking ballad All I Have To Do Is Dream, a blockbuster from Boudleaux that again paced the pop and country charts during the summer of 1958 with Roy Orbison’s Claudette proving a very strong flip.

Boudleaux came right back with both sides of the Everlys’ next pairing, the novelty rocker Bird Dog and a gorgeous Devoted To You, and they were both smashes. The Bryants collaborated on Problems, the Everlys’ next hit that fall, but Don was a talented songscribe in his own right, bringing in the rumbling (‘Til) I Kissed You, their biggest seller of 1959. Rose was appalled that the Everlys tackled something outside the Acuff-Rose catalog, but their instincts proved correct when the strings-enriched ballad Let It Be Me was a 1960 smash. The pair left a few winners in the Cadence vaults when they defected to Warner Bros. in ‘60, notably the Phil-penned When Will I Be Loved, which hit in direct competition with their WB sides.

The duo came up with a juggernaut their first time out for their new label with the self-generated Cathy’s Clown, a #1 pop smash on both sides of the Atlantic. The hits continued in abundance at WB initially with a Don-scribed So Sad (To Watch Good Love Go Bad) and its flip, a remake of Little Richard’s Lucille, as well as another two-sider in ’61 pairing Sonny Curtis’ pounding Walk Right Back and John D. Loudermilk’s tragedy opus Ebony Eyes. Then Don got the idea to update the Tin Pan Alley artifact Temptation. That was more than Rose could bear. When it came out as a single, Rose retaliated by shutting off the duo’s access to the Bryants and the other writer in his stable.

Compounding their problems, the Everlys had to fulfill their military obligations during this turbulent period. But they persevered, looking to New York for fresh material and scoring big with Carole King and Howard Greenfield’s lovely Crying In The Rain and then That’s Old Fashioned (That’s The Way Love Should Be) by a trio of Brill Building stalwarts. Then the British Invasion hit. Instead of boosting the Everlys’ fortunes, it largely wiped them from the charts aside from the throbbing self-penned rocker Gone, Gone, Gone in 1964.

Making a slew of contrasting albums and promising 45s for WB that never quite ignited commercially, the Everlys soldiered along until imploding at a 1973 concert at Knott’s Berry Farm in Buena Park, California. Each tried to mount a solo career, Don posting three country chart records on Hickory in 1976-77 with Yesterday Just Passed This Way Again, Since You Broke My Heart and Brother Juke-Box. But two separate Everlys just didn’t have the appeal of the brothers as a unit, and they reunited in 1983. On The Wings Of A Nightingale, the pair’s first single together in over a decade, came out the next year and was an all-star affair, written by Paul McCartney and produced by Dave Edmunds. Surprisingly, it was only a mild hit.

Although they toured widely with another celebrated duo, Simon and Garfunkel, in 2003-2004, the brothers were reportedly estranged again in later years. Don took Phil’s death hard, going so far as to say good morning to his ashes every day some two years after his passing. Now they’re together again.

 

 

The Everly Brothers

Born into music, Don and Phil began performing as children in the mid-40s. Their father Ike Everly, an accomplished guitarist, hosted a variety of rural radio programs which eventually incorporated his whole family. Wife Margaret and sons Don (born February 1, 1937) and Phil (born January 9, 1939) all took their turns at the mic in varying combinations as they honed their harmony skills. However, by 1953 the family's format had reached its end. As recorded music overtook the need for live performers, Don and Phil became infatuated with introducing rock and rhythm and blues flavors to their standard folk and country repertoire.

The mid-'50s found the family struggling to survive. Ike and Margaret worked odd jobs to support their sons' burgeoning musical career, while Don and Phil focused on songwriting and knocking on doors near Nashville. Their first recording deal with Columbia was a fleeting failure and it was not until the duo met up with Wesley Rose that they were truly on the path to success. Being one of the most powerful music magnates in Nashville (and the owner of the colossal Acuff Rose publishing company), Wesley Rose found the brothers a home with East Coast indie label Cadence Records. Rose further coupled Don and Phil with the husband and wife writing team of Boudleaux and Felice Bryant, and the rest is, as they say, history.

The Everly Brothers' first Cadence release, 1957's Bye Bye Love, began a solid string of thirteen Top 40 hits for the label. But by 1964, the Everlys and many of their label mates had departed from Cadence (and the charts). Resultantly, founder Archie Bleyer sold his musical assets to former signee, singer Andy Williams. Although Williams held back the Everly masters for six years, 1970 saw the first in a flood of nostalgic reissues of the duo's Cadence recordings (a trend which continues to this day). Nevertheless, these collections are simply a shuffling of the same forty songs the brothers cut for the label.

March 1985 saw the first compilation that deviated from this format, Rhino Records' 'All They Had To Do Was Dream'. Compiled entirely from outtakes and demos, this set lifted the lid on what still remained within the Cadence archive. Bear Family's 'Classic Everly Brothers' (BCD 15618) box set further collected these outtakes with a few added obscurities, giving enthusiasts and historians a more complete picture of what occurred during those times.

