Waylon Jennings Never Say Die - Complete Final Concert Set
- catalog number:CDRCA713749
- weight in Kg 0.3
Waylon Jennings: Never Say Die - Complete Final Concert Set
Article properties:Waylon Jennings: Never Say Die - Complete Final Concert Set
Interpret: Waylon Jennings
Album titlle: Never Say Die - Complete Final Concert Set
Label RCA
Genre Country
Artikelart CD
EAN: 0886971374926
- weight in Kg 0.3
Jennings, Waylon - Never Say Die - Complete Final Concert Set CD 1 | ||||
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01 | Never Say Die | Waylon Jennings | ||
02 | Medley: Good Hearted Woman/Mamas Don't Let | Waylon Jennings | ||
03 | Your Babies Grow Up To Be Cowboys | Waylon Jennings | ||
04 | Trouble Man | Waylon Jennings | ||
05 | Medley: Amanda/A Couble More Years | Waylon Jennings | ||
06 | Waymore's Blues (& JOHN ANDERSON) | Waylon Jennings | ||
07 | It's The World's Gone Crazy (Cotillion) | Waylon Jennings | ||
08 | Love's The Only Chain (& JESSI COLTER) | Waylon Jennings | ||
09 | I'm Not Lisa (& JESSI COLTER) | Waylon Jennings | ||
10 | Storms Never Last (& JESSI COLTER) | Waylon Jennings | ||
11 | Suspicious Minds (& JESSI COLTER) | Waylon Jennings | ||
12 | Closing In On The Fire | Waylon Jennings |
Jennings, Waylon - Never Say Die - Complete Final Concert Set CD 2 | ||||
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01 | I'm A Ramblin' Man | Waylon Jennings | ||
02 | Help Me Make It Through The Night | Waylon Jennings | ||
03 | Havin' A Good Time | Waylon Jennings | ||
04 | Shakin' The Blues | Waylon Jennings | ||
05 | Nothing Catches Jesus By Surprise | Waylon Jennings | ||
06 | Never Been To Spain | Waylon Jennings | ||
07 | Drift Away | Waylon Jennings | ||
08 | I've Always Been Crazy (& TRAVIS TRITT) | Waylon Jennings | ||
09 | Goin' Down Rockin' | Waylon Jennings | ||
10 | The Weight | Waylon Jennings | ||
11 | Can't You See | Waylon Jennings |
Waylon Jennings
The Jennings family was like many in West Texas, subsistence farmers and odd jobbers. His folks, William Albert Jennings and Lorene Beatrice Shipley, had married in 1935, and he was the oldest child, born June l5, 1937. Littlefield was a town built around the cotton fields, carved up from a three million acre ranch that had been under the aegis of Major George Washington Littlefield at the turn of the twentieth century. The seat of Lamb County, it was bisected by the Panhandle and Santa Fe Railroad, and it was as typical a small town Texas life as could be, working in his Daddy's produce store, chasing girls through the town square, watching the cowboy pictures at the Palace Theatre.
There was music in the family - his Daddy loved to sing like Bill Monroe and pluck his guitar thumb-and-finger style, while his Momma showed him how to form his first chords - and more crackling over the radio: the Grand Ole Opry and the Louisiana Hayride and Stan's Record Rack and, one morning in the fall of 1954, the echoings of a countryish singer who sounded like no other country singer before: Elvis Presley, reprising Arthur Crudup's That's Alright, Mama and Bill Monroe's Blue Moon Of Kentucky.
Waylon himself leaned toward Hank Williams and Ernest Tubb, and soon enough was trying to emulate his idols by appearing at the weekly Palace Theatre talent shows. Finding he wasn't much good at most of the available menial labors in town, he found a job at the Voice of Lamb County, KVOW, as a disc jockey, playing a variety of music from Mantovani to country to the classics. Slowly his circle of performing expanded, and he was able to watch the rise of rock and roll first-hand when a local boy from Lubbock, Buddy Holly, had a hit record called
The Jennings family was like many in West Texas, subsistence farmers and odd jobbers. His folks, William Albert Jennings and Lorene Beatrice Shipley, had married in 1935, and he was the oldest child, born June l5, 1937. Littlefield was a town built around the cotton fields, carved up from a three million acre ranch that had been under the aegis of Major George Washington Littlefield at the turn of the twentieth century. The seat of Lamb County, it was bisected by the Panhandle and Santa Fe Railroad, and it was as typical a small town Texas life as could be, working in his Daddy's produce store, chasing girls through the town square, watching the cowboy pictures at the Palace Theatre.
There was music in the family - his Daddy loved to sing like Bill Monroe and pluck his guitar thumb-and-finger style, while his Momma showed him how to form his first chords - and more crackling over the radio: the Grand Ole Opry and the Louisiana Hayride and Stan's Record Rack and, one morning in the fall of 1954, the echoings of a countryish singer who sounded like no other country singer before: Elvis Presley, reprising Arthur Crudup's That's Alright, Mama and Bill Monroe's Blue Moon Of Kentucky.
Waylon himself leaned toward Hank Williams and Ernest Tubb, and soon enough was trying to emulate his idols by appearing at the weekly Palace Theatre talent shows. Finding he wasn't much good at most of the available menial labors in town, he found a job at the Voice of Lamb County, KVOW, as a disc jockey, playing a variety of music from Mantovani to country to the classics. Slowly his circle of performing expanded, and he was able to watch the rise of rock and roll first-hand when a local boy from Lubbock, Buddy Holly, had a hit record called That'll Be The Day.
Excerpt from the book BCD 16320 - Waylon Jennings - The Journey: Destiny's Child - Read more at: https://www.bear-family.com/jennings-waylon-the-journey-destiny-s-child-6-cd.html
https://www.bear-family.com/jennings-waylon/
Copyright © Bear Family Records
Auszug aus dem Buch BCD 16320 - Waylon Jennings - The Journey: Destiny's Child - Lesen Sie mehr unter: https://www.bear-family.com/jennings-waylon-the-journey-destiny-s-child-6-cd.html
https://www.bear-family.com/jennings-waylon/
Copyright © Bear Family Records

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