Now, some twenty years later, Everly fans are once again allowed back into the archive to hear a newly unearthed set of working versions and musical sketches from that magical era. A compelling study of the creative process behind the legendary Cadence masters, this set gives one a fresh perspective on these, the Everlys' most popular sides. You won't hear perfection at every turn. Yet, nearly every track exhibits a talented team on the verge of a musical breakthrough. So, pull up a chair and join us at RCA Victor Studios in Nashville, as we join the Everly Brothers in session.

The Everly Brothers The Outtakes
Read more at: https://www.bear-family.de/everly-brothers-the-the-outtakes.html
Copyright © Bear Family Records

Read, write and discuss reviews...more
Customer evaluation for "Walk Right Back - The Everly Brothers on Warner Bros 1960-69 (2-CD)"
Write an evaluation
Evaluations will be activated after verification.

The fields marked with * are required.

Weitere Artikel von The Everly Brothers
Studio Outtakes (CD)
The Everly Brothers: Studio Outtakes (CD) Art-Nr.: BCD17587

Ready to ship today, delivery time** appr. 1-3 workdays

$11.26 *
Classic (3-CD Deluxe Box Set)
The Everly Brothers: Classic (3-CD Deluxe Box Set) Art-Nr.: BCD15618

Ready to ship today, delivery time** appr. 1-3 workdays

$67.85 *
The Price Of Fame (7-CD Deluxe Box Set)
The Everly Brothers: The Price Of Fame (7-CD Deluxe Box Set) Art-Nr.: BCD16511

Ready to ship today, delivery time** appr. 1-3 workdays

$178.75 * $169.70 *
Chained To A Memory (8-CD - 1-DVD Deluxe Box Set)
The Everly Brothers: Chained To A Memory (8-CD - 1-DVD Deluxe Box Set) Art-Nr.: BCD16791

Ready to ship today, delivery time** appr. 1-3 workdays

$226.28 *
The Everly Brothers Rock (CD)
The Everly Brothers: The Everly Brothers Rock (CD) Art-Nr.: BCD17321

Ready to ship today, delivery time** appr. 1-3 workdays

$19.18 * $16.92 *
Jim Silke: Bettie Page - Queen Of Hearts (Hardback, Deutsch)
Bettie Page: Jim Silke: Bettie Page - Queen Of Hearts... Art-Nr.: 0017135

This article is deleted and can no longer be ordered!

$33.89
Kevin & Tanja Crouch: Sun King - The Life And
Sam Phillips: Kevin & Tanja Crouch: Sun King - The Life And Art-Nr.: 0017140

This article is deleted and can no longer be ordered!

$14.66
Robert W. Philliops: Biography...plus
Roy Rogers: Robert W. Philliops: Biography...plus Art-Nr.: 0018038

This article is deleted and can no longer be ordered!

$33.89
Werner Walendowski: Die Story 1960 bis heute
The Rattles: Werner Walendowski: Die Story 1960 bis heute Art-Nr.: 0018039

This article is deleted and can no longer be ordered!

$28.24
Blue Guitars (11-CD&1-DVD Earbook)
REA, Chris: Blue Guitars (11-CD&1-DVD Earbook) Art-Nr.: 0018040

This article is deleted and can no longer be ordered!

$56.57
Tracklist
Everly Brothers, The - Walk Right Back - The Everly Brothers on Warner Bros 1960-69 (2-CD) CD 1
01 Cathy's Clown
02 So Sad (To Watch Good Love Go Bad)
03 Walk Right Back
04 Love Hurts
05 Sleppless Nights
06 Nashville Blues
07 Lucille
08 What Kind Of Girl Are You
09 Made To Love
10 Radio And TV
11 Stick With Me Baby
12 Always It's You
13 Tempatation
14 Ebony Eyes
15 Crying In The Rain
16 Don't Blame Me
17 True Love
18 That's Old Fashioned
19 Nancy's Minuet
20 I'm Not Angry
21 How Can I Meet Her?
22 Burma Shave
23 Muskrat
24 Just One Time
25 Lonely Street
26 Sweet Dreams
Everly Brothers, The - Walk Right Back - The Everly Brothers on Warner Bros 1960-69 (2-CD) CD 2
01 The Price Of Love
02 Man With Money
03 Love Is Strange
04 Give Me A Sweetheart
05 You're The One I Love
06 You're My Girl
07 Kiss Your Man Goodbye
08 Gone, Gone, Gone
09 Don't Let The Whole World Know
10 Don't Forget To Cry
11 Nothing Matters But You
12 It's All Over
13 Empty Boxes
14 Bowling Green
15 Love Of The Common People
16 (I'd Be) A Legend In My Time
17 I'm Movin' On
18 T For Texas
19 I Wonder If I Care As Much
20 Lord Of The Manor
21 Sing Me Back Home
22 Shady Grove
23 Cuckoo Bird
24 I'm On My Way Home Again